The Merchants Tale - AO5 Flashcards
Why does Januarie want to marry
So he “will be able to satisfy his lust regularly” (Lumiansky, 1955)
How is Januarie using religion
“January is using religion as an attempted disguise for his lecherous intent” (Lumiansky, 1955)
Importance of:
“Thus seyde this olde knyght, that was so wys”
2 hints by the narrator that Januarie is a fool
(Lumiansky, 1955)
Januarie’s reasons for marriage - The Merchant
“but the Merchant makes it abundantly clear that this old and lecherous knight knows nothing of the more admirable reasons for a marriage” (Lumiansky, 1955)
Placebo and Justinus - allegorical names
Placebo –> “Placebo means I shall please”
he is a “sycophantic courtier” (Lumiansky, 1955)
Justinus –> “Justinus, whose name means the just man”
“Only clear-thinking individual in the whole story”
“sharp contrast with the Merchant himself, as well as
January” (Lumiansky, 1955)
May’s deceit
“May’s mercenary intent”
- She is exploiting the system so that when he dies she inherits everything (Lumiansky, 1955)
Januarie’s folly in the bedroom
Januarie feels sorry for May as he believes he is a dominant force in the bedroom but he actually struggles (Lumiansky, 1955)
Consummation of the marriage
“Nowhere in the tale is the atmosphere more nauseatingly unpleasant” (Lumiansky, 1955)
Lumiansky - mocking courtly love
“Damian, sick unto death with love for her” (Lumiansky, 1955)
Coopgredients
Cooper - what is ‘TMT’
“a fabliau, with the standard ingredients of adultery and the tricking of authority” (Cooper, 1996)
Cooper - January’s refusal to see
“from the very first lines of the tale onwards, January’s wilful refusal to see clearly is made to seem inevitable” (Cooper, 1996)
Ruddinvestment
“May, as a young wife is the ageing Januarie’s most valuable investment” (Rudd, 2000)
transAERctions
“marriages in the middle and upper social groups were transactions” (David Aers)
Kraippetite
“The tale portrays May as a female body full of appetite and sexual desire” (Kraishan, 2013)
Tollissession
“January will never be able to see May’s adultery as he only perceives her as his possession” (Tolliver)