Showing posts with label ESSAY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ESSAY. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 July 2021

ESSAY: A COMEDY OF ERAS: MEDIEVAL MYSTERY PLAYS AND ELIZABETHAN COMEDIES: A COMPARISON

I wrote this during some ante-deluvian epoch when things were a bit funnier. Not perfect, not bad. It was interesting to root around in the the history of drama for a while, a wonderful art form, and one that will be with us for a long time to come. Don't slip on any banana peels!

 

Cheers, Jake.

 

IN THE SECULAR COMEDY OF THE ELIZABETHAN PERIOD, A number of dramatic elements and conventions survived from earlier medieval religious dramas. One of the most important of these is plot structure. In medieval mystery plays, (see definitions below) there is a basic design that has a representative Everyman figure journeying through three stages of life. In the play, "Castle of Perseverance", for example, Everyman is ‘born’; he introduces himself to the audience and then gives a history of his life.

 

This FIRST STAGE for medieval drama was considered to be one of innocence and a natural state for the characters. In later Elizabethan dramas this stage or phase is seen as ignorance. For eamaple, in the comedy, "Love’s Labour Lost", the “endeavor of our present breath” (I.i.5) is an oath of allegiance that, to Elizabethan audience, is seen as plainly unnatural. It is, in fact, antithetical to life, is celibate and non-celebratory. In "Love", the main characters will spend three years in secluded study, removed from the society of women and other earthly experiences. They will forego gaining knowledge of the world for this period of time. Like their medieval dramatic counterparts, they are innocent of reality, but to the Elizabethans, they are also ignorant.

For the earlier, medieval audience—a Christian audience—Everyman, at this stage, is deceived: he is innocent; he does not know that he must undertake trials and struggles as a necessary part of life in order to achieve spiritual salvation. And the plot centres around him being made to understand this necessity, which he will hopefully learn by the end of the play. The same structure can be seen in Elizabethan plays, such as Shakespeare's  "Love’s Labour Lost" or John Lyly's "Gallathea", with the threat of virgin sacrifice and the necessity of disguising the girl as a boy. Her disguise is obviously a false front, as is Navarre’s pact with his courtiers; it is also celibate (as a 'male' she cannot have sex) and anti-life (in the sense there is no chance for procreation), and a confrontation must follow. In the tradition of Elizabethan drama, ignorance is not the same as innocence: ignorance must be confronted and overcome by knowledge. This is an important distiction between the early medieval dramas and the Elizabethans: in the mystery plays, ignorance is accepted or at least understood (in the Christian sense, for fallen, fallible creatures in a fallen world are born ignorant, and live their lives as such--as farce--until they battle with life's temptations and find salvation in God's grace. Perhaps the best way to understand the difference between the two dramatic traditions is to see that the goal in a medieval mystery play is for the characters to achieve the grace of God and gain knowledge or an awareness of his presence in the world. On the other hand, later secular comedies have as goals the achieving of self-knowledge and/or a better understanding of the human condition--"Humanistic" goals, in other words.)

 

In the earlier, mystery dramas, the character of Mankind (the Everyman character in "Castle", for example) is innocent, and his innocence is seen as natural. But natural though it may be, Mankind nevertheless is still seen to live a partial and limited existence. For the medieval Christian, an innocent life is one that has not yet progressed through the challenges and trials of a fallen world. This initial stage of innocence in medieval drama is, in later, secular dramas, translated into the ‘false position’ stage as demonstrated by the self-deceptions of the main characters. In other words, for the Elizabethans, the ignorance of the main characters (how they become or remain self-deceived or deluded) does not excuse them from working to overcome their lack of self-knowledge and confronting the challenges set before them. 

A medieval audience would see such characters as living lives of farce, who in the end, if they continue living as such, will not redeem themselves by vanquishing the sins of their fallen natures. They fail in not recognizing that they have, first and foremost, a spiritual challenge to overcome in life. The character of Mankind will accept the challenge and gain salvation in the end.

In mystery plays' SECOND STAGE, Mankind is tempted, and enters into a world of farce. The medieval notion of farce is that evil (or the denial of God’s grace) is absurd and ultimately futile. But farce is also a part of life. In the eponymously-named play, "Mankind", characters that portray deception, or the fleshy pleasures of life, or "inversion"* all represent farce. They represent three examples of temporal trials with which Mankind must contend. The character "Mischief" inverts the social order by parodying "Mercy." And in the scene where Mankind attends a church service, the mass becomes a “black mass”; grace becomes  a sin, and hymns turn into obscene songs. Next, fleshy "Vices" tempt Mankind with the distractions of the temporal world, while, later on, the satanic figure "Titiuillus" tempts Mankind with his inverted logic.

In the later, secular dramas, farce is also represented by elements of deception, inversion and worldly pleasures. The variant is that in First Stage, Elizabethan characters they have begun their actions with false premises. In other words, they begin, not innocent like Mankind, but in a state of ignorance. In these secular dramas, this state represents a movement away from the humanistic ideals of the Renaissance (reason, understanding, knowledge), not the Christian ideals of the acceptance of sin, the need for penance and gaining redemption found in the mystery plays. The Second Stage is an intensification of the initial ‘false position’ of the First Stage in Elizabethan drama, with conflicts presented to force the characters to change their positions. The false premises that the characters live by are tested, found wanting and abandoned in the end. In medieval mystery plays, Mankind is tempted, falls, but eventually overcomes his temptations and is saved during the THIRD STAGE. As I will outline shortly, mystery plays operate within a broader scheme of "God's Time". The actions and conflict resolutions found there are less significant than whether or not the characters pass beyond the farcical nature of the temporal world and achieve spiritual salvation by the play's end. In Elizabethan comedies, on the other hand there is only the human or "Humanistic" time frame. The resolutions at the end only reflect the conflicts and challenges fround at the beginning. And perhaps the best that can be said for the dénouements found there is that any spiritual resolutions remain works in progress. 

Both mystery plays and secular comedies have similarities in their dénouements dramatic presentations of recognition and penance  . In "Love’s Labour Lost", the men recognize their false-love conventions and perform a meaningful trial or rite-of-passage (or penance), in order to achieve union with the women. Note that the goal of secular comedies is, of course, secular i.e. marriage and intimate human relationships. On the other hand, in medieval mysteries and related dramas (see below), while having the same over-all, three-part structure, their goal is the recognition of sin, the need for penance, and the reward of God’s grace.

 

As I've previously mentioned, it is important to realize that medieval mystery plays and secular Elizabethan comedies have two distinct sets of time frames. In mysteries, it is Farce Time and God's Time. In other words, the farcical, temporal trials that Everyman goes through occur within the broader context of God’s Time, as experienced by the audience. Through such characters as Mercy, for example, or the Doctor, or the Vexillators in "The  Castle of Perseverance", this broader, all-encompassing God's Time framework is introduced so the audience clearly sees how futile and false such temptations are within this larger framework. The audience knows that in the end, Mankind will be saved. 

 

In Elizabethan comedies, the false positions that characters adopt at the beginning of the play (the "complication" or "conflict") must be overcome by the end, for the character to succeed. The two time frames for secular comedy can be characterized as "Farce Time" and (the broader, all-inclusive) "Humanistic Time", replacing God's Time. Thus, the sacrifice of virgins, the need for disguise and the wooing-by-proxy in Robert Green's  "Friar Bacon" were all false positions adopted by the main characters. The plot involves working out these farcical positions within the  Humanistic framework of relationships, i.e. marriage (which promotes life, procreation and social stability.) 

Shakespeare carries this further by over-laying an even broader perspective on the play when he seems, at the end, to question marriage itself as a potentially false and farcical ideal. Is marriage, he asks, a suitable ending for the characters in "Love’s Labour Lost"? It's an open question, and one left unanswered by the play's end. In the final scene, the nobleman Berowne  tells the King that to continue with his disguise, for a "twelvemonth and a day" (V.ii 951), as he plans to do, is "too long for a play" (V.ii 952).  In other words, he says it's too long to wait in order to answer the question of whether marriage is a suitable outcome for the two couples in the play. The process of answering the question will not fit within the time frame of the play. Thus, by following the king's timetable, the answer's discovery would extend beyond the play's frame.**

Other surviving traits of early medieval drama include the "Vice" figures who emerge later as clowns in Shakespeare’s work, characters such as Cosmid and Holefernes, or Miles and Rafe in Green's  "Friar Bacon". They act as ‘inverters’, much like their medieval counterparts. They invert the social hierarchies of the human world. In addition, the 'distance'+ that farce provides in both the mysteries and comedies allows the audience to more readily examine how a character acts. The audience in both traditions ‘knows' the outcome. Farce allows characters to be seen less as individuals and more as types representating various human characteristics and traits. Therefore, we can more clearly understand them as they encounter challenges in various situations. It is their reactions that are important, not so much external matters of  conflict and plot.

Both genres make use of rhetorical language, colloquialisms (scatological and obscene, as well). In the medieval mystery plays there is also direct dialogue with the audience (Mankind’s obscene song and collecting money from the audience, for example). In Elizabethan comedy, we see this transformed into the soliloquies and monologues, as well as in the spying and disguises used, where the audience directly participates, in a sense, as in "Love’s Labour Lost" sonnet-under-the-tree scene. 

 

In summary, the mystery plays and related  liturgical plays (see below) of the medieval age, with their ever-present elements of farce, were precursors of Elizabethan secular comedies, particularly with respect to their structure.

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* "Inversion" is a medieval concept of the world, social status, one's life situation literally turned 'upside down' or inverted. The "Great Chain of Being" was the Christian conception of life as a hierarchy, from God at the top on down to the lowliest elements of the universe. Humans, of course, were part of the hierarchy and their sub-catagories or levels included the king at the top on down to the lowliest serf. To invert, or change position on this hierarchy was to destabilize the whole edifice, and was therefore anathema to medieval Christian audiences. 

 

** With this statement, Berowne refers to Aristotle's archetypal dramatic conventions, which dictate that a play must observe the three unities: unity of time, place, and action. He rightly points out that a time span of a year is too long (for all the disguises to be removed and marriages to occur) for a play to be able to observe all three unities. 

The fact that Shakespeare draws the attention of the audience to the fact they are watching a play, an 'artiface', with Berowne's  reference to "a play" does seem to suggest he feels the question is 'too large' a question for a play to to answer. (Spark Notes)

 

+ In a farce or comedy, the audience knows the character is in a state of ignorance or is holding a false position, and armed with this awareness, they can examne the play's characters more objectively.

 

 

 

 

 

Morality Plays: "were dramatized allegories of the representative Christian life, in the mode of a quest fro salvation in which the crucial events are temptation, sin, and the confrontation with death. The protagonist represents Mankind, or Everyman; among other characters are personifications of virtues, vices and death, asd well as angels and demons..."  (Glossary 108)

 

Mystery Plays: called such in the archaic sense of the "trade" of the medieval guilds who sponsored these plays--is applied to dramas based on the Old and New Testements. The biblical plays originated within the church in about the tenth century." (Glossary 107)

 

Miracle Plays: "had as their subjects either a story from the Scriptures or else the life and martyrdom of a saint." (Glossary 107)

 

Farce: "Is a type of comedy designed to provoke the audience to simple, hearty laughter, using...exaggerated or caricatured types of characters...in improbable and ludicrous situations. Farce was a component in the comic episodes in medieval miracle plays, such as the Wakefield plays "Noah" and the "Second Shepherd's Play..." (Glossary 29)

 

 

 

 

Works Cited

 

Cawley, E. C. ed.  Everyman and Other Medieval Plays. NY: Everyman Paperback Classics Ltd., 1993.

 

Shakespeare, William. Love's Labours Lost in The Riverside Shakespeare. Ed. G.B. Evans. NY: Houghton Mifflin, 1974.

 

Abrams., M.H., ed. A Glossary of Literary Terms, fifth edition. Fort Worth, Chicago: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., 1988

 

https://www.sparknotes.com/shakespeare/labours/section7/

 

 

 

 

 

PROF COMMENTS: Strongly argued and well organized. the discussion of the 2nd stage…weakest; you seemed to shy away from offering specific examples of mischief, inversion and tempting absurdities in Elizabethan drama. This final page seems to be a rushed effort to include everything else that might seem relevant. Remember, "quality, not quantity". Good Work. B+/A-  A

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[I include the short essay, below, because it is on the same plays. Somewhat helpful in understanding Medieval Mystery plays.]


IN CLASS ESSAY: Topic may have been: "What is the role of Evil in Comedy?"

 

In the introduction to the Townley Shepherd’s Play, it [What?] states that comedy “illuminates the world of suffering.” And as we shall see, comedy also acts to illuminate evil. In several Corpus Christi plays, we have comedy side-by-side with evil. In The Second Shepherd’s Play, Mak, a character that we associate with evil, casts a spell over the three shepherds who asleep after their hard day’s work:

“Bot abowte you a serkyll, as rownde as a moyn,

To I have done that I wyll, Ayll that it be noyn,

That ye lyg stone styll…” (276).

 

Mak is also seen as a spirit of the pre-Christian pagan world, seeming to evoke magic to accomplish his ends. It is significant that he emerges or is introduced to us during the high point of the shepherds’ celebrations. The pastoral setting, the use of wine and the resulting intoxication* of the shepherds have strong echoes of the pagan Bacchanalian rituals. That Mak is introduced to us here, suggests his strong connection with such earlier, primitive rites.

What follows Mak’s introduction is the comic plot of the play. The first part provides us with the introduction to the three shepherds and a comic portrayal of the cares of the world:

Chystys crosse me spede, and Sant Nycholas!

Ther of had I need; it is wars then it was… (270).

 

This is followed by what might be interpreted as a sub-plot of the play, but as we shall see, it is rather a progression through the play’s main thematic elements rather than a digression. Again, Mak’s character is humorous; a medieval audience would see his clownish “spell” as artifice. The shepherds remain asleep—not through any magical power of Mak’s—but rather because they are drunk. Mak’s self-deception, [?] or more simply, sheer clowning, would also signal to the audience that this character, comic but corrupt and mischievous, a trickster, is also an ineffectual one. His “magic” is powerless. Mak’s magic fails in keeping the shepherds asleep. Nor do his tricks and deceits prevent them from journeying to Bethlehem. Had his “magic” succeeded, a major re-interpretation of the power of good versus evil, and the strength of the Christian community (as represented by the shepherds) would have been necessary. As it is, Mak’s humour in herding the sleeping shepherds’ flock (from which he will steal) adds to his comic, buffoon-like character:

“If the flek be skard, yit shall I nyp nere.

How, dreawes herderwad…” (276).

 

The dialogue with his equally corrupt wife Uxor gives the audience the necessary information that Mak will fail at whatever he attempts to do.

Returning to Mak’s introduction, the appearance of such an obviously mischievous, comically-corrupt character would signal that the events the shepherds were participating in, namely, drunken revelry, was corrupt. Or, perhaps more subtly, it can be put that evil participates in such events. The shepherds are seen as participating in evil, albeit that the “evil” is commonplace. We all drink, and hence the message is given that we all participate in evil. One of Mak’s strongest thematic purposes is to bring this point to the audience. From their drunkenness, their first song emerges. It is not the same as the song at the end of the play. It is corrupt, earthly and “Mak-like”.

Mak’s plot comes between the shepherd’s introduction and the ultimate completion of their journey to Bethlehem. The comic “maze” of deceits Mak and Uxor attempt to impose would have been seen by a medieval audience as representative of their own journey in life, a journey made through error, mistaken identities and worshipping false idols, until they at last achieve grace.

The shepherds emerge from Mak’s spells of deceit or evil and are tempted to seek revenge against him: “Get Wepy” [“get weapons!” (289). However, there is no bloodshed; only the symbolic removal of Mak (wrapped in a blanket) from their community. It is interesting to note that the shepherds’ ritual is effective in a way Mak’s is not. This would be seen as portraying the Christian journey (the acquisition of grace) as the only effective ritual to practice or believe in. In the end, as part of a Christian community, the shepherds succeed where Mak fails.

The importance of the clown figure, Mak, is two-fold. First, to the medieval mind, evil would be seen as comic in the sense that it is ultimately futile and ineffectual. The second purpose that Mak’s character fulfils (similar to the portrayal of Cain, Noah’s wife Uxor, Caliphas and even Satan) is for identification. We identify with the evil [careful!] we see because it is illuminated by the comic. Characters like Mak are like us (eg. Cain’s blustering complaints, Uxor’s laziness, etc.). They are human and understandable. Evil, then, is seen as a human trait and part of our makeup, not some grand and abstract notion.

The comic portrayal of evil acts as a bridge between the audience’s everyday experiences and what the playwright portrays in his interpretations, thematically. A “comic-less” Cain or an “epically complaining” Uxor would be seen as artificial, removed from everyday experience. Hence, the audience would not appreciate their own participation in evil found in such characters. With characters such as Mak, the audience can identify with evil and understand the playwright’s emphasis on rejecting those characters in which it is embodied.

The grotesque humour of the soldiers in The Scourging works, paradoxically, to remove any identification with such characters the audience might initially have. The soldiers’ emphasis on the minute details of their job and, most importantly, their failure to acknowledge their own participation in evil, works against identifying with them. As it should. They lack self-reflection; they fail to acknowledge that what they do is evil. We therefore reject the soldiers because the irony of the scene is too great: We cannot identify with those who deny they are like us.

Comedy acts both as a venue for identification and rejection (of evil), but in either case it illuminates the evil of the world, effectively and powerfully.

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 * I am not sure about this part; I thought the shepherds went to sleep after a long day of work, IIRC. There may be wine—I think the play has a scene with them eating their supper—but I am not sure if they are “drunk”. There may be mention of others celebrating and drinking, but again, I’m not sure if it is the shepherds. Ed.

  

 

PROF COMMENTS: An interesting answer—thoughtful and suggestive. Mark= A-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, 21 June 2021

ESSAY: ANOTHER LOOK AT THE CANTERBURY TALES

 

I’M NOT SURE IF THIS SHORT ESSAY WAS WRITTEN for my Chaucer course from long ago in the Way Back. It may have been, but unfortunately my archives were broken into by a bunch of magpies and papers got scattered about and used for execrable purposes. It could have been better written on my part, and I have done some editing of it for this post. My prof took it to task and red penned sections of it. I include his/her comments for readers because we can all learn from my mistakes. And hey, it’s not thaat bad!

 

Cheers, Jake.

 

The Monk: Characterization in the Prologue to The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer

 

It is appropriate that Chaucer chooses to introduce the Monk immediately following the Prioress, where he is described as an “outridere” (l. 166), someone associated with a monastery but who operates at a distance from it. In the pilgrimage, the Monk is associated with the Prioress and her group, but he is not actually part of their company. For the Monk, this distance is a spiritual one as much as it is physical.

Chaucer’s narrator begins by characterizing the Monk as “fair” (l. 165), that is, he is a fine example of a monk. The irony of this description is shortly revealed by lines in which we see the Monk characterized first as someone who loves hunting, “venerye” (l. 166), and who is also “manly” (l. 167) or someone who is strongly masculine. Both these descriptions suggest the Monk is motivated more by the senses than by a sense of spirituality. [Nicely expressed.] Should not a Monk first love God? And the fact that “venerye” has sexual connotations (OED, 3603) makes us suspect that the Monk is less in possession of those qualities that make an “abbott able” (l. 167) than the poem's opening lines would suggest. The fact that the narrator feels the Monk is unworthy of his office seems clear to us at this point and the obvious irony of the first line is revealed. But it is the presentation of subtle ironies of self-deception that Chaucer’s characterizations excel. We learn quickly enough that the narrator observes and condemns the greed and corruption of the Summoner, Pardoner, and the Monk. But it is through observations of their clothing and possessions, their physical mannerisms and instances of revealed motivation and biography that their individual personalities, complete with their illusions, emerge from behind what would otherwise be merely descriptions of stereotypical social “types”. There is the sense throughout the Prologue that for most of the characters self-deception is a common human failing. That is perhaps why Chaucer’s narrator does not condemn them, as unworthy as some of the pilgrims seem to be. We are all on the same pilgrimage, he seems to be telling us. 

 

Returning to the Monk, we find that this lover of hunting rides his “daintee” (l. 168) horse through the countryside with harness bells loudly “Ginglen in the whistling wind” (l. 170). One wonders how much game such a hunter will win given how he announces his presence every time he goes out riding. The reader contrasts this obvious demonstration of pride and lack of common sense with that of the description of the Yeoman who dresses simply and wears a Saint Christopher’s medal, and who is notably well versed in “wodecraft” (line 110). The fact that the narrator characterizes the Monk’s bells as being as loud as the chapel bells of the cell the Monk oversees clearly indicates how important hunting is to the Monk, or rather how important it is for the Monk to give the impression to others he is a hunter. It should be noted that the Benedictine Order practices the vow of silence. [Did you research this point?] The monk’s prideful use of harness bells gives us a clear picture as to his view of this rule. It should also be noted that the narrator refers to the Monk as the ‘Kepere” (l. 172) of the cell, reminding us that the Monk is someone who uses the power of his office to act with impunity—in this case to pursue his “lust” (l. 192) for hunting.

In the next section, Chaucer’s narrator provides us with a description of the Monk’s motivations as they are revealed in his commentary concerning the value of church doctrine, specifically the precepts of the Benedictine Order of which he is a member. Amusingly, [Not clear why this is amusing—he could be a progressive reformer.] the narrator reveals the Monk did not believe in the teachings of St. Maurus or St. Benedict because the rules were too old and essentially not in keeping with modern times. The Monk neglects to mention that the rules of the order are also strict. In two concise lines, Chaucer contrasts the narrator’s more accurate perception of the Monk’s character with the Monk’s self-deceptions. The Monk does not see he chooses to follow his own rules because the rules of his monastery are too demanding for him. Instead, he lets old things “pace” (l. 175).

 

The Monk has stated that the laws of the monastic order consider hunters to be “nought holy men” (l. 178) and therefore are not worth obeying. In fact, this rationalization by the Monk for not honouring his vows has little to do with the actual activity of hunting itself. Instead, it has more to do with the context in which hunting, and all other human activities, must be placed: namely within a Christian community. [Your expression is too cryptic here and you do not say what you mean] This is something the Monk does not accept; such a text, he says, is not worth an “oystre” (l. 182). (His example of an oyster is ironic as it is a creature leading an isolated, solitary existence, much like the Monk himself.

Chaucer uses the image of a fish out of water (the fish, a symbol of Christianity) to underscore the absurdity of the Monk’s position. He is, in fact, ‘outside’ the community of Christians. Chaucer’s use of the phrase “This is to sayn” (l. 181), which connects the two images of a fish out of water and a monk out of his cloister, ironically reinforces this view of the Monk.

In the next section, the narrator describes the Monk as a “prikasour” (l. 189). Since he is a monk in name [Not what you mean—he IS a monk] only, the narrator turns to an examination of the identity that the Monk professes to be his true one: that of a hard rider and hunter. His hunting dogs are described as being as “swift as fowl in flight.” (l. 190). We note that while the Monk sees little worth in domesticated chicken, as earlier he insisted the teachings of the Saints were of no more value than a “pulled hen” (l. 177), presumably, wild fowl are of greater value to him, reflecting perhaps his lack of reverence for life.* [There doesn’t seem to be much basis in the text for these conclusions] We also note, in the closing line of the Monk’s introduction, that his favourite food is swan, not wild boar or bear, or even hare that we presume a hunter would normally acquire but a domesticated and easily obtainable game fowl. Again, we note the obvious contrast between the Monk professes himself to be, a hunter, and what he actually is, namely, “a lord ful fat” (l. 200). With greyhounds swift as birds doing the work of running the hares to ground, there would be little else for him to do except to ride up, harness bells jingling, and collect his prey. The fact that his only passion is in hunting hares shows us how absurdly self-deceived he is. A true hunter hunts what is necessary and available to hunt, not what he chooses to hunt. The darkly humorous image of the Monk sparing no expense in his hunting endeavours suggests the contemporary image of the self-styled “hunter” spending thousands of dollars to kill an animal on a game farm. Of course, the fact that he wears only the finest fur clothing further elaborates for us how self-deceived he is. A true hunter would wear what fur is available and gotten from the labour of his own hands. 

 

The next description continues the examination of the Monk’s clothing. He wears a gold pin on his cloak containing the design of a stylized “love knot” (l. 197). The pin of gold is luxurious and markedly un-monk-like, and the love knot design is not a true love knot. Love knots were generally made of cloth and exchanged between lovers as a token of affection. (O.E.D., 1670) As he wears a representation of a love knot, this reinforces our view of him as “representing” himself, first as a Monk, then a hunter (and finally as a lover). The fact that the design is at the “grettere” (l. 197) end of the pin suggests the importance representation and false images play in his life. His cloak’s hood hides a bald head, that “shoon as any glas,” (l.198), suggesting his vanity, and is in contrast to the quiet green clothing and “brown visage” (l. 109) of the Yeoman. The Monk’s appearance also contrasts with the dignity and quiet grace of the Parson.

 

Next, Chaucer puns on the word “anoint” (l. 199) with its connotations of baptism and the sacramental inclusion into the Christian community. Here, the Monk’s face is ‘anointed’, but with the sweat and grease of his favourite food: “A fat swan” (l. 201). The narrator provides us with images of the Monk’s obesity and gluttony, saying he is “full fat” (l. 200), for example. We are told his eyes are like pots—cooking pot—glowing in a furnace; they bulge with gluttonous desire in an un-monk-like manner.

His boots are, of course, supple. He does not use them save for show. His horse was a “palfrey” (l. 107), an ordinary riding horse, often described as a “ladies” horse (O.E.D., 2058), and therefore unsuitable both for hunting and for a monk (especially a fat one).

Finally, the narrator describes the Monk as “nat pale as a forpined gost” (l. 205). This is interesting because the word ghost (“gost”) also describes the seat of spiritually in a person, the soul (O.E.D., 1138). But Chaucer uses this image to describe the Monk’s physical characteristics. He is by no means “ghost-like”. In fact, he is a fat, fleshy, red-faced lord. This also describes the Monk’s spiritual condition, for he is a “manly man” (l. 167) and not of the spirit.

 

In his characterization of the monk, Chaucer provides us with a description of a person in full flight from the reality [use" values" here instead to better qualify this] of his life. We see that he is neither a Monk nor is he a hunter, as he imagines himself to be. His actions in the world lack integrity because they lack context. [Not clear] Chaucer would say that his actions must be placed [unclear] within a Christian framework. To understand this, we must answer the question the narrator earlier posed: “How shal the world be served?” (l. 187). The Monk is right to say the world will not be served studying books and labouring with his hands. For him, these actions are divorced from their context. Instead, it is not the world that must be served, but God. The Monk has failed to grasp this basic message. Finally, the greatest irony for the Monk lies in his rejection of the teachings of “Austin” (l. 187), that is Saint Augustine, who was a Benedictine monk and the founder of the Christian church in Britain (Britannica, 700). He was also the first Archbishop of Canterbury, [ new arguments, facts, evidence should NOT be introduced during your summation] toward which the monk now “wolden ride[s]” (l. 27).

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* I agree with my prof's criticism here. My conclusion about the Monk here seems trite and superficial, and tossed-off without enought thought. His favouring "wild" fowl is probably more about his view of himself as a 'hunter'. (I might have been pushing it a bit.)

 

 

Works Cited

 

Chaucer, Geoffery. The Canterbury Tales. in The Norton Anthology of English Literature. Vol.1. Fifth ed. Ed. M.H. Abrams. N.Y: Norton, 1986.

 

Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. 2 vols. N.Y: Oxford University Press, 1971.

 

Goetz, Philip, W., ed. The New Encyclopedia Britannica. Vol. 1 Chicago: U of C Press, 1981. 

 

PROF COMMENTS: -5% failure to document properly. you make several good points, and the essay is lucidly written but ALL of your quotations from Chaucer are improperly documented. Don--you have written an essay that is in many places very fine, searching and often scholarly. You recognize, with some degree of subtly, the careful employment of irony to reveal character. Almost all of your paragraphs are very well constructed. At the core of each is solid and convincing evidence that supports your generalizations. I had no trouble detecting your themes and your argument is well-structured, interesting, and persuasive. This is an A- paper judged on content. the paper suffers however, from problems of expression—in fact one major problem ought to be overcome (your overuse of dashes and parenthesis—subordinate clauses--the pitfalls of which I have tried to illustrate here). [unclear] gave [unclear] 5% for [unclear] errors, but I do count 3% in penalties. Still, I am amending your grade to B+

 

[In response to my prof’s comments, I am not sure of the correct quotation documentation that should have been used. And I am not sure whether I’ve previously corrected it when I transcribed my Uni essays onto a Word document from my original hardcopy (old school) notes, some years ago. I think I have corrected most of my “subordinate clause” errors (Bad habit of mine.) And use of parenthesis. (Almost!) 

My summary is a bit unpolished and somewhat disjointed; it seems rushed. If I was closer to the material, I would have tried to do more rewriting, but it's been a while since I've read any Chaucer. So I deserved what I got, grade-wise, but I’m glad my prof found the paper generally well-written, though. Live and learn.]