| SUMMONER | His tale follows the Friar's in "The Canterbury Tales" |
| MENDICANT | Given to begging, like the Friar in The Canterbury Tales (9) |
| REEVE | His tale follows the miller's |
| TUCK | Name of the friar in the legends of Robin Hood; a child's personal supply of snacks/food at school; or, a move in gymnastics, skiing and trampolining (4) |
| FRANCISCAN | Member of an order of mendicant friars in the Roman Catholic church (10) |
| DOMINIC | Saint ---, Spanish priest who founded an order of preaching friars in the 13th Century (7) |
| TABARD | The ... was an inn in Southwark that was the starting point for the pilgrimage in The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer (6) |
| BATH | The Wife of ___ (title character in one of the stories in The Canterbury Tales) |
| INN | The Tabard in "The Canterbury Tales," e.g. |
| THETABARD | Inn in Southwark, London, mentioned in The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer |
| INNKEEPER | Harry Bailly, in "The Canterbury Tales" |
| PILGRIM | Many a character in "The Canterbury Tales" |
| FRIAR | Summoner's rival in "The Canterbury Tales" |
| WIFE | ___ Of Bath, a narrator in The Canterbury Tales (4) |
| THEFRANKLIN | One of Chaucer's pilgrims in the Canterbury Tales (3,8) |
| FART | Comic device used several times in "The Canterbury Tales" |
| PLOWMAN | Agricultural figure in "The Canterbury Tales" |
| REEVES | Oswald in "The Canterbury Tales", et al. |
| PARSON | Pilgrim in "The Canterbury Tales" |
| HEROIC | ___ couplet (poetic form in "The Canterbury Tales") |