consisting of different things; miscellaneous; various
Explanation:
The adjective <em>sundry </em>means several, various and diverse. In the passage from Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales," the use of the word <em>sundry </em>has to do with the different kinds of pilgrims who traveled to Canterury together. In that matter, the group was integrated by people of all social status and morals, such a nun, a knight, a wife and a pardoner.