The Canterbury Tales | Commentary: The Nun’s Priest’s Tale

In the following essay excerpt, E. Talbot Donaldson examines the role of rhetoric in “The Nun’s Priest’s Tale.”

It is the nature of the beast fable, of which the “Nun’s Priest’s Tale” is an example, to make fun of human attitudes by assigning them to the lower animals. Perhaps no other form of satire has proved so charming throughout literary history. From Aesop’s fables through the medieval French mock-epic Reynard the Fox (upon a version of which the “Nun’s Priest’s Tale” relies for its slight plot), down to La Fontaine and Br’er Rabbit, the beast who acts like a man has enjoyed general popularity. In the “Nun’s...

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