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MIDDLE ENGLISH
LITERATURE
English literature of the medieval period - c.1100 to c.1500.
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Table of Contents
Background ................................................................... 3
The Early Period ............................................................. 4
The Thirteenth Century ..................................................... 4
The Fourteenth Century ..................................................... 5
Pearl ......................................................................... 5
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (c. 1375 - 1400) ........................ 7
WILLIAM LANGLAND ( c. 1330 - 1387) ................................. 8
Piers Plowman .............................................................. 8
Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1343 - 1400) .......................................... 9
Early Works ............................................................... 10
Italian Period ............................................................... 11
The Canterbury Tales - portrait of real people. .......................... 11
John Gower (c. 1330? - 1408) - English poet. ............................ 13
SIR THOMAS MALORY (c. 1405 - 1471) ............................... 14
King Arthur - Legendary Character / Royalty .......................... 15
The Fifteenth Century ..................................................... 16
WILLIAM CAXTON AND THE INTRODUCTION OF PRINTING
TO ENGLAND, 1476. ..................................................... 17
The Medieval Drama ...................................................... 18
TROPES, LITURGICAL PLAYS, AND MYSTERY PLAYS. ........ 19
THE MORALITY PLAYS. ............................................... 20
THE INTERLUDES. ...................................................... 21
THE LATER INFLUENCE OF THE MEDIEVAL DRAMA. ......... 22
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Background
The Norman conquest of England in 1066 traditionally signifies the
beginning of 200 years of the domination of French in English letters.
French cultural dominance, moreover, was general in Europe at this time.
French language and culture replaced English in polite court society and had
lasting effects on English culture. But the native tradition survived, although
little 13th-century, and even less 12th-century, vernacular literature is
extant, since most of it was transmitted orally. Anglo-Saxon fragmented into
several dialects and gradually evolved into Middle English, which, despite
an admixture of French, is unquestionably English. By the mid-14th cent.,
Middle English had become the literary as well as the spoken language of
England.
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The Early Period
Several poems in early Middle English are extant. The Orrmulum - a
12th-century work of Biblical exegesis, written in early Middle English
verse by a monk named Orm. It’s a verse translation of parts of the Gospels
which is of linguistic and prosodic rather than literary interest. Of
approximately the same date, The Owl and the Nightingale is the first
example in English of the débat, a popular continental form; in the poem,
the owl, strictly monastic and didactic, and the nightingale, a free and
amorous secular spirit, charmingly debate the virtues of their respective
ways of life.
The Thirteenth Century
Middle English prose of the 13th cent. continued in the tradition of
Anglo-Saxon prose—homiletic, didactic, and directed toward ordinary
people rather than polite society. The “Katherine Group” (c.1200),
comprising three saints' lives, is typical. The Ancren Riwle (c.1200) is a
manual for prospective anchoresses; it was very popular, and it greatly
influenced the prose of the 13th and 14th cent. The fact that there was no
French prose tradition was very important to the preservation of the English
prose tradition.
In the 13th cent. the romance, an important continental narrative verse
form, was introduced in England. It drew from three rich sources of
character and adventure: the legends of Charlemagne, the legends of ancient
Greece and Rome, and the British legends of King Arthur and the Knights
of the Round Table. Layamon’s Brut, a late 13th-century metrical romance
marks the first appearance of Arthurian matter in English.
Layamon's Brut, also known as the Chronicle of Britain and often
called simply Brut, is a Middle English poem compiled and recast by the
English priest Layamon. It is named for Britain’s mythical founder, Brutus
of Troy. The Brut is 16,095 lines long and narrates the history of Britain.
The rhyming style is the alliterative verse line style commonly used in
Middle English poetry. Layamon's Brut (c. 1215) is a history of England in
verse written in a form of Middle English and it remains one of the best
extant examples of early Middle English.
Original English romances include King Horn ( one of the earliest
Middle English romances which was written in a South Midlands dialect
somewhere around 1225 by an unknown poet and which is based on the
Anglo-Norman story) and Havelok the Dane ( a Middle English romance
story). Both 13th-century works retain elements of the Anglo-Saxon heroic
tradition.
However, French romances were far more influential than their English
counterparts. In England French romances popularized ideas of adventure
and heroism quite contrary to those of Anglo-Saxon heroic literature and
were representative of wholly different values and tastes. Ideals of courtly
love, together with its elaborate manners and rituals, replaced those of the
heroic code; adventure and feats of courage were pursued for the sake of the
knight's lady rather than for the sake of the hero's honor or the glory of his
tribal king.
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Continental verse forms based on metrics and rhyme replaced the AngloSaxon alliterative line in Middle English poetry. Many French literary forms
also became popular, such as a moral tale, the animal fable, and the dream
vision. The continental allegorical tradition, which derived from classical
literature, is exemplified by the Roman de la Rose, which had a strong
impact on English literature.
Medieval works of literature often center on the inevitability, sadness,
change, loss, and death; and the vanity of human grandeur. A number of
13th-century secular and religious Middle English lyrics are extant, but like
Middle English literature in general, the lyric reached its fullest flower
during the second half of the 14th cent. Lyrics continued popular in the 15th
cent., from which time the ballad also dates.
The Fourteenth Century
The poetry of the alliterative revival includes some of the best poetry in
Middle English. The Christian allegory The Pearl is a poem of great
intricacy and sensibility that is meaningful on several symbolic levels. Sir
Gawain and the Green Knight, by the same anonymous author, is also of
high literary sophistication, and its intelligence, vividness, and symbolic
interest render it possibly the finest Arthurian poem in English. Other
important alliterative poems are the moral allegory Piers Plowman,
attributed to William Langland, and the alliterative Morte Arthur, which,
like nearly all English poetry until the mid-14th cent., was anonymous.
Pearl
It is a Middle English alliterative poem written in the late 14th century.
Its unknown author, designated the "Pearl poet" or "Gawain poet", is
generally assumed to be the author of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,
Patience, and Cleanness and may have composed St. Erkenwald.
The poem may be divided into three parts: an introduction, a dialog
between the two main characters in which the Pearl instructs the narrator,
and a description of the New Jerusalem with the narrator's awakening. The
narrator, upset at the loss of his Pearl, falls asleep and begins to dream. In
his dream he is transported to a garden. Wandering by the side of a beautiful
stream, he becomes convinced paradise is on the other shore. He sees a
young maid whom he identifies as his Pearl.
When he asks whether she is the pearl he has lost, she tells him he has
lost nothing, that his pearl is merely a rose which has naturally withered. He
wants to cross to her side, but she says it is not so easy, that he must resign
himself to the will and mercy of God. He objects to the idea that God
rewards every man equally, regardless of his apparent due. She responds
that God gives the same gift of Christ's redemption to all. She instructs him
on several aspects of sin, repentance, grace and salvation. She describes the
earthly and the heavenly Jerusalem. She advises him to forsake all and buy
this pearl. He asks about the heavenly Jerusalem; she tells him it is the city
of God. He asks to go there; she says that God forbids that, but he may see it
by a special dispensation. They walk upstream, and he sees the city across
the stream, which is described in a paraphrase of the Apocalypse. He also
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sees a procession of the blessed. Plunging into the river in his desperation to
cross, he awakes from the dream back and resolves to fulfill the will of God.
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Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (c. 1375 - 1400)
Sir Gawain was one of the most popular heroes of Arthurian legend;
nephew of King Arthur, a knight of King Arthur’s Round Table. He was
regarded, particularly in the early romances, as the model of chivalry—pure,
brave, and courteous. In later romances, when spiritual purity was valued
more than chivalrous deeds, his character deteriorated, becoming
treacherous and brutal. Gawain is most famous as the hero of Sir Gawain
and the Green Knight.
In the tale, Sir Gawain accepts a challenge from a mysterious warrior
who is completely green, from his clothes and hair to his beard and skin.
The "Green Knight" offers to allow anyone to strike him with his axe if the
challenger will take a return blow in a year and a day. Gawain accepts, and
beheads him in one blow, only to have the Green Knight stand up, pick up
his head, and remind Gawain to meet him at the appointed time. The story
of Gawain's struggle to meet the appointment and his adventures along the
way demonstrate the spirit of chivalry and loyalty. He sets out to find the
Green Knight, and undergoes many trials to his ideals and virtue, as
compared with Beowulf who has to fight Grendel and his dam to save his
people.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a Medieval English romance in the
Arthurian tradition. The text is thought to have been composed in the midto late fourteenth century. The anonymous author is today called alternately
"The Pearl Poet," after the poem Pearl in the same manuscript, or "The
Gawain Poet."
Gawain is a verse romance.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is written in a North or West Midlands
dialect. Gawain was first published in 1839, and numerous translations and
retellings have appeared since.
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WILLIAM LANGLAND ( c. 1330 - 1387)
Langland, William, c.1332-c.1400, putative author of Piers Plowman. He
was born probably at Ledbury near the Welsh marshes and may have gone
to school at Great Malvern Priory. Although he took minor orders he never
became a priest. Later in London he apparently eked out his living by
singing masses and copying documents. His great work, Piers Plowman, or,
more precisely, The Vision of William concerning Piers the Plowman, is an
allegorical poem in unrhymed alliterative verse, regarded as the greatest
Middle English poem prior to Chaucer.
Piers Plowman
It is the title of a Middle English allegorical narrative poem by William
Langland. Piers is considered by many critics to be one of the early great
works of English literature along with Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Sir
Gawain and the Green Knight during the Middle Ages. The poem—part
theological allegory, part social satire—concerns the narrator's intense quest
for the true Christian life, which is told from the point of view of the
medieval Catholic mind. This quest entails a series of dream-visions and an
examination into the lives of three allegorical characters, Dowel ("DoWell"), Dobet ("Do-Better"), and Dobest ("Do-Best").
The poem begins in the Malvern Hills in Malvern, Worcestershire. A
man named Will falls asleep and has a vision of a tower set upon a hill and a
fortress in a deep valley; between these symbols of heaven and hell is a
"fair field full of folk", representing the world of mankind. In fact, he has
different visions, which he describes, and in which he exposes the
corruptions of society, the dissoluteness of the clergy, and the allurements to
sin, with considerable bitterness. In the early part of the poem Piers, the
humble plowman of the title, appears and offers himself as the narrator's
guide to Truth. The latter part of the work, however, is concerned with the
narrator's search for Dowel, Dobet and Dobest. It is both a social satire and
a vision of the simple Christian life. The poem consists of three dream
visions: (1) in which Holy Church and Lady Meed (representing the
temptation of riches) woo the dreamer; (2) in which Piers leads a crowd of
penitents in search of St. Truth; and (3) the vision of Do-well (the practice
of the virtues), Do-bet (in which Piers becomes the Good Samaritan
practicing charity), and Do-best (in which the simple plowman is identified
with Jesus himself).
The works of Geoffrey Chaucer mark the brilliant culmination of Middle
English literature. Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales are stories told each
other by pilgrims—who comprise a very colourful cross section of 14thcentury English society—on their way to the shrine at Canterbury. The tales
are cast into many different verse forms and genres and collectively explore
virtually every significant medieval theme. Chaucer's wise and humane
work also illuminates the full scope of medieval thought. Overshadowed by
Chaucer but of some note are the works of John Gower.
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Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1343 - 1400)
Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1343 - 1400) - is considered the greatest poet of the
Middle English period. He's well-known for "The Canterbury Tales." He has
been called "the father of English poetry. With his knowledge of Latin,
French and Italian literature, he transformed the world of literature.
Chaucer's greatest work was his "Canterbury Tales," a collection of stories
told by pilgrims on their way to Canterbury
Birthplace: London, England
Chaucer (the name is French and seems to have meant originally
'shoemaker') came into the world probably in 1338, the first important
author who was born and lived in London, which with him becomes the
centre of English literature. About his life, as about those of many of our
earlier writers, there remains only very fragmentary information, which in
his case is largely pieced together from scattering entries of various kinds in
such documents as court account books and public records of state matters
and of lawsuits. His father, a wine merchant, may have helped supply the
cellars of the king (Edward III) and so have been able to bring his son to
royal notice; at any rate, while still in his teens Geoffrey became a page in
the service of one of the king's daughters-in-law. In this position his duty
would be partly to perform various humble work in the household, partly
also to help amuse the leisure of the inmates, and it is easy to suppose that
he soon won favour as a fluent story-teller. He early became acquainted
with the seamy as well as the brilliant side of courtly life; for in 1359 he was
in the campaign in France and was taken prisoner. That he was already
valued appears from the king's subscription of the equivalent of a thousand
dollars of present-day money toward his ransom; and after his release he
was transferred to the king's own service, where about 1368 he was
promoted to the rank of esquire. He was probably already married to one of
the queen's ladies-in-waiting. Chaucer was now thirty years of age, and his
practical sagacity and knowledge of men had been recognized; for from this
time on he held important public positions. He was often sent to the
Continent - to France, Flanders, and Italy - on diplomatic missions; and for
eleven years he was in charge of the London customs, where the
uncongenial drudgery occupied almost all his time until through the
intercession of the queen he was allowed to perform it by deputy. In 1386 he
was a member of Parliament, knight of the shire for Kent; but in that year
his fortune turned - he lost all his offices at the overthrow of the faction of
his patron, Duke John of Gaunt (uncle of the young king, Richard II, who
had succeeded his grandfather, Edward III, some years before). Chaucer's
party and himself were soon restored to power, but although during the
remaining dozen years of his life he received from the Court various
temporary appointments and rewards, he appears often to have been poor
and in need. When Duke Henry of Bolingbroke, son of John of Gaunt,
deposed the king and himself assumed the throne as Henry IV, Chaucer's
prosperity seemed assured, but he lived after this for less than a year, dying
suddenly in 1400. Chaucer was buried in Westminster Abbey, becoming the
first to occupy what is now called Poet's Corner.
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Early Works
Chaucer's literary activity is often divided into three periods. The first
period includes his early work (to 1370), which is based largely on French
models, especially the Roman de la Rose and the poems of Guillaume de
Machaut. He drew inspiration from the rich French poetry of the period,
which was produced partly in France, partly in England.
Chaucer experimented with the numerous lyric forms which the French
poets had brought to perfection; he also translated, in whole or in part, the
most important of medieval French narrative poems, the thirteenth century
'Romance of the Rose' of Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meung, a very
clever satirical allegory, in many thousand lines, of medieval love and
medieval religion. Chaucer's chief works during this time are the Book of
the Duchess, an allegorical lament written in 1369 on the death of Blanche,
wife of John of Gaunt, and a partial translation of the Roman de la Rose.
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Italian Period
Chaucer's second period (up to c.1387) is called his Italian period
because during this time his works were modelled primarily on Dante and
Boccaccio. It dates from his first visit to Italy in 1372-3, where at Padua he
may perhaps have met the fluent Italian poet Petrarch, and where at any rate
the revelation of Italian life and literature must have aroused his intense
enthusiasm. From this time, and especially after his other visit to Italy, five
years later, he made much direct use of the works of Petrarch and Boccaccio
and to a less degree of those of their greater predecessor, Dante, whose
severe spirit was too unlike Chaucer's for his thorough appreciation. The
longest and finest of Chaucer's poems of this period, 'Troilus and Crisside'
is based on a work of Boccaccio. It’s one of the great love poems in the
English language. Here Chaucer details with compelling power the
sentiment and tragedy of love, and the psychology of the heroine who had
become for the Middle Ages a central figure in the tale of Troy. Chaucer
perfected the seven-line stanza later called rhyme royal.
Major works of the second period include poems: The House of Fame,
recounting the adventures of Aeneas after the fall of Troy; The Parliament
of Fowls, which tells of the mating of fowls on St. Valentine's Day and is
thought to celebrate the betrothal of Richard II to Anne of Bohemia; and a
prose translation of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae.
Chaucer's third period, covering his last fifteen years, is called his
English period, because now at last his genius, mature and self-sufficient,
worked in essential independence. Among the works of this period are the
unfinished 'The Legend of Good Women,' - a series of romantic
biographies of famous ladies and the prose fragment The Treatise on the
Astrolabe, written for his son Lewis.
The Canterbury Tales - portrait of real people.
To Chaucer's final period, in which he achieved his fullest artistic power,
belongs his masterpiece, The Canterbury Tales (written mostly after 1387) a poetic collection of stories widely regarded as the beginning of English
literature. This unfinished poem, about 17,000 lines, is one of the most
brilliant works in all literature in which he draws us into a very down-toearth world. The poem introduces a group of pilgrims journeying from
London to the shrine of St. Thomas à Becket at Canterbury. To help pass the
time they decide to tell stories which are bawdy, comical and pious.
Chaucer himself is among the pilgrims in the tales. Together, the pilgrims
represent a wide cross section of 14th-century English life.
By chance, 29 other pilgrims come trooping into the tavern, also headed
for Canterbury. Chaucer chats with all of them, becomes part of their group,
and decides to leave with them early the next morning. Chaucer then tells us
all about the group he's joined: who they are, what their station in life is,
even what they're wearing.
He proceeds to give us detailed descriptions of almost all of them,
starting with the Knight, the highest-ranking member of the group.
The Host has a plan - he proposes that each pilgrim should tell two tales
on the way to Canterbury and two more on the way back. Whoever tells the
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best tale-the most morally instructive as well as the most amusing - gets
treated to dinner by the rest of the gang on the return trip (at the Host's inn,
of course). Chaucer's description of each character tells us something about
the character's personality. We'll also learn something more about the
character based on the story he or she tells. Chaucer tells us much about
each pilgrim, not only by telling us what they do for a living, but also
through description of their clothes, attitudes, even their bodies. Chaucer's
list of attributes often parodies the standards set for a given rank, turning
some descriptions into great comedy. Through Chaucer's superb powers of
characterization the pilgrims—such as the earthy wife of Bath, the gentle
knight, the worldly prioress, the evil summoner—come intensely alive.
This literary form--a collection of disconnected stories bound together in
a fictitious framework--goes back almost to the beginning of literature itself;
but Chaucer may well have been directly influenced by Boccaccio's famous
book of prose tales, 'The Decameron' (Ten Days of Story-Telling). Between
the two works, however, there is a striking contrast, which has often been
pointed out. While the Italian author represents his gentlemen and ladies as
selfishly fleeing from the misery of a frightful plague in Florence to a
charming villa and a holiday of unreflecting pleasure, the gaiety of
Chaucer's pilgrims rests on a basis of serious purpose, however conventional
it may be.
The pilgrims' tales include a variety of medieval genres from the
humorous fabliau to the serious homily, and they vividly indicate medieval
attitudes and customs in such areas as love, marriage, and religion. Chaucer
was a master storyteller and craftsman, but because of a change in the
language after 1400, his metrical technique was not fully appreciated until
the 18th cent. Only in Scotland in the 15th and 16th cent. did his imitators
understand his versification.
Chaucer was among the first to use English to create a great work of
poetry, in an age when courtly languages like Latin and French were
typically favoured for poetry and stories.
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John Gower (c. 1330? - 1408) - English poet.
Gower, John was the best-known contemporary and friend of Chaucer,
who addressed him as “Moral Gower,” at the end of Troilus and Criseyde.
Apparently he was a Kentish landowner who lived in London until his last
years, when he became blind and retired as a layman to the priory of St.
Mary Overey. In the 15th and 16th cent. Gower was frequently paired with
Chaucer as a master of English poetry. He is remembered primarily for three
major works, the Mirroir de l'Omme, Vox Clamantis, and Confessio
Amantis, three long poems written in French, Latin, and English
respectively, which are united by common moral and political themes.
Gower's first work was Mirour de l'Omme (i.e. Mirror of Man) (written
before 1381), an allegorical poem in French meditating on the fall of man
and the effect of sin on the world. Gower later changed the title to Speculum
Meditantis to fit with the titles of his later works. is an allegorical manual of
the vices and virtues; Around 1381, Gower began work on Vox Clamantis
(i.e. The Clamoring Voice), an essay in Latin elegiac verse. Like the
Speculum Meditantis, it too treats of sinfulness, and criticizes the corruption
of the society.
It also provides a contemporary view of the Peasants' Revolt of 1381.
Gower's moral and philosophical writings were highly praised by his peers.
In 1385, Gower's good friend, Geoffrey Chaucer, dedicated the Troilus and
Criseyde to him, giving him the epithet "moral Gower."
Confessio Amantis, (i.e. Lover's Confession) Gower's masterpiece
(written c.1390) is a collection of stories that illustrate the Seven Deadly
Sins. Unlike his previous works, Gower wrote the Confessio in English at
the request of Richard II who was concerned that so little was being written
in English. It is a collection of tales and exempla treating of courtly love.
The framework is that of a lover complaining first to Venus, and later in the
work, confessing to her priest, Genius. Confessio Amantis made an
important contribution to courtly love literature in English. Some of the
stories have their counterparts in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, and one of the
stories later served as the source for Shakespeare's Pericles, in which
Shakespeare had Gower appear in the Chorus. Gower revised Confessio
Amantis in 1393, replacing the praise of King Richard II with a dedication
to Henry of Lancaster. In return, Henry presented Gower with an
ornamented collar.
Next, Gower composed a series of Latin poems. Among his minor works
are Cinkante Ballades, which are love poems in French, and In Praise of
Peace, a poem in English.
Old and blind, John Gower died in 1408, leaving a considerable estate.
He was buried in St. Mary Overies, now Southwark Cathedral, where his
tomb can still be seen today.
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SIR THOMAS MALORY (c. 1405 - 1471)
Malory, English author of Morte d'Arthur. It is almost certain that he was
Sir Thomas Malory of Newbold Revell, Warwickshire. Knighted in 1442,
he served in the parliament of 1445. He was evidently a violent, lawless
individual who committed a series of crimes, including poaching, extortion,
robbery, rape, and attempted murder. Most of his life from 1451 on was
spent in prison, and he probably did most of his writing there. Malory's
original book was called The Book of King Arthur and His Noble Knights of
the Round Table and was made up of eight romances that were more or less
separate. William Caxton printed it in 1485 and gave it the misleading title
of Morte d'Arthur ("The Death of Arthur"). This work is generally regarded
as the most significant accomplishment in English literature in the two
centuries between the works of Chaucer and those of such masters as
Spenser and Shakespeare. The last medieval English work of the Arthurian
legend, Malory's tales are supposedly based on an assortment of French
prose romances. The Morte d'Arthur is noted for its excellent dramatic
narrative and the beauty of its rhythmic and simple language. It remains the
standard source for later versions of the legend.
"Le Morte Darthur" was written in English and consists of eight tales in
507 chapters in 21 books, so arranged by Caxton, for clarity of
understanding. It is the basis of most modern tellings of the Arthurian story
and was the inspiration for Tennyson's "Idylls of the King." Le Morte
Darthur is undoubtedly the last definitive interpretation of the Arthurian
myth before the dawn of the English Renaissance.
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King Arthur - Legendary Character / Royalty
King Arthur is one of the great mythic figures of English literature.
Dozens of legends and romantic images have grown up around him: the
knights of the Round Table, Merlin the wizard, and the Holy Grail, to name
a few. According to the main Athurian legends, the king wielded a magical
sword, Excalibur; lived in a glorious kingdom called Camelot; was helped
by the wizard Mordred; and was married to the beautiful Queen Guinevere
(who in many legends falls for Arthur's knight Sir Lancelot). Many of our
modern-day stories of Arthur are based on Le Morte d'Arthur ("The Death
of Arthur"), the collection of Arthurian tales published by Sir Thomas
Malory in 1485. Historians can't decide whether anyone like Arthur ever
existed, though most now accept that the legend is very loosely based on a
real historical figure; he may have been a 5th or 6th century ruler name
Arturus or Riothamus.
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The Fifteenth Century
The 15th cent. is not distinguished in English letters, due in part to the
social dislocation caused by the prolonged Wars of the Roses. Of the many
15th-century imitators of Chaucer the best-known are John Lydgate and
Thomas Hoccleve. Other poets of the time include Stephen Hawes and
Alexander Barclay and the Scots poets William Dunbar, Robert Henryson,
and Gawin Douglas. The poetry of John Skelton, which is mostly satiric,
combines medieval and Renaissance elements.
The miracle play, a long cycle of short plays based upon biblical
episodes, was popular throughout the Middle Ages in England. The morality
play, an allegorical drama centering on the struggle for man's soul,
originated in the 15th cent. The finest of the genre is Everyman (a 15th
century English morality play).
Everyman is the best surviving example of the type of Medieval drama
known as the morality play. Moralities evolved side by side with the
mystery plays, although they were composed individually and not in cycles.
The moralities employed allegory to dramatize the moral struggle
Christianity envisions universal in every individual.
Everyman, a short play of some 900 lines, portrays a complacent
Everyman who is informed by Death of his approaching end. The play
shows the hero's progression from despair and fear of death to a "Christian
resignation that is the prelude to redemption." First, Everyman is deserted
by his false friends: his casual companions, his kin, and his wealth. He falls
back on his Good Deeds, his Strength, his Beauty, his Intelligence, and his
Knowledge. These assist him in making his Book of Accounts, but at the
end, when he must go to the grave, all desert him save his Good Deeds
alone. The play makes its grim point that we can take with us from this
world nothing that we have received, only what we have given.
The play was written near the end of the fifteenth century. It is probably
a translation from a Flemish play, Elckerlijk (or Elckerlyc) first printed in
1495, although there is a possibility that Everyman is the original, the
Flemish play the translation. There are four surviving versions of Everyman,
two of them fragmentary.
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WILLIAM CAXTON AND THE INTRODUCTION
OF PRINTING TO ENGLAND, 1476.
Malory's book is the first great English classic which was given to the
world in print instead of written manuscript; for it was shortly after Malory's
death that the printing press was brought to England by William Caxton.
The invention of printing, perhaps the most important event of modern
times, took place in Germany not long after the middle of the fifteenth
century, and the development of the art was rapid. During the year 1476,
just a century before the first theatre was to be built in London, Caxton
returned to England and established his shop in Westminster, then a London
suburb. During the fifteen remaining years of his life he laboured diligently,
printing an aggregate of more than a hundred books, which together
comprised over fourteen thousand pages. Aside from Malory's romance,
which he put out in 1485, the most important of his publications was an
edition of Chaucer's 'Canterbury Tales.' While labouring as a publisher
Caxton himself continued to make translations, and in spite of many
difficulties he, together with his assistants, turned into English from French
no fewer than twenty-one distinct works. From every point of view Caxton's
services were great. As translator and editor his style is careless and
uncertain, but like Malory's it is sincere and manly, and vital with energy
and enthusiasm. As printer, in a time of rapid changes in the language, when
through the wars in France and her growing influence the second great
infusion of Latin-French words was coming into the English language, he
did what could be done for consistency in forms and spelling. Partly
medieval and partly modern in spirit, he may fittingly stand at the close, or
nearly at the close, of our study of the medieval period.
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The Medieval Drama
The drama of the whole medieval period - though it did not reach a very
high literary level, was one of the most characteristic expressions of the age.
In England the folk-plays, throughout the Middle Ages and in remote
spots down almost to the present time, sometimes took the form of energetic
dances. Their characters gradually came to be a conventional set, partly
famous figures of popular tradition, such as St. George, Robin Hood, Maid
Marian, and the Green Dragon. Other offshoots of the folk-play were the
'mummings' and 'disguisings,' collective names for many forms of
processions, shows, and other entertainments, such as, among the upper
classes, that precursor of the Elizabethan Mask in which a group of persons
in disguise, invited or uninvited, attended a formal dancing party. In the
later part of the Middle Ages, also, there were the secular pageants,
spectacular displays (rather different from those of the twentieth century)
given on such occasions as when a king or other person of high rank made
formal entry into a town. They consisted of an elaborate scenic background
set up near the city gate or on the street, with figures from allegorical or
traditional history who engaged in some pantomime or declamation, but
with very little dramatic dialog, or none.
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TROPES, LITURGICAL PLAYS, AND MYSTERY
PLAYS.
All these forms, though they were not altogether without later influence,
were very minor affairs, and the real drama of the Middle Ages grew up,
without design and by the mere nature of things, from the regular services of
the Church.
The list of plays thus presented commonly included: The Fall of Lucifer;
the Creation of the World and the Fall of Adam; Noah and the Flood;
Abraham and Isaac and the promise of Christ's coming; a Procession of the
Prophets, also foretelling Christ; the main events of the Gospel story, with
some additions from Christian tradition; and the Day of Judgment.
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THE MORALITY PLAYS.
The Mystery Plays seem to have reached their greatest popularity in the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The Morality Play probably arose in part
from the desire of religious writers to teach the principles of Christian living
in a more direct and compact fashion than was possible through the Bible
stories of the Mysteries. As compared with the usual type of Mystery plays
the Moralities had for the writers this advantage, that they allowed some
independence in the invention of the story; and how powerful they might be
made in the hands of a really gifted author has been finely demonstrated in
our own time by the stage-revival of the best of them, 'Everyman' (which is
probably a translation from a Dutch original). In most cases, however, the
spirit of medieval allegory proved fatal, the genuinely abstract characters are
mostly shadowy and unreal, and the speeches of the Virtues are extreme
examples of intolerable sanctimonious declamation. Against this tendency,
on the other hand, the persistent instinct for realism provided a partial
antidote; the Vices are often very lifelike rascals, abstract only in name. In
these cases the whole plays become vivid studies in contemporary low life,
largely human and interesting except for their prolixity and the coarseness
which they inherited from the Mysteries and multiplied on their own
account. During the Reformation period, in the early sixteenth century, the
character of the Moralities, more strictly so called, underwent something of
a change, and they were--sometimes made the vehicle for religious
argument, especially by Protestants.
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THE INTERLUDES.
Early in the sixteenth century, the Morality in its turn was largely
superseded by another sort of play called the Interlude.
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THE LATER INFLUENCE OF THE MEDIEVAL
DRAMA.
The various dramatic forms from the tenth century to the middle of the
sixteenth at which we have thus hastily glanced--folk-plays, mummings and
disguisings, secular pageants, Mystery plays, Moralities, and Interludes-have little but a historical importance.
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