The Merchant's Tale: Revision Quiz
The Merchant's Tale: Revision Quiz
The Merchant's Tale: Revision Quiz
1. Q: On his wedding night, why was Januarie shave all newe in his manere?
(line 614)
A: Young men shaved and old men grew beards. This shows Js attempt to
fake youth and virility.
2. Q: Who said: For, God it woot, I have wept many a teere / Ful prively, sin I
have had a wyf.?
3. Q: Slakke skin about his nekke shaketh and his fresshe May. What do
these two quotations emphasise about Januarie and Mays relationship?
A: Two months
A: Pyrie or pear
6. Q: How is the following metaphor used and what is its relevance to the rest
of the poem?
But certeynly, a young thing may men aye,
Right as men may warm wex with handes plye.
A: May has made a wax impression of the key to the gate of the garden,
Damyan has a key made. May and Januarie visit the garden and she
makes signs for Damyan to go in first.
A: It is Justinus way of explaining that only he knows the faults of his wife.
It highlights the difference between appearance and reality.
9. Q: I have, quod he, herd seyd, full yore ago, / Ther may be no man han
parfite blisses two / This is to seye, in erth and eek in hevene.
Who says this?
A: Januarie
A: Both names are seasonal. Jan is a Winter month when things are cold,
dead, withered. May is Spring which represents birth, warmth and
creation. This highlights the couples incompatibility.
A: J Both physically and metaphorically blind. The moral that May gives.
D Courtly lover love is blind. A critical view of CL is given through
parody.
A: The series of questions one after the other builds the strength of her
argument. They highlight the major weaknesses in Plutos argument.
She proves that men are not as noble as they are first labelled. She
suggests that men are ignorant of the truth whereas women are more
knowledgeable and intuitive.