The Host (Canterbury Tales)

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William Blake's The Canterbury Pilgrims with The Host in the middle Blake Canterbury Pilgrims engraving.jpg
William Blake's The Canterbury Pilgrims with The Host in the middle

The Host (Harry Bailly or Harry Bailey) is a character who plays a key role in and throughout Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales . He is the owner of the Tabard Inn in London, where the pilgrimage begins and he agrees to travel on the pilgrimage, and promises to judge both the tales the pilgrims tell, and disputes among the pilgrims. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

He discusses his marriage to his absent wife, Goodelief, when commenting on The Tale of Melibee with its message of patience . The Host says Goodelief is herself extremely impatient and speedy in urging him to violent revenge. Her name Goodelief may be a real name or just meaning, perhaps ironically, good dear one. [9]

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The Prologue and Tale of Beryn are spurious fifteenth century additions to Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. They are both written in Middle English.

The Canterbury Tales is a collection of stories, mostly in verse, written by Geoffrey Chaucer chiefly from 1387 to 1400. They are held together in a frame story of a pilgrimage on which each member of the group is to tell two tales on the way to Canterbury, and two on the way back. Fewer than a quarter of the projected tales were completed before Chaucer's death. It is uncertain in what order Chaucer intended the tales to appear; moreover it is very possible that, as a work-in-progress, no final authorial order of tales ever existed.

The Squire (<i>Canterbury Tales</i>) Character in the Canterbury Tales

The Squire is a fictional character in the framing narrative of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. He is squire to the Knight and is the narrator of The Squire's Tale or Cambuscan. The Squire is one of the secular pilgrims, of the military group. The Knight and the Squire are the pilgrims with the highest social status. However his tale, interrupted as it is, is paired with that of the Franklin. The Squire is a candidate for the interrupter of The Host in the epilogue of the Man of Law's Tale.

Marion Turner is the J. R. R. Tolkien Professor of English Literature and Language at the University of Oxford and an academic authority on Geoffrey Chaucer. She has authored several books, including Chaucer: A European Life, which was shortlisted in 2020 for the Wolfson History Prize, and was a finalist in the PROSE Awards, and for which she was awarded the 2020 Rose Mary Crawshay Prize.

References

  1. Richardson, C. C. (1970). The Function of the Host in The Canterbury Tales. Texas Studies in Literature and Language, 12(3), 325-344.
  2. Williams, T. (2008). The Host, His Wife, and Their Communities in the" Canterbury Tales". The Chaucer Review, 42(4), 383-408.
  3. Page, B. (1969). Concerning the Host. The Chaucer Review, 1-13.
  4. Shutters, L. (2020). The Host, the Man of Law's Tale, and the Fantasy of the Foreign Wife. The Chaucer Review, 55(4), 397-421.
  5. Jungman, R. E. (1976). The Pardoner's Quarrel with the Host. Philological Quarterly, 55(2), 279.
  6. Pichaske, D. R., & Sweetland, L. (1977). Chaucer on the Medieval Monarchy: Harry Bailly in the" Canterbury Tales". The Chaucer Review, 179-200.
  7. Glasser, M. (1983). The Pardoner and the Host: Chaucer's Analysis of the Canterbury Game. CEA Critic, 46(1/2), 37-45.
  8. Gray, Douglas (2003) The Oxford Companion to Chaucer Entry on Host, The, Oxford University Press
  9. Gray, Douglas (2003) The Oxford Companion to Chaucer Entry on Goodelief, Oxford University Press