Monday 23 September 2013

The Merchant & The Clerk Presentation



Character overview
The Merchant
Merchants were viewed as middle class citizens and in the Chaucerian time period the middle class were rising and become more powerful. This was shown through the clothes that he was wearing when he was riding his horse. For example in line 272/273 (Upon his heed a Flaundryssh bever hat, His bootes clasped faire and fetisly) he wore a Flemish beaver hat, and his boots were buckled ‘handsomely and elegantly’.

The merchant also speaks ‘solemnly’ of his finances and his social status, so much so that no one knew he was in debt. Chaucer the pilgrim says that he managed his finances well and that people saw him as a worthy man. But we as a reader and Chaucer the writer shows us that he couldn’t manage his finances well as he is in debt, but does this necessarily make him an unworthy man?

The Clerk
The clerk (scholar), is an intelligent man that is studying logic at Oxford. He does not have any support and is extremely poor which is evident from his threadbare short upper coat. He is also very thin and so is his horse, perhaps because of his lack of money. He isn’t a materialistic person, and would rather have knowledge and books, instead of beautiful robes and paintings (lines 295-298).

He is a man of few words and does not speak more than necessary. But whatever he does say tends to increase moral virtue in the listeners. The scholarly Clerk religiously prays for the welfare of his friends and benefactors.

There are no ironic overtones in the Clerk’s portrait apart from the pun on his being a philosopher and yet being poor. In the Middle Ages, a philosopher also implied an alchemist who claimed to transform base metals into silver and gold (line 300). I don’t think Chaucer the writer would want us to think any differently of the Clerk that Chaucer the pilgrim does, as he doesn’t denounce the clerks character in his writing.

Links to other characters
The clerk and the merchant are very similar in the fact that they do not have to conform to strict rules about who they should be and how they should act. This contradicts the characters of the monk, prioress and the knight, as they were expected to be noble, holy and idealistic characters. Despite the fact they do not have certain rules about what they can do, Chaucer presents them as pilgrims who should be respected, as they intelligent and ‘well behaved’.

The merchant is similar to the knight as he is interested in foreign affairs and as it says in line 278-279 he doesn’t want England to be invaded. He is also a noble man that rides proudly upon his horse (line 272).

The clerk is similar to the yeoman in some ways, as he is an expert in his field, for the clerk that is knowledge, and for the yeoman that is weaponry, he is also religious and prays for others, much like the yeoman idolizes St. Christopher.

Important lines
Chaucer tells us that (283/4) line ‘He was a worthy fellow all the same; To tell the truth, I do not know his name’ this would suggest that the merchant acts as if many people would know who he was and pretends to be worthy, when in actual fact not a lot of people know either who he is or in fact what he is actually called.

Chaucer tells us that the Clerk (304) "never spoke a word more than was need", this could foreshadow his tale in the future and possibly suggest that this will teach us something moral or ethical


Conclusion
The clerk and the merchant are two very different characters, and this is evident from the way Chaucer writes about them. They have different character traits and enjoy different things for example the merchant cares about how people view him where as the clerk cares about what people think, not about him but about life. But they are also similar as they pursue their different passions. Any questions or quotes you would like to explore?

Prezi - Link to presentation

The Clerk:                              The Merchant:


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