Illustrate from 'The Pardoner's Tale and Prologue' the Pardoner's skill as a preacher.

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Andrew Luke                  Illustrate from 'The Pardoner's Tale and Prologue' the Pardoner's skill as a preacher.

Illustrate from 'The Pardoner's Tale and Prologue' the Pardoner's skill as a preacher.

People sought salvation with devotion as The Black Death swept across Europe. The pre-science era when Chaucer wrote The Canterbury Tales meant priests faced an increasing workload, introducing monetary payments in exchange for remission of sin or penances (punishment). The responsibility of the collection of this money went to quaestores. These quaestores did not always have a firm connection with the Church, and definitely not with the artes praedicandi, the collected thought embodied in the theory and art of preaching. However, the new direction the Church took became a rampant breeding ground for forgers and confidence tricksters such as the Pardoner, preying upon the fears of the diminishing population for personal gain.

The artes praedicandi was divided into two areas, the moral and the technical. With the moral, the preacher, genuinely inspired, was to be the mouthpiece for the Holy Spirit. There is no question that Chaucer’s Pardoner is a completely immoral creature, his motives selfish and his interests in human art more important than guidance from God. However, in the technical aspect of preaching he excels. Medieval practice and sermon called upon the preacher to provide religious teaching as well as entertainment. Gardiner writes of elements of convention in the traditional Medieval religious lesson and the Pardoner covers all of them. The first, statement of theme, is a biblical text and in the Pardoner’s case  it is, ‘Radix Malorum Est Cupiditas’, the love of money is the root of all evil. ‘The Exemplum’, a story to illustrate the text, is taken care of in the tale of the riotours’ search for death. The discourse of the sins of drunkenness, gluttony, gambling, blasphemy and swearing could be considered the dilatatio, detailed explaining of the text, and set after the story’s close, the peroration, a discussion and application of the text.

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The Pardoner’s Prologue sets up a universally held view, that the Pardoner is full of the very sins he preaches against, he seeks to become sin itself and is master of his own damnation. The Pardoner has with him firm establishment of authority and credibility, ‘bulles of popes and cardinales’ that grant him powers of absolution.

“And I assoille him by the auctoritee

Which that by bulle ygraunted was to me”

By this gaude have I wonne, yeer by yeer,

An hundred mark sith I was pardoner”

                                        (103-6)

The Pardoner also has a piece of the sail of ...

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