marriage unless she had this and it seems to prove one of Chaucer's views on marriage. The Clerk's Tale is about a man, King Walter, who was known to be close to perfect, but his only flaw was that he wished not to marry.
The people in town wished he would marry and he complied by marrying a woman named Griselde, but wanted to put her through a series of tests, such as killing two of her newly born children, to prove that she truly loved him. In the end, Griselde overcame his cruel tests after he asked to marry another and she replied with such an answer he was looking for. Chaucer's view on marriage in the Clerk's Tale is that men in the relationship should have the dominant power over their wife and that all wives must obey their husbands, but not all have to go through what Griselde necessarily had to deal with. Walter had complete control over Griselde and she never objected to it or said anything and this was the sense of male dominance that Chaucer was trying to
imply. The Merchant's Tale is about an old, blind man, January, who wanted to marry. January's two brothers, Placebo and Justinus, both have different opinions on his idea. Placebo backs the idea of marriage, but Justinus despised his idea and marriage itself. January marries a woman, May, who he has a happy marriage with, but his squire, Damien, falls in love with her. Damien ultimately tells her how he feels about her and one day they make love in a tree and when January asks about it, May immediately denies and he believes her. During this tale, Chaucer implies that he also believes in the same view as Justinus does. Chaucer creates that image that marriage can only bring sorrow and misery and you can never receive happiness from a marriage, which is simply pointless to have. Chaucer shows completely different views on the discussion of marriage in all of these tales. He is not consistent in his beliefs, but he expresses his numerous amounts of views through different these different genres of tales. It is interesting to see what Chaucer actually believes in when it comes to different types of marriage because it is not the typical types of views you see often. Some of these tales were highly fictional, but Chaucer still visibly got the general viewpoint of marriage through to his readers.