Geoffrey Chaucer: Representative of Fourteenth Century
Geoffrey Chaucer: Representative of Fourteenth Century
Geoffrey Chaucer: Representative of Fourteenth Century
Representative of
Fourteenth Century
- February 02, 2016
Q-1 "Chaucer's work represents his
14th century completely". Amplify?
Q-2 " Worldly people on an
unworldly journey". How far is this
a correct description of the pilgrims
in the Prologue?
1- The General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales is a remarkable
piece pertaining to social criticism.
Like Pope and Tennyson, Chaucer, too, painted the life of his time in
his poetry. The social group of thirty pilgrims covers the entire
range of fourteen century English society, leaving only loyality on
the one hand and the lowest life on the other. Chaucer lived in an
age which was epoch- making in religious, social and political
planes. The victories of the English army in the continent made
Calais an English colony and the nation prosperous. The disasters,
which came after the victories, helped in ripening the English mind.
9- Inthe end, we can say that Chaucer is the perfect exponent of his
age and his poetry reflects the fourteenth century.
Critical Remarks:
"Certain features of the plan strike the reader at once and hence
need only be mentioned. The sketches were divised to provide
representatives of the chief classes of English Society under the
higher nobility. No one ever supposed it chance that there are one
knight, one lawyer, one Monk, etc. 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 satire on faults in social life; they
summarize the noblest ideals of the time and the basest
practices". (J. R. Hulbert)