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Secularism In The Canterbury Tales

Decent Essays

The decades preceding the 14th century, more commonly known as the Middle Ages, encountered a culture dominated almost entirely by religion. The vested powers in the hands of the Pope and in Christianity were capable of influencing the social standards and moral principles of the society. However, in The Canterbury Tales, a series of twenty-four short stories, Geoffrey Chaucer depicts the rise of secularism. One of the stories, “The Miller’s Tale,” follows three young men – John, Nicholas, Absolon – who are all involved with one woman, Alisoun. Chaucer ignores divine revelation and deals solely with the corrupted, material world of sin and vice, revealing a shift in culture, a movement away from religious principles, and the selfish manipulation …show more content…

While adultery was not as common as simple fornication, it prevailed during the late Middle Ages. Chaucer illustrates this by trivializing adultery when Nicholas gives way to impulse and seduces Alisoun. As their plan to fool the carpenter, John, goes to fruition, “without more words [Nicholas and Alisoun] go to bed, where the carpenter is accustomed to lie” (3648-3651). The youth demonstrate a lack of principle compared to the Christian standards set forth by the church. Similarly, “The Miller’s Tale” describes the evident rise in indecent exposure in society. Obscene exposure was one of the most common sexual offenses during the Middle Ages and was not supported by religious institutions. This is demonstrated in the text when “[Nicholas] opened the window hastily and put his ass stealthily over the buttock, to the thigh” (3801-3803). The action of revealing his buttock out the window, among other sins committed in the story, brings to light the beginnings of a cultural shift in moral principles. Accordingly, Chaucer demonstrates that as the characters continued to commit sinful acts throughout the story and society drifted away from the church, the habits of society were

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