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It is not a part of the plan of this book to present any extended bibliography, but there are certain reference books to which the student's attention should be called.
In medieval
literature likewise the modern student encounters much which seems at
first sight grotesque. One of the most conspicuous examples is the pervasive
use of allegory. The men of the Middle Ages often wrote, as we do, in
direct terms and of simple things, but when they wished to rise above
the commonplace they turned with a frequency which to-day appears astonishing
to the devices of abstract personification and veiled meanings. No doubt
this tendency was due in part to an idealizing dissatisfaction with
the crudeness of their actual life (as well as to frequent inability
to enter into the realm of deeper and finer thought without the aid
of somewhat mechanical imagery); and no doubt it was greatly furthered
also by the medieval passion for translating into elaborate and fantastic
symbolism all the details of the Bible narratives. But from whatever
cause, the tendency hardened into a ruling convention; thousands upon
thousands of medieval manuscripts seem to declare that the world is
a mirage of shadowy forms, or that it exists merely to body forth remote
and highly surprising ideas.
Of all these
countless allegories none was reiterated with more unwearied persistence
than that of the Seven Deadly Sins (those sins which in the doctrine
of the Church lead to spiritual death because they are wilfully committed).
These sins are: Covetousness, Unchastity, Anger, Gluttony, Envy, Sloth,
and, chief of all, Pride, the earliest of all, through which Lucifer
was moved to his fatal rebellion against God, whence spring all human
ills. Each of the seven, however, was interpreted as including so many
related offences that among them they embraced nearly the whole range
of possible wickedness. Personified, the Seven Sins in themselves almost
dominate medieval literature, a sort of shadowy evil pantheon. Moral
and religious questions could scarcely be discussed without regard to
them; and they maintain their commanding place even as late as in Spenser's
'Faerie Queene,' at the very end of the sixteenth century. To the Seven
Sins were commonly opposed, but with much less emphasis, the Seven Cardinal
Virtues, Faith, Hope, Charity (Love), Prudence, Temperance, Chastity,
and Fortitude. Again, almost as prominent as the Seven Sins was the
figure of Fortune with her revolving wheel, a goddess whom the violent
vicissitudes and tragedies of life led the men of the Middle Ages, in
spite of their Christianity, to bring over from classical literature
and virtually to accept as a real divinity, with almost absolute control
in human affairs. In the seventeenth century Shakspere's plays are full
of allusions to her, but so for that matter is the everyday talk of
all of us in the twentieth century.
LITERATURE
IN THE THREE LANGUAGES. It is not to the purpose in a study like the
present to give special attention to the literature written in England
in Latin and French; we can speak only briefly of that composed in English.
But in fact when the English had made its new beginning, about the year
1200, the same
general forms flourished in all three languages, so that what is said
in general of the English applies almost as much to the other two as
well.
RELIGIOUS LITERATURE.
We may virtually divide all the literature of the period, roughly, into
(1) Religious and (2) Secular. But it must be observed that religious
writings were far more important as literature during the Middle Ages
than in more recent times, and the separation between religious and
secular less distinct than at present. The forms of the religious literature
were largely the same as in the previous period. There were songs, many
of them addressed to the Virgin, some not only beautiful in their sincere
and tender devotion, speaking for the finer spirits in an age of crudeness
and violence, but occasionally beautiful as poetry. There were paraphrases
of many parts of the Bible, lives of saints, in both verse and prose,
and various other miscellaneous work. Perhaps worthy of special mention
among single productions is the 'Cursor Mundi'
(Surveyor of
the World), an early fourteenth century poem of twenty-four thousand
lines ('Paradise Lost' has less than eleven thousand), relating universal
history from the beginning, on the basis of the Biblical narrative.
Most important of all for their promise of the future, there were the
germs of the modern drama in the form of the Church plays; but to these
we shall give special attention in a later chapter.
SECULAR LITERATURE.
In secular literature the variety was greater than in religious. We
may begin by transcribing one or two of the songs, which, though not
as numerous then as in some later periods, show that the great tradition
of English secular lyric poetry reaches back from our own time to that
of the Anglo-Saxons without a break. The best known of all is the
'Cuckoo Song,'
of the thirteenth century, intended to be sung in harmony by four voices:
Sumer is icumen
in;
Lhude sing,
cuccu!
Groweth sed
and bloweth med
And springth
the wde nu.
Sing, cuccu!
Awe bleteth
after lomb,
Lhouth after
calve cu.
Bulluc sterteth,
bucke verteth;
Murie sing,
cuccu!
Cuccu, cuccu,
Wel singes
thu, cuccu;
Ne swik thu
never nu.
Summer is come
in; loud sing, cuckoo! Grows the seed and blooms the mead
[meadow] and
buds the wood anew. Sing, cuckoo! The ewe bleats for the lamb, lows
for the calf the cow. The bullock gambols, the buck leaps; merrily sing,
cuckoo! Cuckoo, cuckoo, well singest thou, cuckoo; cease thou never
now.
The next is
the first stanza of 'Alysoun' ('Fair Alice'):
Bytuene Mersh
ant Averil,
When spray
beginnth to springe,
The lutel foul
hath hire wyl
On hyre lud
to synge.
Ieh libbe in
love-longinge
For semlokest
of alle thinge;
He may me blisse
bringe;
Icham in hire
baundoun.
An hendy hap
ichabbe ybent;
Iehot from
hevene it is me sent;
From alle wymmen
mi love is lent
Ant lyht on
Alysoun.
Between March
and April, When the sprout begins to spring, The little bird has her
desire In her tongue to sing. I live in love-longing For the fairest
of all things; She may bring me bliss; I am at her mercy. A lucky lot
I have secured; I think from heaven it is sent me; From all women my
love is turned And is lighted on Alysoun.
There were
also political and satirical songs and miscellaneous poems of various
sorts, among them certain 'Bestiaries,' accounts of the supposed habits
of animals, generally drawn originally from classical tradition, and
most of them highly fantastic and allegorized in the interests of morality
and religion. There was an abundance of extremely realistic coarse tales,
hardly belonging to literature, in both prose and verse. The popular
ballads of the fourteenth century we must reserve for later consideration.
Most numerous of all the prose works, perhaps, were the Chronicles,
which were produced generally in the monasteries and chiefly in the
twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the greater part in Latin, some in
French, and a few in rude English verse. Many of them were mere annals
like the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, but some were the lifelong works of
men with genuine historical vision. Some dealt merely with the history
of England, or a part of it, others with that of the entire world as
it was known to medieval Europe. The majority will never be withdrawn
from the obscurity of the manuscripts on which the patient care of their
authors inscribed them; others have been printed in full and serve as
the main basis for our knowledge of the events of the period.
THE ROMANCES.
But the chief form of secular literature during the period, beginning
in the middle of the twelfth century, was the romance, especially the
metrical (verse) romance. The typical romances were the literary expression
of chivalry. They were composed by the professional minstrels, some
of whom, as in Anglo-Saxon times, were richly supported and rewarded
by kings and nobles, while others still wandered about the country,
always welcome in the manor-houses. There, like Scott's Last Minstrel,
they recited their sometimes almost endless works from memory, in the
great halls or in the ladies' bowers, to the accompaniment of occasional
strains on their harps. For two or three centuries the romances were
to the lords and ladies, and to the wealthier citizens of the towns,
much what novels are to the reading public of our own day. By far the
greater part of the romances current in England were written in French,
whether by Normans or by French natives of the English provinces in
France, and the English ones which have been preserved are mostly translations
or imitations of French originals. The romances are extreme representatives
of the whole class of literature of all times to which they have given
the name. Frankly abandoning in the main the world of reality, they
carry into that of idealized and glamorous fancy the chief interests
of the medieval lords and ladies, namely, knightly exploits in war,
and lovemaking. Love in the romances, also, retains all its courtly
affectations, together with that worship of woman by man which in the
twelfth century was exalted into a sentimental art by the poets of wealthy
and luxurious Provence in Southern France. Side by side, again, with
war and love, appears in the romances medieval religion, likewise conventionalized
and childishly superstitious, but in some inadequate degree a mitigator
of cruelty and a restrainer of lawless passion. Artistically, in some
respects or all, the greater part of the romances are crude and immature.
Their usual main or only purpose is to hold attention by successions
of marvellous adventures, natural or supernatural; of structure, therefore,
they are often destitute; the characters are ordinarily mere types;
and motivation is little considered. There were, however, exceptional
authors, genuine artists, masters of meter and narrative, possessed
by a true feeling for beauty; and in some of the romances the psychological
analysis of love, in particular, is subtile and powerful, the direct
precursor of one of the main developments in modern fiction.
The romances
may very roughly be grouped into four great classes. First in time,
perhaps, come those which are derived from the earlier French epics
and in which love, if it appears at all, is subordinated to the military
exploits of Charlemagne and his twelve peers in their wars against the
Saracens. Second are the romances which, battered salvage from a greater
past, retell in strangely altered romantic fashion the great stories
of classical antiquity, mainly the achievements of Alexander the Great
and the tragic fortunes of Troy. Third come the Arthurian romances,
and fourth those scattering miscellaneous ones which do not belong to
the other classes, dealing, most of them, with native English heroes.
Of these, two,
'King Horn'
and 'Havelok,' spring direct from the common people and in both substance
and expression reflect the hard reality of their lives, while
'Guy of Warwick'
and 'Bevis of Hampton,' which are among the best known but most tedious
of all the list, belong, in their original form, to the upper classes.
Of all the
romances the Arthurian are by far the most important. They belong peculiarly
to English literature, because they are based on traditions of British
history, but they have assumed a very prominent place in the literature
of the whole western world. Rich in varied characters and incidents
to which a universal significance could be attached, in their own time
they were the most popular works of their class; and living on vigorously
after the others were forgotten, they have continued to form one of
the chief quarries of literary material and one of the chief sources
of inspiration for modern poets and romancers. It seems well worth while,
therefore, to outline briefly their literary history.
The period
in which their scene is nominally laid is that of the Anglo-Saxon conquest
of Great Britain. Of the actual historical events of this period extremely
little is known, and even the capital question whether such a person
as Arthur ever really existed can never receive a definite answer. The
only contemporary writer of the least importance is the Briton (priest
or monk), Gildas, who in a violent Latin pamphlet of about the year
550 ('The Destruction and Conquest of Britain') denounces his countrymen
for their sins and urges them to unite against the Saxons; and Gildas
gives only the slightest sketch of what had actually happened. He tells
how a British king (to whom later tradition assigns the name Vortigern)
invited in the Anglo-Saxons as allies against the troublesome northern
Scots and Picts, and how the Anglo-Saxons, victorious against these
tribes, soon turned in furious conquest against the Britons themselves,
until, under a certain Ambrosius Aurelianus, a man 'of Roman race,'
the Britons successfully defended themselves and at last in the battle
of Mount Badon checked the Saxon advance.
Next in order
after Gildas, but not until about the year 800, appears a strangely
jumbled document, last edited by a certain Nennius, and entitled
'Historia Britonum'
(The History of the Britons), which adds to Gildas' outline traditions,
natural and supernatural, which had meanwhile been growing up among
the Britons (Welsh). It supplies the names of the earliest Saxon leaders,
Hengist and Horsa (who also figure in the 'Anglo-Saxon Chronicle'),
and narrates at length their treacherous dealings with Vortigern. Among
other stories we find that of Vortigern's tower, where Gildas' Ambrosius
appears as a boy of supernatural nature, destined to develop in the
romances into the great magician Merlin. In Nennius' book occurs also
the earliest mention of Arthur, who, in a comparatively sober passage,
is said, some time after the days of Vortigern, to have 'fought against
the Saxons, together with the kings of the Britons, but he himself was
leader in the battles.' A list, also, is given of his twelve victories,
ending with Mount Badon. It is impossible to decide whether there is
really any truth in this account of Nennius, or whether it springs wholly
from the imagination of the Britons, attempting to solace themselves
for their national overthrow; but it allows us to believe if we choose
that sometime in the early sixth century there was a British leader
of the name of Arthur, who by military genius rose to high command and
for a while beat back the Saxon hordes. At most, however, it should
be clearly realized, Arthur was probably only a local leader in some
limited region, and, far from filling the splendid place which he occupies
in the later romances, was but the hard-pressed captain of a few thousand
barbarous and half-armed warriors.
For three hundred
years longer the traditions about Arthur continued to develop among
the Welsh people. The most important change which took place was Arthur's
elevation to the position of chief hero of the British (Welsh) race
and the subordination to him, as his followers, of all the other native
heroes, most of whom had originally been gods. To Arthur himself certain
divine attributes were added, such as his possession of magic weapons,
among them the sword Excalibur. It also came to be passionately believed
among the Welsh that he was not really dead but would some day return
from the mysterious Other World to which he had withdrawn and reconquer
the island for his people. It was not until the twelfth century that
these Arthurian traditions, the cherished heritage of the Welsh and
their cousins, the Bretons across the English Channel in France, were
suddenly adopted as the property of all Western Europe, so that Arthur
became a universal Christian hero. This remarkable transformation, no
doubt in some degree inevitable, was actually brought about chiefly
through the instrumentality of a single man, a certain English archdeacon
of Welsh descent, Geoffrey of Monmouth. Geoffrey, a literary and ecclesiastical
adventurer looking about for a means of making himself famous, put forth
about the year 1136, in Latin, a 'History of the Britons' from the earliest
times to the seventh century, in which, imitating the form of the serious
chronicles, he combined in cleverly impudent fashion all the adaptable
miscellaneous material, fictitious, legendary, or traditional, which
he found at hand. In dealing with Arthur, Geoffrey greatly enlarges
on Gildas and Nennius; in part, no doubt, from his own invention, in
part, perhaps, from Welsh tradition. He provides Arthur with a father,
King Uther, makes of Arthur's wars against the Saxons only his youthful
exploits, relates at length how Arthur conquered almost all of Western
Europe, and adds to the earlier story the figures of Merlin, Guenevere,
Modred, Gawain, Kay, and Bedivere. What is not least important, he gives
to Arthur's reign much of the atmosphere of feudal chivalry which was
that of the ruling class of his own age.
Geoffrey may
or may not have intended his astonishing story to be seriously accepted,
but in fact it was received with almost universal credence. For centuries
it was incorporated in outline or in excerpts into almost all the sober
chronicles, and what is of much more importance for literature, it was
taken up and rehandled in various fashions by very numerous romancers.
About twenty years after Geoffrey wrote, the French poet Wace, an English
subject, paraphrased his entire 'History' in vivid, fluent, and diffuse
verse. Wace imparts to the whole, in a thorough-going way, the manners
of chivalry, and adds, among other things, a mention of the Round Table,
which Geoffrey, somewhat chary of the supernatural, had chosen to omit,
though it was one of the early elements of the Welsh tradition. Other
poets followed, chief among them the delightful Chretien of Troyes,
all writing mostly of the exploits of single knights at Arthur's court,
which they made over, probably, from scattering tales of Welsh and Breton
mythology. To declare that most romantic heroes had been knights of
Arthur's circle now became almost a matter of course. Prose romances
also appeared, vast formless compilations, which gathered up into themselves
story after story, according to the fancy of each successive editor.
Greatest of the additions to the substance of the cycle was the story
of the Holy Grail, originally an altogether independent legend. Important
changes necessarily developed. Arthur himself, in many of the romances,
was degraded from his position of the bravest knight to be the inactive
figurehead of a brilliant court; and the only really historical element
in the story, his struggle against the Saxons, was thrust far into the
background, while all the emphasis was laid on the romantic achievements
of the single knights.
LAGHAMON'S
'BRUT.' Thus it had come about that Arthur, originally the national
hero of the Welsh, and the deadly foe of the English, was adopted, as
a Christian champion, not only for one of the medieval Nine Worthies
of all history, but for the special glory of the English race itself.
In that light he figures in the first important work in which native
English reemerges after the Norman Conquest, the 'Brut' (Chronicle)
wherein, about the year 1200, Laghamon paraphrased Wace's paraphrase
of Geoffrey.
[Footnote:
Laghamon's name is generally written 'Layamon,' but this is incorrect.
The word 'Brut' comes from the name 'Brutus,' according to Geoffrey
a Trojan hero and eponymous founder of the British race. Standing at
the beginning of British (and English) history, his name came to be
applied to the whole of it, just as the first two Greek letters, alpha
and beta, have given the name to the alphabet.] Laghamon was a humble
parish priest in Worcestershire, and his thirty-two thousand half-lines,
in which he imperfectly follows the Anglo-Saxon alliterative meter,
are rather crude; though they are by no means dull, rather are often
strong with the old-time Anglo-Saxon fighting spirit. In language also
the poem is almost purely Saxon; occasionally it admits the French device
of rime, but it is said to exhibit, all told, fewer than a hundred words
of French origin. Expanding throughout on Wace's version, Laghamon adds
some minor features; but English was not yet ready to take a place beside
French and Latin with the reading class, and the poem exercised no influence
on the development of the Arthurian story or on English literature.
SIR GAWAIN
AND THE GREEN KNIGHT. We can make special mention of only one other
romance, which all students should read in modern translation, namely,
'Sir Gawain (pronounced Gaw'-wain) and the Green Knight.' This is the
brief and carefully constructed work of an unknown but very real poetic
artist, who lived a century and more later than Laghamon and probably
a little earlier than Chaucer. The story consists of two old folk-tales,
here finely united in the form of an Arthurian romance and so treated
as to bring out all the better side of knightly feeling, with which
the author is in charming sympathy. Like many other medieval writings,
this one is preserved by mere chance in a single manuscript, which contains
also three slightly shorter religious poems (of a thousand or two lines
apiece), all possibly by the same author as the romance. One of them
in particular, 'The Pearl,' is a narrative of much fine feeling, which
may well have come from so true a gentleman as he. The dialect is that
of the Northwest Midland, scarcely more intelligible to modern readers
than Anglo-Saxon, but it indicates that the author belonged to the same
border region between England and Wales from which came also Geoffrey
of Monmouth and Laghamon, a region where Saxon and Norman elements were
mingled with Celtic fancy and delicacy of temperament. The meter, also,
is interesting--the Anglo-Saxon unrimed alliterative verse, but divided
into long stanzas of irregular length, each ending in a 'bob' of five
short riming lines.
'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight' may very fittingly bring to a close our hasty survey of the entire Norman-French period, a period mainly of formation, which has left no literary work of great and permanent fame, but in which, after all, there were some sincere and talented writers, who have fallen into forgetfulness rather through the untoward accidents of time than from lack of genuine merit in themselves.
Chapter III.
Period III. The End Of The Middle Ages. About 1350 To About 1500
PERIOD III.
THE END OF THE MIDDLE AGES. ABOUT 1350 TO ABOUT 1500
THE FIRST FIFTY
YEARS. POLITICAL AND SOCIAL CONDITIONS. Of the century and a half, from
1350 to 1500, which forms our third period, the most important part
for literature was the first fifty years, which constitutes the age
of Chaucer.
The middle
of the fourteenth century was also the middle of the externally brilliant
fifty years' reign of Edward III. In 1337 Edward had begun the terrible
though often-interrupted series of campaigns in France which historians
group together as the Hundred Tears' War, and having won the battle
of Crecy against amazing odds, he had inaugurated at his court a period
of splendor and luxury. The country as a whole was really increasing
in prosperity; Edward was fostering trade, and the towns and some of
the town-merchants were becoming wealthy; but the oppressiveness of
the feudal system, now becoming outgrown, was apparent, abuses in society
and state and church were almost intolerable, and the spirit which was
to create our modern age, beginning already in Italy to move toward
the Renaissance, was felt in faint stirrings even so far to the North
as England.