Geoffrey Chaucer
English poet, born in London between
1340 and 1345; died there, 25 October, 1400. John Chaucer, a vintner and
citizen of London, married Agnes, heiress of one Hamo de Copton, the city
moneyer, and owned the house in Upper Thames Street, Dowgate Hill (a site
covered now by the arrival platform of Cannon Street Station), where his son
Geoffrey was born. That his birth was not in 1328, hitherto the accepted date,
is fully proved (Furnivall in The Academy, 8 Dec., 1888, 12 Dec., 1887). John
Chaucer was connected with the Court, and once saw Flanders in the royal train.
Geoffrey was educated well, but whether he was entered at either university
remains unknown. He figures by name from the year 1357, presumably in the
capacity of a page, in the household books of the Lady Elizabeth de Burgh, wife
of Prince Lionel, third son of King Edward III (Bond in Fornightly Review, VI,
28 Aug., 1873). The lad followed this prince to France, serving through the
final and futile Edwardian invasion, which ended in the Peace of Bretigny
(1360), and was taken prisoner at 'Retters', identified by unwary
biographers as Retiers near Rennes, but by Skeat as Rethel near Reims, a place
mentioned by Froissart in his account of this very campaign. Thence Chaucer was
ransomed by the king, who, when the Lady Elizabeth died, took over her page and
later (1367) pensioned him for life. Chaucer was married before 1374; probably
the Philippa Chaucer named in the queen's grant of 1366 was then Geoffrey
Chaucer's wife (Lounsbury, Studies in Chaucer, I, 95-7). It seems clear that he
could not have been happy in his marriage (Hales in Dict. Nat. Biog., X, 157).
He had two sons and a daughter, if not other children. Gascoigne tells us that
his contemporary, Thomas Chaucer was the poet's son. This statement, long
discredited, is now fully endorsed by the best authorities (Hales in Athenaeum,
31 March, 1888; Skeat, ibid., 27 Jan.1900). Thomas Chaucer's mother was
Philippa Roet, daughter of Sir Paon or Payne de Roet Guienne king at arms. Roet
had another daughter, Catherine, widow of Sir Hugh Swynford, who was for
Gaunt's mistress and eventually his third wife. Thus Chaucer became the
brother-in-law of the great duke, who from 1368 onwards had been his most
powerful patron. Thomas Chaucer (b. about 1367; d. 1434), later of Woodstock
and Ewelme, became chief butler to four sovereign, as well as Speaker of the
House of Commons (in 1414). His sister Elizabeth (b.1365) at sixteen entered
Barking Abbey as a novice, John of Gaunt providing fifty pounds as her religious
dowry. Lewis Chaucer, the 'litel sonne Lowys', for whom the
'Astrolale' was written, is supposed to have died in childhood. From
about his twenty-sixth year Chaucer was frequently employed on important
diplomatic missions; the year 1372-3 marks the turning point of his literary
life, for then he was sent to Italy; circumstances make it extremely probable
that either in Florence or at Padua he made Petrarch's acquaintance (Lounsbury,
Studies, I, 67-68). The young King Richard II granted Chaucer a second life
pension. It is startling to find him, in 1380, concerned in a discreditable
abduction (Athenaeum, 29 Nov., 1873; from the Close Roll of 3 of Richard II).
He was made comptroller of the petty customs of the port of London and
complains of the burden of official life in 'The House of Fame'
(lines 652-60); and it would appear from the prologue the 'Legend of Good
Women', and through the influence of the new queen, Anne of Bohemia, he
was enabled by1385 to sucure a permanent deputy. At this time he gave up
housekeeping in Aldgate, and settled in the country, presumably at Greenwich,
where he had a garden and arbour. The intrigues of the partisans of the king's
uncle, Thomas, Duke of Gloucester, involved Chaucer's fortunes in partial ruin.
The grants made to Philippa, his wife ceased in 1387, so that we may suppose
she was then dead; during the springs of 1388 Chaucer was obliged to sell two
of his pensions; in 1390 he was twice in one day robbed of the king's money,
but was excused from repaying it. Until King Richard recovered power Chaucer
had lean years to undergo. For a while he was Clerk of the Works at Windsor,
Westminster and the Tower, but proved thriftless and unsuccessful in business
affairs, and gave little satisfaction. Unrivalled opportunities and the
fostering care of successive sovereigns could not keep hirn frorn anxiety, if
not penury, towards the end. It is noticeable that his latest and most troubled
period produced the 'Canterbury Tales'. Within four days after his
accession King Henry IV, the son of Chaucer's first benefactor, increased
Chaucer's remaining income by forty marks per annum. The poet then leased a
pleasant house in the monastery garden at Westminster, and there, hard by the
Lady Chapel of the Abbey (now replaced by the loftier erection of Henry VII ),
he died. For a century and a half his only memorial in Westminster Abbey was a
Latin epitaph written by Surigonius of Milan, engraved upon a leaden plate, and
hung up, probably at Caxton's instigation, on a pillar near the grave. The
present canopied grey marble altar-tomb, on the south side, was set up by
Nicholas Brigham, in 1556, all trace of its votive portrait of the venerated
master disappeared long ago. The 'Canterbury Tales' were first
printed by Caxton, from a faulty manuscript, in or about 1476-7; later by
Pynson, and by Wynkyn de Worde. Other pieces were collected, and, between
1526-1602, often published with the 'Tales'. Many of these,
attributed to Chaucer even by his earliest great modern editor, Tyrwhitt, are
now known not to be his. (Skeat, 'Chaucer's Minor Poems', Oxford,
1896; or, Idem 'Chaucerian Pieces' in the 'Complete Works',
Oxford, 1897, suppl. vol.) Chaucer's genuine major poems are assigned to this
chronological order: The 'Romaunt of the Rose', that is, the first
1705 lines the remainder being rejected as not Chaucer's (see Chaucer Society
Publications, 2nd Series, No 19, 1884), dates from about 1366, and 'The
A.B.C.', from the same period; the 'Book of the Duchess' from
1369, the 'Complaint of Pity' from 1372; 'Anelida and False
Arcite' from 1372-4; 'Troilus and Cressid' from 1379-83, the
'Parliament of Fowls' from 1382; the 'House of Fame' from
1383-4; the 'Legend of Good Women' from about 1385-6; and the 'Canterbury
Tales' as a whole, from 1386 onwards until after 1390. It is curious that
the first draft of the lovely Tales by the Second Nun, the Man of Law, the
Clerk, the Knight, and part of the Monk, should have been produced early; and
that the Tales by the Miller, the Reeve, the Shipman, and the Merchant, as well
as the Wife of Bath's Prologue, should have been produced after 1387. Chaucer's
objectionable work is, therefore, not the work of his youth.
To the intense affection, frequently
expressed, of Hoccleve, we owe the first and best of Chaucer's portraits,
familiar through reproduction. It appears in the margin of 'The Governail
of Princes', or 'De Regimine Principum' (Harl. MS. 4866, in
British Museum). In it we see Chaucer, limned from memory, in his familiar hood
and gown, rosary in hand, plump, full-eyed, fork-bearded. (For detailed
accounts see Spielman, 'The Portraits of Geoffrey Chaucer', London,
l900, first issued in the 'Chaucer Memorial Lectures', 111-41.) Like
Dryden, he was silent, and had a 'down look'; this physical
characteristic was partly due to a most genuine modesty, partly to the habit of
constant reading. Chaucer indeed read and annexed everything, and transmuted
everything into that vocabulary of his, all plasticity and all power. He is a
cosmopolite, chiefly influenced by Ovid, by his own contemporary Italy, a
debtor, if ever man was, to the whole spirit of his age; he has its fire, its
impudence, its broad licentiousness; he has rather more than his share of its
true-hearted pathos, its exquisite freshness and brightness, its sense of
eternity. The so-called 'Counsel of Chaucer' sums up, at a holy and
serene moment, his philosophic outlook. He had unequalled powers of
observation, and gave a highly ironic but most humane report. He is an artist
through and through, and that artist had been a soldier and a diplomat, hence
his genius, even in its extremes of mirth has balance and health, remoteness
and neutrality -- it is never bitter, and never in the least 'viewy'.
Matthew Arnold (Introduction to Ward's 'English Poets' 1885, I, pp.
xxxiv--v) accuses him of a lack of what Aristotle calls 'high and
excellent seriousness'. But 'high seriousness' is not quite the
note of the fourteenth century. Chaucer's is the master-note (submerged all
over Europe since the Reformation) of joy. This brings us to the question of
his personal religion.
Foxe (Acts and Monuments of the
Church, 1583, II, 839) started the absurd theory that Chaucer was a follower of
Wyclif. The poet's own abstract habit; his association with the prince who
(probably actuated by no very high motives) withdrew his favour from the
contemporary reformer when solicitude for a purer practice ran into heresy and
threatened revolt; his close friendship with Strode, a Dominican of Oxford and
a strong anti-Lollard--these things tend of themselves to denote Chaucer's
views in the matter. The opposite inference is 'due to a misconception of
his language, based on a misconception of his character' (Lounsbury
Studies, II, 469). Like Wyclif, Chaucer loved the priestly ideal; and he draws
it incomparably in his 'Poor Parson of Town'. Yet, as has been said,
that very 'Parson's Tale', in its extant form, goes far to prove that
its author, even by sympathy, was no Wyclifite (A.W. Ward, 'Chaucer',
London, 1879, p. 134, in 'English Men of Letters Series').
Passionless justice was the bed-rock of Chaucer's mind. He paints that
parti-coloured Plantagenet world as it was, not interfering to make it better,
nor to wish it better. Where the churchman type was gross, he represents it
grossly. It is well, however, to recall that the famous episode of his
'beating a Friar in Fleet street' is the invention of Speght, further
embroidered by Chatterton; and that the prose tractate, 'Jack
Upland', full of invective against the religious orders, is proved not to
be Chaucer's. His attitude towards women is just as two-sided. He shows in many
a theme a reverence toward them which must have been fed by that 'hy
devocioun' to Our Lady which is beautifully apparent in his pages, and
which Hoccleve mentions in recalling his memory; but dramatic exigencies,
Boccaccio's example, presumable hard domestic experience, a laughingly
merciless psychology, and a paralyzing outspokenness, contrive too often, as
readers regret, to fight it down. He has been held up as a rationalist, on the
strength of a few passages, and against the enormous mass of testimony which he
furnishes on the soundness of his Catholic ethos. Of that, after all, as of its
absence, Catholics are the best judges. The 'Nuns' Priest's Tale'
(Skeat's ed., lines 4424-40) raises the question of predestination, only to
drop it. The context shows that the poet thinks his sudden side-issue not
trivial or tedious, but quite the contrary, he quits it only because he cannot
'boult it to the bren', i.e., sift it down, analyze it
satisfactorily. Again, the 'Knight's Tale' (Skeat's ed., lines
2890--14) implies that the author has no mind to dogmatize upon the final
destiny of poor Arcite, newly slain. Both these instances have been cited in
the masterly chapter on 'Chaucer as a Literary Artist' (Lounsbury,
Studies, II, 512-15, 520), to prove, in the one ease, an easy dismissal of a
mere scholastic dilemma; in the other, Chaucer's disbelief, or half-belief, in
immortality. They prove, rather, a restraint in dogmatizing about the destiny
of the individual, a restraint practiced by the church itself. 'The Legend
of Good Women' opens with some fifteen lines, the purport of which need
never have been questioned. They mean nothing if they do not mean that
knowledge by evidence is one thing, assurance by faith another thing; and that
lack of sensible proof can never discredit revelation. A somewhat playful
confession of belief has here been turned into a serious profession of agnosticism,
through sheer lack of spiritual understanding. His 'hostility to the
Church', as Professor Lounsbury calls it, is certainly not borne out by
Chaucer's going out of his way, as he does, to defend her from age-long
calumnies; for instance, in the 'Franklin's Tale', and in the section
'De Ira' of the 'Parson's Tale', he witnesses to her horror
of superstitions and false sciences. Chaucer, in short, though none too
supernatural a person, had a most orthodox grip on his catechism.
The 'Preces', or prose
'retracciouns', which are usually painted at either end of the
'Canterbury Tales' date from the evening of Chaucer's life. To
Tyrwhitt, Hales, Ward, and Lounsbury, who suspect undue priestly influence, the
'Preces' are, in their own words, 'morbid', 'reaction
and weakness', 'a betrayal of his poetic genius',
'unbearable to have to accept as genuine'. In the course of them,
Chaucer disclaims of his books 'thilke that sounen in-to sinne' i.e.,
those which are consonant with, or sympathetic with sin. Skeat is the only
editor who understands Chaucer in his contrition (Notes to the 'Canterbury
Tales', in the Oxford Press complete edition, 475). Gascoigne (Theological
Dictionary, Pt. II, 377, the manuscript of which is in the library of Lincoln College,
Oxford) unwittingly parodies the situation, and represents the old sinner
'Chawserus' as dying while lamenting over pages, quae male scripsi de
malo et turpissimo amore. To the secular point of view it has all seemed, and
may well seem, mistaken and deplorable. But nothing is manlier, or more
touching and endearing, than this humble self-subordination to conscience and
the moral law. 'Except ye become as little children' is the hardest
saying ever given to the intellectual world. These are great geniuses, Geoffrey
Chaucer not least among them, to whom it was not given in vain.
The standard recent editions of
Chaucer are: (1) 'Chaucer's Canterbury Tales Annotated and Accented, with
Illustrations of English Life in Chaucer's Time. New and revised edition, with
illustrations from the Ellesmere MS.' (Saunder's ed., London, 1894); (2)
'The Student's Chaucer; being a Complete Edition of his Works' (Skeat
ed., Oxford, 1895); (3) 'The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, edited
from numerous Manuscripts' (Skeat ed. 7 vols., Oxford, 1894-7); (4)
'The Canterbury Tales done into Modern English, by the Rev. Walter W.
Skeat' (The King's Classics Series, Gollancz ed., 1904).