Chaucer's Art of Characterization in the Prologue of the Canterbury Tales
Chaucer is the first great painter of character because he is the first great observer of it among English writers, In fact, next to Shakespeare, Chaucer is the greatest creator of lively characters in English literature. In The Canterbury Tales Chaucer tried to paint faithfully the body and soul of the fourteenth century life. Before The Canterbury Tales we do not know a poem of which the primary aim was to depict and display the truthful spectacle of life.
Geoffrey Chaucer
(1343-1400)
It is the greatness of Chaucer that in the
Prologue his twenty nine characters drawn from different classes of society
represent the fourteenth century society as vividly and clearly as Pope
represented early eighteenth century life in his poems such as The Rape of the
Lock and Dunciad. In the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales Chaucer's England
comes to life. We meet the Knight travel-stained from the war and as meek as a
girl in his behavior; the Squire with curly locks 'embroidered' like a meadow
full of fresh flowers, white and red; the Yeoman clad in coat and hood of
green; the Prioress, earnest to imitate the manners of high society; the jolly
Monk; the wanton and merry Friar; the drunkard Cook; the Merchant; the Oxford
Clerk; the Lawyer; the Doctor; the Dartmouth Sailor; the Summoner; the Pardon;
the Reeve; the Wife of Bath; the gentle Parson; the five guildsmen; the
Ploughmen etc. All these characters are vivid and nicely sketched in the
Prologue, which is a veritable picture gallery.
In presenting the characters, Chaucer follows
the method of an artist with a brush in his hand, but his method in painting
the characters is primitive. He is primitive also by a certain honest
awkwardness, the unskilled stiffness of some of his outlines, and such an
insistence on minute points as at first provokes a smile. Chaucer has adopted
no definite pattern in the description of portraits. He seems to amass details
haphazardly. Sometimes the description of the dress comes first and then he
describes physical features. Sometimes he begins with analysis of character and
adds touches of dress afterwards describes physical features. Sometimes he begins
with analysis of character and adds touches of dress afterwards.
Chaucer has shown his characters by presenting
them as foils to each other. The Summoner and the Friar, the Miller and the
Reeve, the Prioress and the Wife of Bath, the Cook and the Manciple, the
conscientious Parson and the unscrupulous Pardoner are foils. All his pilgrims
are severally distinguished from each other; and not only in either
inclinations, but also in their appearances and persons. Even the grave and the
serious characters are distinguished by their several sorts of gravity; their
discourses are such as belong to their age; their calling and their breeding
such as are becoming of them and of them only.
In the Prologue various characters comprise
all sorts and conditions of men, some of them are so real that they can be
easily the sketches devised to provide a representation of the chief classes of
English society under the higher nobility. Moreover, the sketches not only give
typical traits of temperament, appearance and manners, but incorporate the
essentials of medicine, law, scholarship, religion, the theory of knighthood
and also a satire on faults in social life; they summarize the noblest ideals
of the time and the basest practices. The result, therefore, is a conspectus of
medieval English society; it would be possible to use the Prologue as the basis
for a survey of fourteenth century English life.
Chaucer's characters are both individuals and
types. The Knight is a chivalrous character of all ages. He is a great warrior
and a conqueror who in every age stands as the guardian of man against the
oppressor. But the Knight has been individualized by his horse, dress and
gentle and meek behavior. The young Squire stands for the type of warriors who
are not always lost in the dreams of warfare, but are also interested in
singing and playing upon a flute. But he has been individualized by his curly
locks, embroidered clothes, and his short coat with long wide sleeves. The
Yeoman is the type of expert archers, but he has been individualized by his
cropped head and his brown visage. The Prioress is the type of a woman who
tries to imitate courtly manners, but she has been individualized by her nasal
tone, tenderness of heart, and her physical features
The monk is a type of the monks who had
deserted their religious duties and passed their, time in riding and keeping
greyhounds for hunting. But Chaucer's Monk is an individual with a bald head
and rolling eyes glowing like fire under a cauldron. Chaucer's Friar is a type
of those friars who were wanton and jolly, interested in gay and flattering
talk. But Chaucer's Friar is individualized by his melodious voice, his skill
in singing songs and by his knowledge of taverns and barmaids. In Chaucer's
time The Clerk of Oxford represented studious scholars who devoted their time
in the acquisition of knowledge, but he is also an individual person with his
volumes of Aristotle, his hollow cheeks, grave looks and threadbare clock. The
Man of Law is a typical figure. The Doctor of Physik with his love of gold and
his little knowledge of the Bible is a typical doctor. But the Man of Law and
the Doctor of Physik have also been individualized by their physical traits and
features. There are many other characters who represent their class, their
profession, but they are also individual figures with notions, idiosyncrasies,
arguments and particular physical features. Thus Chaucer has maintained a
balance between the typical and the individual features of a character.
The Prologue to the Canterbury Tales presents
a social group of persons, larger and more diversified. Chaucer's group of
pilgrims is not schematically representative of English society, but covers
well enough the main social elements. The nobility and the lowest class of
laborers are excluded as it was unlikely for them to travel in the fashion of
this group.
The lifelikeness of most of the Canterbury
pilgrims has given rise to several scholarly attempts at identifying them among
Chaucer's known contemporaries. The Host of the Tabard Inn, later in The
Canterbury Tales called Herry Bailly most probably pictures an actual
fourteenth century Southwark innkeeper called Henery Bailly; and here and there
are scattered throughout the portraits, hints of possible actual persons. One
can think of several personal features so distinctive that one feels that
Chaucer's own observation noticed them somewhere in real life, but more often
it is the occurrence of a name that adds lifelikeness to a portrait: the
shipman hails from Dartmouth and is master of the barge `Mandelaynel, the Reeve
comes from Bawds- well in Norfolk; the Merchant's trading interests were
largely concentrated in Middleburg in Holland end Orwell near Harwich ; the
knight had taken part in campaigns some of which were topical in 1386 in connection
with a famous lawsuit in which a knightly family known to Chaucer was involved.
Such details of names of persons or places may well derive from Chaucer's own
knowledge, and with them some of the particulars of the persons described, and
it is certainly no discredit to Chaucer's art if he did derive some of his
inspiration from living people.
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