NOTES TO THE PROLOGUE
1. Women connen utter such chaffare: women are adepts at
giving circulation to such wares. The Host evidently means that
his wife would be sure to hear of his confessions from some
female member of the company.
NOTES TO THE TALE
1. The Squire's Tale has not been found under any other form
among the literary remains of the Middle Ages; and it is
unknown from what original it was derived, if from any. The
Tale is unfinished, not because the conclusion has been lost, but
because the author left it so.
2. The Russians and Tartars waged constant hostilities between
the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries.
3. In the best manuscripts the name is "Cambynskan," and thus,
no doubt, it should strictly be read. But it is a most pardonable
offence against literal accuracy to use the word which Milton
has made classical, in "Il Penseroso," speaking of
"him that left half-told
The story of Cambuscan bold,
Of Camball, and of Algarsife,
And who had Canace to wife,
That owned the virtuous Ring and Glass,
And of the wondrous Horse of Brass,
On which the Tartar King did ride"
Surely the admiration of Milton might well seem to the spirit of
Chaucer to condone a much greater transgression on his domain
than this verbal change -- which to both eye and ear is an
unquestionable improvement on the uncouth original.
4. Couth his colours longing for that art: well skilled in using
the colours -- the word-painting -- belonging to his art.
5. Aries was the mansion of Mars -- to whom "his" applies.
Leo was the mansion of the Sun.
6. Sewes: Dishes, or soups. The precise force of the word is
uncertain; but it may be connected with "seethe," to boil, and it
seems to describe a dish in which the flesh was served up amid a
kind of broth or gravy. The "sewer," taster or assayer of the
viands served at great tables, probably derived his name from
the verb to "say" or "assay;" though Tyrwhitt would connect
the two words, by taking both from the French, "asseoir," to
place -- making the arrangement of the table the leading duty of
the "sewer," rather than the testing of the food.
7. Heronsews: young herons; French, "heronneaux."
8. Purpose: story, discourse; French, "propos."
9. Gawain was celebrated in mediaeval romance as the most
courteous among King Arthur's knights.
10. Gin: contrivance; trick; snare. Compare Italian, "inganno,"
deception; and our own "engine."
11. Mr Wright remarks that "the making and arrangement of
seals was one of the important operations of mediaeval magic."
12. Remued: removed; French, "remuer," to stir.
13. Polies: Apulian. The horses of Apulia -- in old French
"Poille," in Italian "Puglia" -- were held in high value.
14. The Greeke's horse Sinon: the wooden horse of the Greek
Sinon, introduced into Troy by the stratagem of its maker.
15. Master tower: chief tower; as, in the Knight's Tale, the
principal street is called the "master street." See note 86 to the
Knight's Tale.
16. Alhazen and Vitellon: two writers on optics -- the first
supposed to have lived about 1100, the other about 1270.
Tyrwhitt says that their works were printed at Basle in 1572,
under the title "Alhazeni et Vitellonis Opticae."
17. Telephus, a son of Hercules, reigned over Mysia when the
Greeks came to besiege Troy, and he sought to prevent their
landing. But, by the art of Dionysus, he was made to stumble
over a vine, and Achilles wounded him with his spear. The
oracle informed Telephus that the hurt could be healed only by
him, or by the weapon, that inflicted it; and the king, seeking
the Grecian camp, was healed by Achilles with the rust of the
charmed spear.
18. Ferne: before; a corruption of "forne," from Anglo-Saxon,
"foran."
19. Aldrian: or Aldebaran; a star in the neck of the constellation
Leo.
20. Chamber of parements: Presence-chamber, or chamber of
state, full of splendid furniture and ornaments. The same
expression is used in French and Italian.
21. In Pisces, Venus was said to be at her exaltation or greatest
power. A planet, according to the old astrologers, was in
"exaltation" when in the sign of the Zodiac in which it exerted
its strongest influence; the opposite sign, in which it was
weakest, was called its "dejection."
22. Launcelot: Arthur's famous knight, so accomplished and
courtly, that he was held the very pink of chivalry.
23. Trill: turn; akin to "thirl", "drill."
24. Ride: another reading is "bide," alight or remain.
25. Feastying: entertaining; French, "festoyer," to feast.
26. The old physicians held that blood dominated in the human
body late at night and in the early morning. Galen says that the
domination lasts for seven hours.
27. Fumosity: fumes of wine rising from the stomach to the
head.
28. Fremde: foreign, strange; German, "fremd" in the northern
dialects, "frem," or "fremmed," is used in the same sense.
29. Leden: Language, dialect; from Anglo-Saxon, "leden" or
"laeden," a corruption from "Latin."
30. Tercelet: the "tassel," or male of any species of hawk; so
called, according to Cotgrave, because he is one third ("tiers")
smaller than the female.
31. "And Lamech took unto him two wives: the name of the
one Adah, and the name of the other Zillah" (Gen. iv. 19).
32. Galoche: shoe; it seems to have been used in France, of a
"sabot," or wooden shoe. The reader cannot fail to recall the
same illustration in John i. 27, where the Baptist says of Christ:
"He it is, who coming after me is preferred before me; whose
shoe's latchet I am not worthy to unloose."
33. Byleve; stay; another form is "bleve;" from Anglo-Saxon,
"belitan," to remain. Compare German, "bleiben."
34. This sentiment, as well as the illustration of the bird which
follows, is taken from the third book of Boethius, "De
Consolatione Philosophiae," metrum 2. It has thus been
rendered in Chaucer's translation: "All things seek aye to their
proper course, and all things rejoice on their returning again to
their nature."
35. Men love of proper kind newfangleness: Men, by their own
-- their very -- nature, are fond of novelty, and prone to
inconstancy.
36. Blue was the colour of truth, as green was that of
inconstancy. In John Stowe's additions to Chaucer's works,
printed in 1561, there is "A balade whiche Chaucer made
against women inconstaunt," of which the refrain is, "In stead of
blue, thus may ye wear all green."
37. Unless we suppose this to be a namesake of the Camballo
who was Canace's brother -- which is not at all probable -- we
must agree with Tyrwhitt that there is a mistake here; which no
doubt Chaucer would have rectified, if the tale had not been
"left half-told," One manuscript reads "Caballo;" and though not
much authority need be given to a difference that may be due to
mere omission of the mark of contraction over the "a," there is
enough in the text to show that another person than the king's
younger son is intended. The Squire promises to tell the
adventures that befell each member of Cambuscan's family; and
in thorough consistency with this plan, and with the canons of
chivalric story, would be "the marriage of Canace to some
knight who was first obliged to fight for her with her two
brethren; a method of courtship," adds Tyrwhitt, "very
consonant to the spirit of ancient chivalry."
38. (Trancriber's note) In some manuscripts the following two
lines, being the beginning of the third part, are found: -
Apollo whirleth up his chair so high,
Till that Mercurius' house, the sly...
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