Criticism of the portraits in Chaucer's General Prologue to the
Canterbury Tales has taken various directions : some critics have
praised the portraits especially for their realism, sharp
individuality, adroit psychology and vividness of felt life; others,
working in the genetic direction have pointed out actual historical
persons who might have sat for portraits; others appealing to the light
of medieval sciences, have shown the portraits to be filled with the
lore of Chaucer's days and to have some typical identities like case
histories.
Resemblance to the Tales of Decameron
According to W.H.Clowson, The Canterbury Tales resembles to Boccacio's Decameron in 4 ways:
- The tales are told in succession by the members of an organized group.
- This group is brought together by special external circumstances.
- There is narrative and conversational links between the tales.
- There is a preciding officer.
‘The general tone of the framing narrative and the general topics of
its tales are very similar to those of Chaucer's. […] and in
Boccaccio's apology for the impropriety of some of his stories he makes
the same defence as that offered by Chaucer for the same fault --- that
he must tell what happened, that the reader may skip any tale he
wishes, and that such stories are purely for entertainment and are not
to be taken too seriously.'
But the majority of the scholars of Chaucer believed that this
link is not established properly. More over there is no evidence that
Chaucer met Bocaccio in 1373 --- during his brief vist to Florence.
Unity in diversion in Prologue
Chaucer in his Prologue, tried to present portraits of all the
‘strata' of life, but this variety is only the interior frame work
which functions with the exterior circle which gives unity to all the
characters. Such a unity, it may be argued, is fulfilled only due to
the reason ( in A.W. Hoffman's words) that ‘ all the portraits are
portraits of pilgrims': “and pilgrimes were they alle”
Treatment of ‘Love” in Prologue
Love has been treated in the prologue from the beginning as a character, a matter of the body and spirit.
The note of love that is sounded in different keys ball through the portraits, such as :
The Knight : “… he loved chivalrie…”
The prioress : “… Amor vincit omnia …”
Wife of Bath : “… of remedies of love she knew perchance, For she koude of that art the olde daunce”
The Pardoner : “… com hider, love, to me!”
The pilgrims were represented as affected by a variety of
destructive and restorative kinds of love. Their characters and
movements can be described by the mixture of love that drives them and
love that calls and summons.
Character sketches in Prologue
According to William J. Long, ‘In the famous “ Prologue” the
poet makes us acquainted with the various characters of his drama.
Until Chaucer's day popular literature had been busy chiefly with the
gods and heroes of a golden age: it had been essentially romantic, and
so had never attempted to study men and women as they are, or to
describe them so that the reader recognizes them, not as ideal heroes,
but as his own neighbors. Chaucer not only attempted this new realistic
task, but accomplished it so well that his characters were instantly
recognized as true to life'
Throwing light to another aspect of Chaucer's characterization
A. Compton Rickett writes: ‘[…] His people always on the move. Never do
they become shadowy or lifeless. They shout and swear, and laugh and
weep, interrupt the story teller, pass compliments, and in general
behave themselves as we might expect them to in the dramatic
circumstances of the narrative. It is never possible to confuse the
story teller: each is distinct and inimitable, whether it be the
sermonizing Pardoner, the hot-tempered Miller, or the exuberantly
vivacious Wife of Bath, who has had five husbands, but experience
teaching her that husbands are transient blessings, she has fixed her
mind on a sixth!'
Prologue copies the exact life: Ambiguity and Double view of pilgrimage
The prologue begins by presenting a double view of Canterbury
pilgrimage ----- one tiny manifestation of a huge tide of life.
This is not so as only because Chaucer sketched the varieties
of different species from the human society, but also because of the
presence of the Double View of pilgrimage in his portrait, which is
also a miniature of the real social life and this one is enhanced and
extended by the portraits where it appears, in one aspect, as a range
of motivation. This range of motive spreads from the sacred to the
secular and on to the profane. All the pilgrims are in fact granted a
sacred motive ---- all of them are seeking the shrine. But when we move
to actual motivation among the portraits and we find the difference.
The Knight and the Parson are at the opposite end of the spectrum. Same
is the case of Summoner and the Pardoner.
In A.W. Hoffman's words : ‘And the pilgrims who move, pushed
by the impulse and drawn by vows, none merely impel and non perfectly
committed . and this reflect the common human ambiguity in real life'
William Blake's Observation : Characters of all time
William Blake says : ‘[…]The characters of Chaucer's Pilgrims
are the characters which compose all ages and nations: as one age falls
another rises […] [,but] we see the same characters repeated again and
again […]. Names alter, things never alter' and this is the special
characteristics of Chaucer's portraits.
And moreover what is interesting , according to Blake is : ‘[…]
As Newton numbered stars […] Chaucer numbered the classes of men'.
Pattern of description of the characters in Prologue: from high to low ranks
The military estate is followed by the clerical estates; the
clerics by the laity; an upper middle class by a lower one; with the
rascals at the end.
Further Chaucer had used the arrangement in apparently causal
order of descending importance of merit. Even there is an arrangement
that has moral patterns.
Personality of Chaucer
E.Talbot Donaldson proposed [in his essay ‘Chaucer the Pilgrim',
PMLA, LXIX (1954)] that Chaucer the pilgrim was a fictional creation of
Chaucer the poet, with a distinct personality of his own which was very
unlike that of his creator. This pilgrim is an amiable, exceedingly
naïve bourgeois who admires success of every kind, but especially
material success, who uncritically accepts the values of the upper
class, as these are embodied in the Knight, the Prioress, the Monk and
the Friar; and who recognizes virtue and and wickedness only when they
are thoroughly obvious.
But Jhon M. Major [ in his essay ‘The Personality of Chaucer
the Pilgrim', PMLA, LXXV 9June 1960)] says that there are still many
things which fall out of this theory and for which ‘we are forced to
construct a different kind of narrator from the one Professor Donaldson
has represented'. ‘Granted that Chaucer does employ a persona in the
Canterbury Tales; still, he does not employ him very consistently.[…]
we think narrator as a kind of alter ego of the poet himself, with just
so many shades of difference as allow for ironic play, no difficulty is
raised by the alternating points of view. This narrator reveals himself
to be, like his creator, perceptive, witty, sophisticated, playful,
tolerant, detached, and, above all, ironic. Such a man is very well
aware of the significance of what he observes, though he may show his
awareness by subtle means.[…]That real persona, who is far from being a
fool, understands what he sees ought to be clear from a number of
indications. Not that he is given to moralizing; Chaucer the pilgrim,
like his companion the Parson, has a wide tolerance of human weakness,
and he can warm up to almost all of his fellow pilgrims, especially if
they are convivial. Most of what he observes, both the good and the
bad, he reports with a straight face with a deliberate irony.'
Some important characters of The Prologue to Canterbury Tales :
The Knight and the Squire:
The Knight and Squire with the Squire's Yeoman lead the procession, as Chaucer has placed them in the first position.
William Blake says that : ‘ the Knight is a true hero, a good
great and wise man; his whole length of portrait on horse back, as
written by Chaucer can not be surpassed.' He is ‘that species of
character which in every age stands as the guardian of man against
oppressor.'
The portraits of the Knight and the Squire have a particular
interest. The relationship between these two are governed by natural
one that of a father and son. Again there is a dramatic relationship
between these two as each one of portrait is enhanced and defined in
presence of another. For instance the long roll of Knight's campaigns
and Squire's little opportunity; a series of past tenses, a history for
the Knight and for the Squire breaking forth in active participles.
Even appearances and dress of both are compared.
Knight's pilgrimage is more nearly a response to the voice of saint.
The Knight is defined in terms of his virtues (lines 45-6) and
actions to defend the faith far more than by his words. Knight's
fighting in battle field had a religious cause. He is the antique
pattern of the chivalry of Edward- III's time.
The Nun ( Prioress)
Prioress is described as of the first rank, rich and honored.
She had certain peculiarities and little delicate affections. She was
accompanied by what is truly grand, polite and elegance.
Chaucer has portrayed this character with such care and
tenderness that it is often remarked that Chaucer really liked the
prioress very much, even though he satires her so gently ---- very
gently. But E.T Donaldson believes that this is just an understatement
and Chaucer may not be said to be have liked her, rather he was only
charmed by her beauty.
Eileen Power's illustration show with what extra-ordinary skill
the portrait of the Prioress is packed with abuses of typical 14th
century nuns. Though these abuses are petty, it is clear the Prioress
is anything but a perfect nun and attempts to white wash her.
It has been argued that Chaucer's appreciation for the Prioress
as sort of heroine of courtly romance actually due to Chaucer's
sophisticated living, where he cared little whether amiable nuns are
good and this sophistication permits itself to babble superlatives.
Anyway Prioress's very presence in the pilgrimage, as many
point out, is the very first satiric touch. In the case of Prioress
blemish is sufficiently technical to have only faint satiric coloring.
But this places her at a spot in the sequence --- at one end --- in
which more obviously blemished Monk and friar appear.
In the portrait of the Prioress the double view of pilgrimage
appears both in ambiguity in the surface and in an implied inner range
of motivation.
In the surface there is a name Eglentyne --- means romance ---
and ‘simple and coy' is a romance formula, but she is a nun. There are
coral beads and green gauds, --- a religious emblem. What shall be
taken as principal? Are her courtly manners or her dedication at divine
service explains her? And on the front of motivation, the perfect
explanation lies in the lines of A.W.Hoffman : ‘There is such an impure
but blameless mixture as Prioress …'. Deficiency of knowledge may be
remedied (which caused due to Chaucer's attempt to make more gentle
criticism on the Prioress). It is because, as many believe, Chaucer has
a sister or a daughter who was a nun.
Prioress is the character who is found to be pre-dominating in
some ages. William Blake has observed that ‘The characters of women
Chaucer has divided into two classes, the Lady Prioress and Wife of
Bath. Are not these leaders of the ages of men? The lady Prioress in
some ages predominates; and in some the wife of Bath, in whose
character Chaucer has been equally minute and exact because she is a
scourge and blight'.
Wife of bath
William Blake has observed that ‘The characters of women Chaucer
has divided into two classes, the Lady Prioress and Wife of Bath. Are
not these leaders of the ages of men? The lady Prioress in some ages
predominates; and in some the wife of Bath, in whose character Chaucer
has been equally minute and exact because she is a scourge and blight'.
The main features of her character are common-sense and
pre-occupation with sex, and an important element in Prologue is her
desire to explain life in terms of her values. For instance: ‘She is
willing to admit, for her convention's sake that chastity is the ideal
state. But it is not her ideal.
In prologue, she explains her five husbands.
She She was a good woman but unfortunately rather deaf. The
deafness is a significant detail --- the result of a blow from her
fifth husband.
In medieval theory and law, biblical in origin, the man is the
head of the woman, and should be obeyed. The Wife, however, is not
receptive to this doctrine, and her deafness is the symbolic of this
unwillingness to listen. Physical characteristics in her portrait have
a moral import. Other such characteristics in case of Wife of Bath are
the following. The Wife is a gate-toothed. Medieval students of
physiology held that to have teeth widely spaced was a sign of
boldness, falseness, gluttony and lasciviousness. The Wife born under
Venus (who was not saint) regards it as confirmation of venereal
nature. Her ‘gate-teeth' gave her many opportunities to wander off the
road.
The Wife's portrait begins with a standard feature of the
dreadful women, whom clerks in the Middle Ages liked the same way as
the wives of the Guilds men (lines 376-8). This liking for display is
cleverly combined by Chaucer with her profession (cloth-making). Her
stockings are scarlet and tight laced, and her shoes are “moiste and
newe”. She is thus the scarlet woman, whom preachers against female
vanity love to hate. But this is Chaucerian as she is both sexually
attractive and at the same time ridiculously over dressed.
The Wife turns out to be the monster of anti feminist comedy
--- aggressive, nagging, gossiping, lustful and wasteful. Yet she is
not unattractive.
Apart from five husbands and other youthful company we are
told that she had passed “many a strange strem”. Then : “Of remedies of
love she knew per chance
For she koud of that art the olde daunce”
(lines 475-6)
The ‘remedies' and ‘olde daunce' do not suggest virtue. All in
all she is quite contract to the chastity, modesty and refinement of
the Prioess.
This article was posted on February 07, 2005