English Literature, Considered as an Interpreter of English History - Designed as a Manual of Instruction by Henry Coppee
page 90 of 561 (16%)
page 90 of 561 (16%)
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little to do but enjoy them. Like our Lord, they were generally without a
place to lay their heads; they had neither purse nor scrip. But instead of sanctifying, the itinerary was their great temptation and final ruin. Nothing can be conceived better calculated to harden the heart and to destroy the fierce sensibilities of our nature than to be a beggar and a wanderer. So that in our retrospective glance, we may pity while we condemn "the friar of orders gray." With a delicate irony in Chaucer's picture, is combined somewhat of a liking for this "worthy limitour."[17] In the same category of contempt for the existing ecclesiastical system, Chaucer places the sompnour, or summoner to the Church courts. Of his fire-red face, scattered beard, and the bilious knobs on his cheeks, "children were sore afraid." The friar, in his tale, represents him as in league with the devil, who carries him away. He is a drinker of strong wines, a conniver at evil for bribes: for a good sum he would teach "a felon" ... not to have none awe In swiche a case of the archdeacon's curse. To him the Church system was nothing unless he could make profit of it. THE PARDONERE.--Nor is his picture of the pardoner, or vender of indulgences, more flattering. He sells--to the great contempt of the poet--a piece of the Virgin's veil, a bit of the sail of St. Peter's boat, holy pigges' bones, and with these relics he made more money in each parish in one day than the parson himself in two months. Thus taking advantage of his plot to ridicule these characters, and to |
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