The two least
pleasant of Chaucer’s characters are the Friar and the Summoner, both of whom
earn their livings by deceit, and who are also shown as being at each other’s
throats for at least part of the pilgrimage journey. When they come to tell
their tales, the Friar recounts the story of a rascally summoner who meets the
Devil and whose dishonest behaviour leads to him being carried off to Hell, and
the Summoner is then determined to reply in like manner.
The
Summoner’s prologue consists of him insulting the Friar by, in effect, telling
a mini-tale of a friar who has a vision of being shown round Hell by an angel.
Seeing no fellow friars, our Friar assumes that this must be because friars
never go to Hell. The angel then shows him Satan himself and asks him to lift
his tail. When Satan does so, twenty thousand friars fly out of his backside
like bees from a hive.
Having told
this crude joke at the Friar’s expense, the Summoner proceeds with his tale,
which, not surprisingly, concerns a friar and, again not surprisingly, is
highly insulting. These people really do not like each other!
In medieval England ,
“mendicant” friars were members of religious orders, such as the Franciscans or
Dominicans, who were officially barred from owning property of their own and had
to earn their living by working for the community and receiving alms. By
Chaucer’s time, many friars had become grasping and corrupt, and the friar in
the Summoner’s tale would probably have been recognised by Chaucer’s original
readers as being typical of his kind. The humour would hardly have worked had
this not been the case.
The Summoner’s
Tale
A friar goes
to a village in Yorkshire to preach and beg. However, his sermon entreats his
hearers to save their souls by ceasing to encumber themselves with worldly
possessions, which they should give to the Church instead, represented, as it
happens, by himself!
In going from
house to house, he makes a list of all the people who have given him the best
hospitality, promising to pray for them. However, once he has been well
provided with food and other supplies, he scratches out the names to make room
for more.
(At this
point in the telling of the tale, the “real” Friar tries to interrupt, but the
Host tells him to shut up and lets the Summoner continue.)
The friar
comes to the house of Thomas, whom he has clearly visited many times before.
There is a nice touch in Chaucer’s description of him shoving the cat out of
the way so that he can sit down. However, Thomas is unwell and lying on a
couch. The friar tells him about all the prayers he has offered on Thomas’s
behalf and then greets Thomas’s wife as she comes into the room, with an
embrace that sounds a bit over the top for a Man of God to bestow.
On being
invited to stay for dinner, the friar gives his order, and is then told that
the couple have recently lost their child, who died just after the friar’s last
visit. The friar then assures them that he witnessed the death in a vision, in
which he saw the child’s soul being borne to Heaven. Not only that, but two
other friars saw the same thing, and the whole convent said a Mass on the
child’s behalf. He tells them that holy people such as himself, who live in
abject poverty, have a fast track to God and their prayers are far more
effectual than those of ordinary people, especially the rich. In fact, he goes
on about it at some considerable length, totally forgetting the distress of the
bereaved couple.
When Thomas
can get a word in edgeways, he tells the friar that he has not been getting
good value for all the money he has spent on buying prayers from the various
friars who have passed his way. The friar has an answer for this, namely that
Thomas has been spreading his gold too thinly, and he should instead forget
about all those other “leeches” and give only to one convent, namely the
friar’s own.
He also warns
Thomas about the sin of anger. We can well imagine just how angry Thomas is
getting with all this garbage being spouted at him by a man who is clearly
there only to eat him out of house and home!
The new
sermon takes the form of several short stories, firstly about a king who
condemned three of his knights to death out of misplaced anger. The friar then
talks about two other kings, Cambyses and Cyrus, whose anger led to dire consequences.
Just how relevant these stories are to Thomas’s condition is a moot point; we
can imagine that these little tales are part of the friar’s stock-in-trade,
added to any sermon when the sin of anger is the subject at hand.
The sermon
preached, the friar returns to his main theme, namely Thomas’s financial
contribution. Thomas has clearly had more of this than he can stand; as the
Summoner says, “he would that the friar had been on fire”. He then tells the
friar that he has a special gift for him, that he will give on the firm
condition that the friar shares it equally with all the other friars in his
convent.
The friar
agrees to the condition, and follows Thomas’s instruction to put his hand down
behind Thomas’s back, as far his buttocks, where the “treasure” is to be found.
Once the hand is in place, Thomas lets fly an enormous fart. The friar is then
chased out of the house.
The story
might well have ended at this point, but the Summoner is keen to make his
attack on the Friar of the pilgrimage as savage as possible. The friar of the
story, having been so keen to warn against giving way to anger, now does
precisely that, and storms off to the house of the lord of the manor to seek
justice for this slight.
However, once
the friar has told the lord, his wife and his squire about the “blasphemous”
fart, the latter are far more interested in the problem of how a fart can be
divided into twelve so that it can be shared by all the friars in the convent.
The squire solves the problem by suggesting that all the friars should stand
around a cartwheel, each with their nose at the end of a spoke, and the fart be
delivered at the hub so that its stink will spread equally down each spoke. We
are not told what the friar did next, only that he did not applaud the squire
with the same enthusiasm as everyone else. We can imagine the rest.
The
Summoner’s Tale might have been based on a story known to Chaucer, or it could
be entirely original. Whatever the case, it is a beautifully told tale that
works by gradually building up to a wholly unexpected denouement, that we can
imagine would have had the pilgrims collapsing in fits of laughter, with one
notable exception. The “coda” to the Tale, namely the added detail involving
the squire and the cartwheel, only serves to prolong the mockery of the pilgrim
Friar, who we can picture as having got the worse of the exchange with the
Summoner.
It is because
of tales like this that Chaucer is justly renowned as English Literature’s
first comic genius.
© John
Welford
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