The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer - HTML preview

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Notes to the Cook's Tale

 

NOTES TO THE PROLOGUE

 

1. Jack of Dover: an article of cookery. (Transcriber's note: suggested by some commentators to be a kind of pie, and by others to be a fish)

 

2. Sooth play quad play: true jest is no jest.

 

3. It may be remembered that each pilgrim was bound to tell two stories; one on the way to Canterbury, the other returning.

 

4. Made cheer: French, "fit bonne mine;" put on a pleasant countenance.

 

NOTES TO THE TALE

 

1. Cheapside, where jousts were sometimes held, and which was the great scene of city revels and processions.

 

2. His paper: his certificate of completion of his apprenticeship.

 

3. Louke: The precise meaning of the word is unknown, but it is doubtless included in the cant term "pal".

 

4. The Cook's Tale is unfinished in all the manuscripts; but in some, of minor authority, the Cook is made to break off his tale, because "it is so foul," and to tell the story of Gamelyn, on which Shakespeare's "As You Like It" is founded. The story is not Chaucer's, and is different in metre, and inferior in composition to the Tales. It is supposed that Chaucer expunged the Cook's Tale for the same reason that made him on his death- bed lament that he had written so much "ribaldry."