Friday, October 11, 2013

Marriage and Manipulation


"The Clerk's Tale" should elicit a strong emotional response from the reader because its protagonist is a good and innocent person who suffers repeatedly to satisfy her husband's obsession.  At the behest of his people, Walter, the marquis agrees to wed and provide them a successor of his lineage. His stipulation that he marry a woman of his choosing, no matter her social rank, is an interesting one. Walter’s reasoning for this seems to come from his belief that “under lowe degree / Was ofte vertu hid…” (425-426). Therefore, it makes sense that he chooses the low-born Grisilde. Walter also seems to be interested in Grisilde because he sees in her an ability or willingness to be completely subservient to him.  In a statement to her about what he requires of a wife he says:

I say this, be ye redy with good herte
To al my lust, and that I frely may,
As me best thinketh, do yow laugh or smerte,
And nevere ye to grucche it, night ne day,
And eek whan I say “ye, ne say nat “nay”,

Walter goes on to have her swear to the “oath,” and she does. After they marry he seems to invoke the right to cause her to feel pain by taking from her their first born child and telling her it will be killed. She does not flinch, but rather tells him that she and the child are his to do with as he pleases. After Walter takes her second child, a boy, she reacts in very much the same way. Then, when he informs her that she will be replaced with another she maintains her stoic demeanor and only asks that he “ne prike with nor tormentinge / This tender mainden, as ye han don mo” (1038-1039). Her reactions to the trials and tribulations created for her by Walter are shocking. Perhaps what is equally shocking is the fact that Walter has lied about the children’s deaths and the new wife to learn, through Grisilde's reactions, of her true character and devotion to him.  

This tale remind me of this quote by Martin Luther King, Jr.:
The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.


1 comment:

  1. I really appreciate and agree with your use of the MLK, Jr. quote! I think it really applies to Walter and the Oxford Cleric's story!

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