Sunday, August 18, 2019
Bad Medicine :: Essays Papers
Bad Medicine    Before the age of television shows, movies, and the Internet people entertained one another with vibrant and exaggerated tales.  Geoffrey Chaucerââ¬â¢s, The Canterbury Tales, is a good example of this form of entertainment. The novel details the journey of a band of pilgrims, who engaged in a storytelling competition, as they travel toward the shrine of Thomas à   Becket.  These Middle Age storytellers varied as much as the stories, and consisted of a knight, physician, monk, and many more.  In ââ¬Å"the Prologueâ⬠ the Physician is revealed as a con artist who cares more about himself than his patients.     The Physician was a medical doctor, who was responsible for taking care of the ill and disease stricken.  ââ¬Å"No one alive could talk as well as he did / On points of medicine and surgeryâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬  (Chaucer 30).   He was part of the rising middle class society and his garments that were ââ¬Å"lined with taffetaâ⬠ (Chaucer 31) made this assumption apparent.      During the Middle Ages taffeta was a material like silk, which was very expensive, so only the wealthy could afford it. To many he seemed to be a productive member of society, but appearances can be deceiving. People of the medical profession were looked upon with a certain respect; so many patients did not question what was prescribed. The Physician misused his title to take advantage of his patientsââ¬â¢ faith.    He was revealed as a liar and a cheat. He was a partner with the druggist, to help each other build their wealth.      The reader can draw the appearance of his deceit in the following quote, ââ¬Å"He gave the man his medicine then and there. / All his apothecaries in a tribe / Were ready with the drugs he would prescribe / And each made money from the otherââ¬â¢s guile; / They had been friendly for a goodish whileâ⬠ (Chaucer 30).  Chaucer describes these habits of the physician in order to allow the reader to paint a mental picture of his morals and character. Chaucer also brings the readers attention to the fact that the Physician ââ¬Å"did not read the Bible very muchâ⬠ (31).   Chaucer implies that the Physician is a sinner, who did not see an error in his dishonesty.     Many analysts believe that Chaucer was trying to portray certain qualities through the vivid descriptions of the charactersââ¬â¢, such as in the following quote describing the physician; ââ¬Å"In blood-red garments, slashed with bluish grey / And lined with taffeta â⬠¦Ã¢â¬  (Chaucer 31).  					    
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