登陆注册
14725700000052

第52章 CHARACTERISTICS OF CHAUCER AND OF HIS POETRY.(2)

Herein, as in many other points, a contrast is noticeable between him and the great Italian masters, who were so sensitive as to the esteem in which they and their poetry were held. Who could fancy Chaucer crowned with laurel, like Petrarch, or even, like Dante, speaking with proud humility of "the beautiful style that has done honour to him," while acknowledging his obligation for it to a great predecessor? Chaucer again and again disclaims all boasts of perfection, or pretensions to pre-eminence, as a poet. His Canterbury Pilgrims have in his name to disavow, like Persius, having slept on Mount Parnassus, or possessing "rhetoric" enough to describe a heroine's beauty; and he openly allows that his spirit grows dull as he grows older, and that he finds a difficulty as a translator in matching his rhymes to his French original. He acknowledges as incontestable the superiority of the poets of classical antiquity:----Little book, no writing thou envy, But subject be to all true poesy, And kiss the steps, where'er thou seest space Of Virgil, Ovid, Homer, Lucan, Stace (Statius).

But more than this. In the "House of Fame" he expressly disclaims having in his light and imperfect verse sought to pretend to "mastery" in the art poetical; and in a charmingly expressed passage of the "Prologue" to the "Legend of Good Women" he describes himself as merely following in the wake of those who have already reaped the harvest of amorous song, and have carried away the corn:--And I come after, gleaning here and there, And am full glad if I can find an ear Of any goodly word that ye have left.

Modesty of this stamp is perfectly compatible with a certain self-consciousness which is hardly ever absent from greatness, and which at all events supplies a stimulus not easily dispensed with except by sustained effort on the part of a poet. The two qualities seem naturally to combine into that self-containedness (very different from self-contentedness)which distinguishes Chaucer, and which helps to give to his writings a manliness of tone, the direct opposite of the irretentive querulousness found in so great a number of poets in all times. He cannot indeed be said to maintain an absolute reserve concerning himself and his affairs in his writings; but as he grows older, he seems to become less and less inclined to take the public into his confidence, or to speak of himself except in a pleasantly light and incidental fashion. And in the same spirit he seems, without ever folding his hands in his lap, or ceasing to be a busy man and an assiduous author, to have grown indifferent to the lack of brilliant success in life, whether as a man of letters or otherwise. So at least one seems justified in interpreting a remarkable passage in the "House of Fame," the poem in which perhaps Chaucer allows us to see more deeply into his mind than in any other. After surveying the various company of those who had come as suitors for the favours of Fame, he tells us how it seemed to him (in his long December dream) that some one spoke to him in a kindly way, And saide: "Friend, what is thy name?

Art thou come hither to have fame?"

"Nay, forsoothe, friend!" quoth I;

"I came not hither (grand merci!)

For no such cause, by my head!

Sufficeth me, as I were dead, That no wight have my name in hand.

I wot myself best how I stand;

For what I suffer, or what I think, I will myselfe all it drink, Or at least the greater part As far forth as I know my art."With this modest but manly self-possession we shall not go far wrong in connecting what seems another very distinctly marked feature of Chaucer's inner nature. He seems to have arrived at a clear recognition of the truth with which Goethe humorously comforted Eckermann in the shape of the proverbial saying, "Care has been taken that the trees shall not grow into the sky." Chaucer's, there is every reason to believe, was a contented faith, as far removed from self-torturing unrest as from childish credulity. Hence his refusal to trouble himself, now that he has arrived at a good age, with original research as to the constellations. (The passage is all the more significant since Chaucer, as has been seen, actually possessed a very respectable knowledge of astronomy.) That winged encyclopaedia, the Eagle, has just been regretting the poet's unwillingness to learn the position of the Great and the Little Bear, Castor and Pollux, and the rest, concerning which at present he does not know where they stand. But he replies, "No matter!

--It is no need;

I trust as well (so God me speed!)

Them that write of this matter, As though I know their places there."Moreover, as he says (probably without implying any special allegorical meaning), they seem so bright that it would destroy my eyes to look upon them. Personal inspection, in his opinion, was not necessary for a faith which at some times may, and at others must, take the place of knowledge;for we find him, at the opening of the "Prologue" to the "Legend of Good Women," in a passage the tone of which should not be taken to imply less than its words express, writing, as follows:--A thousand times I have heard men tell, That there is joy in Heaven, and pain in hell;And I accorde well that it is so But natheless, yet wot I well also, That there is none doth in this country dwell That either hath in heaven been or hell, Or any other way could of it know, But that he heard, or found it written so, For by assay may no man proof receive.

But God forbid that men should not believe More things than they have ever seen with eye!

Men shall not fancy everything a lie Unless themselves it see, or else it do;For, God wot, not the less a thing is true, Though every wight may not it chance to see.

The central thought of these lines, though it afterwards receives a narrower and more commonplace application, is no other than that which has been so splendidly expressed by Spenser in the couplet:--Why then should witless man so much misween That nothing is but that which he hath seen?

同类推荐
  • 断桥妙伦禅师语录

    断桥妙伦禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Black Dwarf

    The Black Dwarf

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 紫微斗数

    紫微斗数

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 伤寒心法要诀

    伤寒心法要诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 寒温篇

    寒温篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 快穿之邪不胜正:正宫翻身记

    快穿之邪不胜正:正宫翻身记

    安书兰惨遭渣男出轨,抛弃,不小心出了车祸用灵魂与系统签约,穿梭时空拯救正宫娘娘
  • 神君溺宠逆天小萌狐

    神君溺宠逆天小萌狐

    她有天下第一的容貌,呆萌可爱,实打实的吃货。说话,做事从不经过大脑思考,总是闯祸。他高冷,有天下第一的武功。不把任何人放在眼里,只独宠她一人。为她步步为营。“风哥哥,我饿了”“那我来喂饱你”他一把将她搂入中“风哥哥,我只是想填饱我的胃”
  • 西药常识

    西药常识

    《西药常识》一书,由长期工作在医疗第一线,且具有丰富教学经验和培训经验的专家教授编写。随着科学的发展,很多药品对家庭来说,已成为必备药,常用药。例如抗生素、抗感染药等,特别是有些新药,虽然同过去常用药物具有相同效用,但用法、用量往往不同。有些人服用时,好凭以往经验,或道听途说草率服用,这是非常有害的。
  • 清清告诉奕

    清清告诉奕

    前一秒,谭清是“上得厅堂,下得厨房;钩的了老大,斗的过流氓~”下一秒--谭清捂着红扑扑的脸蛋儿:“完了完了,每次见到老大都呼吸急促大脑失控心跳加速手足无措,是不是”见到老大恐惧症啊~~~”闺蜜唐湄拍拍她的肩膀“笨丫头,你这是坠入爱河,捞不出来的节奏啊。”
  • 那一年的风花雪月

    那一年的风花雪月

    每当初冬下雪时,总会想起那场风花雪月的爱情,唯美的爱情。
  • THE DARK LADY OF THE SONNETS

    THE DARK LADY OF THE SONNETS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 烈风断弦图

    烈风断弦图

    纵观天下,世间万物,无数生灵,变幻不定,神秘莫测,光怪陆离,奇闻异事不绝于世,而真正为世人所知者,无几。
  • 网游之仙魔传奇

    网游之仙魔传奇

    修行之道,危机并存,逆天之旅,至此方生,是生是死,是因是果,是命运,是抉择。
  • 原谅我,亲爱的

    原谅我,亲爱的

    如果有一天,我放弃了,不是因为输了而是因为我懂了。一一金诗雅原谅我,亲爱的。我想陪你天荒地老。一一吴世勋那么耀眼的你,是我永远不可言说的怦然心动。一一鹿晗总以为只要我对你好,你就不忍心对我太坏。一一张艺兴说真的,我好怕你喜欢别人。一一边伯贤
  • 名门公敌,总裁放肆爱

    名门公敌,总裁放肆爱

    楚家大小姐,就是澜城名媛的反面教材,任性狂妄目中无人。什么出格的事情就做什么。而她做过最大胆出格的事情就是……把自己的监护人给撩了。撩完就跑。“楚翘,开完车逃逸知道什么罪吗?--情节虚构,请勿模仿