登陆注册
4614400000003

第3章 CHAUCER'S TIMES.(2)

A single instance must suffice to indicate both the difficulty and the significance of many of those questions of Chaucerian biography which, whether interesting or not in themselves, have to be determined before Chaucer's life can be written. They are not "all and some" mere antiquarians' puzzles, of interest only to those who have leisure and inclination for microscopic enquiries. So with the point immediately in view. It has been said with much force that Tyrwhitt, whose services to the study of Chaucer remain uneclipsed by those of any other scholar, would have composed a quite different biography of the poet, had he not been confounded by the formerly (and here and there still) accepted date of Chaucer's birth, the year 1328. For the correctness of this date Tyrwhitt "supposed" the poet's tombstone in Westminster Abbey to be the voucher; but the slab placed on a pillar near his grave (it is said at the desire of Caxton), appears to have merely borne a Latin inscription without any dates; and the marble monument erected in its stead "in the name of the Muses" by Nicolas Brigham in 1556, while giving October 25th, 1400, as the day of Chaucer's death, makes no mention either of the date of his birth or of the number of years to which he attained, and, indeed, promises no more information than it gives. That Chaucer's contemporary, the poet Gower, should have referred to him in the year 1392 as "now in his days old," is at best a very vague sort of testimony, more especially as it is by mere conjecture that the year of Gower's own birth is placed as far back as 1320. Still less weight can be attached to the circumstance that another poet, Occleve, who clearly regarded himself as the disciple of one by many years his senior, in accordance with the common phraseology of his (and, indeed, of other) times, spoke of the older writer as his "father" and "father reverent." In a coloured portrait carefully painted from memory by Occleve on the margin of a manuscript, Chaucer is represented with grey hair and beard; but this could not of itself be taken to contradict the supposition that he died about the age of sixty. And Leland's assertion that Chaucer attained to old age self-evidently rests on tradition only; for Leland was born more than a century after Chaucer died. Nothing occurring in any of Chaucer's own works of undisputed genuineness throws any real light on the subject. His poem, the "House of Fame," has been variously dated; but at any period of his manhood he might have said, as he says there, that he was "too old" to learn astronomy, and preferred to take his science on faith. In the curious lines called "L'Envoy de Chaucer a Scogan," the poet, while blaming his friend for his want of perseverance in a love-suit, classes himself among "them that be hoar and round of shape," and speaks of himself and his Muse as out of date and rusty. But there seems no sufficient reason for removing the date of the composition of these lines to an earlier year than 1393; and poets as well as other men since Chaucer have spoken of themselves as old and obsolete at fifty. A similar remark might be made concerning the reference to the poet's old age "which dulleth him in his spirit," in the "Complaint of Venus," generally ascribed to the last decennium of Chaucer's life. If we reject the evidence of a further passage, in the "Cuckoo and the Nightingale," a poem of disputed genuineness, we accordingly arrive at the conclusion that there is no reason for demurring to the only direct external evidence in existence as to the date of Chaucer's birth. At a famous trial of a cause of chivalry held at Westminster in 1386, Chaucer, who had gone through part of a campaign with one of the litigants, appeared as a witness; and on this occasion his age was, doubtless on his own deposition, recorded as that of a man "of forty years and upwards," who had borne arms for twenty-seven years. A careful enquiry into the accuracy of the record as to the ages of the numerous other witnesses at the same trial has established it in an overwhelming majority of instances; and it is absurd gratuitously to charge Chaucer with having understated his age from motives of vanity.

The conclusion, therefore, seems to remain unshaken, that he was born about the year 1340, or some time between that year and 1345.

Now, we possess a charming poem by Chaucer called the "Assembly of Fowls,"elaborately courtly in its conception, and in its execution giving proofs of Italian reading on the part of its author, as well as of a ripe humour such as is rarely an accompaniment of extreme youth. This poem has been thought by earlier commentators to allegorise an event known to have happened in 1358, by later critics another which occurred in 1364.

Clearly, the assumption that the period from 1340 to 1345 includes the date of Chaucer's birth, suffices of itself to stamp the one of these conjectures as untenable, and the other as improbable, and (when the style of the poem and treatment of its subject are taken into account) adds weight to the other reasons in favour of the date 1381 for the poem in question. Thus, backwards and forwards, the disputed points in Chaucer's biography and the question of his works are affected by one another.

Chaucer's life, then, spans rather more than the latter half of the fourteenth century, the last year of which was indisputably the year of his death. In other words, it covers rather more than the interval between the most glorious epoch of Edward III's reign--for Crecy was fought in 1346--and the downfall, in 1399, of his unfortunate successor Richard II.

同类推荐
  • 大方广佛华严经疏

    大方广佛华严经疏

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 东溪试茶录

    东溪试茶录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上清无英真童合游内变玉经

    上清无英真童合游内变玉经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • An Unsocial Socialist

    An Unsocial Socialist

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 晚春

    晚春

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 今日出门昨夜归

    今日出门昨夜归

    这是一个巨大的超赵人类文明能力的石窟群。但在厂窟周围却生活着群几乎被现代文明摒弃的穷孩子。一个名叫路云天的奇人在这里自筹资金办起了一座初级中学。路云天突然被害而且遗体不翼而飞。同学们在追查的过程中,遇到了一系列扑朔为离的现代科学无法解释的怪异事件,使大家的探秘过程,变成了对宇宙、对人性、对生命的寻觅和领悟……二十多年前,著名作家竹林曾以反映知青生活的长篇小说《生活的路》轰动全国,并得到了茅盾、冰心、萧乾等前辈的激赏;二十多年后,她站在一个新的起点上,再度出发,以优雅的、意气风发的姿态行走在科幻、魔幻与现实主义之间,为当代中学生讲述了一个奇妙诡异、大气磅礴而又充满了诗怀画意的故事。
  • 错爱枕边人

    错爱枕边人

    她是卑微如草的孤女,为生计沦为欢场女孩。他是令人闻风丧胆的兵王,脱下戎装成为跨国集团继承人。两难之间,他不知自己一开始就步入了一个设下的局,而她正是那枚射向他的银色子弹。究竟是谁将他们的命运相连?爱情和秘密将他们重重包围,当真相一步步揭开之时,那些情深意浓,终究不过是一场幻梦。
  • 狂后要休夫

    狂后要休夫

    女主非善类,请放心跳坑!从相府的小姐到皇后,宁相的眼里,她就是一根草芥,陪葬刚好是死得其所。可她才不要什么死得其所,越是要她死,她越是要活。还要活一个惊天动地泣鬼神。她嚣张,她冷漠,她以为老天怜她,这一世任她逍遥人间,却不知,她玩残的那一个个烂摊子,皆是有一人在背地里悄悄的替她料理着收拾着,乐此而不疲……顶着相府庶女的身份却越过了嫡女的尊贵,她狂,她傲,一夕性情变,怪只能怪那个一直只会睡睡睡的男人宠坏了的她,惯了她一身的毛病。好,既然不怪她,那她便在这重生的异世里玩转锦绣江山,写下一首盛世华歌。◆本文一对一,一生一世一双人,本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同,归他抄我!小剧场摘录:夜黑风高。一只小手捏了捏床上那人英挺的鼻子,“你到底要睡多久?”他无声,继续沉睡。“哧啦”,她剪刀一划,锦衣碎断,“行,既然你喜欢太监的待遇,那就剪了吧。”随即,她眯眼一笑,剪刀便落向了他的身……“臭丫头,你想守寡?”他倏然而起,再也不淡定了。她委屈嘟嘴,“不是一直在守着吗?”他薄唇轻落,距离她的耳朵一寸处停下,“你唤醒我就为了不想守了?”“你说呢?”她挑眉,小脸嫣红。他唇移,落在她的唇上,反手一挥,烛火灭,夜黑依旧风高,纱帐轻垂,不知是谁系了一枚同心结……◆喜欢的亲请收藏,支持就是动力,先扑倒,再么晕,爱亲们,最爱最爱!
  • 开胃下饭菜

    开胃下饭菜

    根据人们不同时候的不同胃口,精选了近百道家常开胃下饭菜,食物搭配具有较强的针对性,富含营养,开胃开心,让你吃得美味,吃得舒畅。《开胃下饭菜》内容丰富,实用性强,通俗易懂,是家庭主妇的有益参考书。
  • 戴流苏耳环的少女

    戴流苏耳环的少女

    【同名电视剧安徽卫视热播中】上个世纪二三十年代,上海滩出现了无线电台,一时间,上海居民耳目一新,一些私人电台蜂拥而起,不仅播放文娱节目,还负责传递商业业务。阮清恬在学校里学过无线电知识,她因为帮助任浩铭建立电台,从而和任浩铭相识了。任浩铭由于一个误会,迁怒于阮清恬,他将阮清恬最重要的传家宝流苏耳环拿走了。阮清恬必须要拿回耳环……
  • 孟秋纪

    孟秋纪

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 历代兴衰演义

    历代兴衰演义

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 我在异界那些年儿

    我在异界那些年儿

    唉!身穿异界,啥也没有,狗老天!你到底要我一个普通人怎么在这天骄多如狗,神灵偶尔出来走的世界混啊!
  • 乱世王者

    乱世王者

    林山苏醒的时候,发现自己已经身处三国乱世之中。玩家:我要举报,林山开挂,一样的武将,为什么十个都打不过他一个。水镜先生:吾主林山,当一统天下!吕布:林山之勇,吾不敌也。貂蝉:你召唤奴家来就是为了暖床?曹操:天下英雄,唯林君与孤也。刘备:既生山,何生备?
  • 冷少甜妻有些萌

    冷少甜妻有些萌

    她前世怨他,躲他,甚至拿死威胁他的。一朝重生,她黏他,爱他,调戏他。剧场一“老公老公,你猜我什么星座?”“什么星座”“是为你量身定做”剧场二“老公,我怀疑你的本质是一本书”“为什么”“不然为什么让我越看越想睡。”冷千凌此生唯一的事就是:爱她,宠她,把她捧在手掌心里宠着她。