30 Great Myths about Chaucer. Stephanie Trigg

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Название 30 Great Myths about Chaucer
Автор произведения Stephanie Trigg
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119194071



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of an esquire would not have presumed to write on such a subject in such a way had he not been assured of a sympathetic reception” (84).

      Myth 4

      CHAUCER’S MARRIAGE WAS UNHAPPY

      In 1931, England’s poet laureate, John Masefield, reported:

      And called me tho by my name,

      And for I shulde the bet abreyde,

      Me mette “Awak,” to me he seyde

      Ryght in the same vois and stevene

      That useth oon I koude nevene;

      And with that vois, soth for to seyn,

      My mynde cam to me ageyn,

      For hyt was goodly seyd to me,

      So nas hyt never wont to be.

      (Iines 558–66)

      Is the “vois and stevene” of “oon I koude nevene” an indirect reference to the voice of his wife? It is tempting to think so. Certainly, the distinction between the tone of the Eagle and Philippa’s voice has led some to claim that this is evidence of Chaucer’s being a “henpecked husband.” Further, they claim that Chaucer begins his dream‐vision with a direct reference to his harried status as he makes a pilgrimage to “the corseynt Leonard.” St. Leonard was the patron saint of prisoners, so critics have traditionally understood this as a reference to marriage as a prison – a reading that seems to be supported by a humorous invocation of St. Leonard that Chaucer might have known from Jean de Meun’s Roman de la Rose.