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Table of Contents | Printable Version | Barron's Booknotes BACKGROUND INFORMATION - BIOGRAPHY ChaucerÂ’s Works Chaucer wrote for a very sophisticated and learned audience of fellow courtiers and officials and even members of the royal family. It is believed that he read his works aloud to this very select audience. During this time the culture of the English upper classes was predominantly under the French influence. English was seen as the language of the lower classes. Thus it is hardly surprising that the contemporary fashionable French poets --- Guillaume De Machaut, Eustace Deschamps and Jean Froissart -- -influenced Chaucer and his early works. Chaucer was also thoroughly familiar with the dream allegory Le Roman de la Rose by the French poets Guillaume de Lorris and Jean de Meun. Chaucer thus absorbed the courtly love tradition that was the predominant theme of all French poetry. Chaucer in fact translated Le Roman de la Rose but only a fragment of it survives. ChaucerÂ’s diplomatic visits to Italy brought him into contact with the works of Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio which left a deep imprint on his own later poetry. Chaucer was extremely well read. One can easily detect the influences of VirgilÂ’s Aeneid, OvidÂ’s Heroides and Metamorphoses, LucanÂ’s Pharsalia, StatiusÂ’ Thebaid, BoethiusÂ’ De Consolatione Philosophiae, and MacrobiusÂ’ commentary on CiceroÂ’s Somnium Scipionis. The Book of the Duchess probably written in 1369 is ChaucerÂ’s
first important work. It is an elegy for the John of GauntÂ’s first wife,
Blanche, who died in 1369, and reveals the influence of Ovid and Machaut.
It is a dream allegory in which the poet meets a man dressed in black
in a forest who tells him about how he courted a beautiful lady and concludes
with the revelation that he is at present mourning her death. The House
of Fame also a dream allegory followed next and showed the influence
of Dante. The Parliament of Fowls was ChaucerÂ’s next major work.
While still in the dream allegory tradition, it combines the influence
of Dante and Boccaccio. The poem celebrates St. ValentineÂ’s day and describes
the mating of birds, which engenders a great debate. All these three dream
sequences were written between 1369 to 1385. In this period Chaucer also
translated religious, philosophical and historical works including ‘a
life of St. CeciliaÂ’, a sequence of medieval tragedies describing the
lives of men weighed down by adverse fortune, and a translation of BoethiusÂ’
The Consolation of Philosophy. Troilus and Criseyde (1382 - 85?) relates the famous story of TroilusÂ’ fatal love for Criseyde, the widowed daughter of Calchas, an astronomer who had foreseen the fall of Troy and defected to the Greek camp. Troilus sees and falls in love with Criseyde and begins a secret affair through the agency of her uncle Pandarus. Their happiness is short-lived and the Greeks demand Criseyde in exchange for a prisoner of war. Fearing public wrath, the lovers neither escape nor negotiate, and Criseyde goes to the Greeks promising to return as soon as possible. However she does not return and Troilus becomes sad and desolate. In the meanwhile Criseyde takes the Greek Diomede as a lover. Troilus sees her betrayal in a dream and devotes himself to the battle. He dies a heroÂ’s death and ascends to the seventh sphere from where he looks down on earth and realizes the vanity of worldly glory. Chaucer next wrote The Legend of Good Women in 1386 but abandoned it in 1387. He then started work on his most magnificent creation The Canterbury Tales. He continued to write this for the next thirteen years or so but could not complete his original plans. Apart from these writings a vast body of spurious material is also attributed to Chaucer. Scholars have labeled this material which includes nearly hundred pieces of verse, the Chaucerian apocrypha. It is believed that a fifteenth century manuscript distributor John Shirley was responsible for these erroneous attributions. John Dryden called Chaucer the "father of English poetry". Chaucer certainly contributed to the growth and development of English language by employing it at a time when as a rule, court poetry was written in Latin, French or Anglo-Norman. He extended the range of poetic vocabulary and meters in English. He was also the 1 st poet to use iambic pentameter, the 7 line stanza that is now termed the rhyme royal, and the heroic couplet. He was one of the most skilful English poets. Chaucer also wrote in prose. Some of his prose writing includes Boece, A Treatise on the Astrolabe, The Tale of Melibee, and The ParsonÂ’s Tale.
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