III Illuminating Love
Chaucer: Troilus and
Criseyde
Medieval Lyrics
Innocent III: On Misery
Saint Augustine:
Confessions
Capellanus: The Art of
Courtly Love
Chaucer:
Troilus and Criseyde (original)
Engaging Chaucer
Our subject has one focus: the course of love.
What makes love compelling?
After reading, pick one passage that shows
how lovers act at a particular time and place,
in a particular stage of their encounters.
Chaucer’s essential
focus is on what contributes
to the joy Troilus and Criseyde anticipate and
eventually enjoy. Attentive readers will work to see
through their eyes, their senses, their assumptions
and expectations, their desires.
This is no little
thing for me to say;
It stuns imagination to express.
For each began to honour and obey
The other’s pleasure; happiness, I guess,
So praised by learned men, is something less.
This joy may not be written down in ink,
For it surpasses all that heart can think.
(III,242, p 171)
After appreciating the
fruits of love you may of course
consider the costs. Pandar, as well as Criseyede and Troilus, are initially wary of love.
And Love’s old sweet song ends unhappily, as court ladies daily hear
from fashionable singers. None-the-less all three at times agree
with Chaucer’s condemnation of nay-sayers.
Lord! Do you think
some avaricious ape
Who girds at love and scorns it as a toy,
Out of the pence that he can hoard and scrape,
Had ever such a moment of pure joy
As love can give, pursuing his foul ploy?
Never believe it! For, by God above,
No miser ever knew the joy of love.
(III, 195, p 159)
Misers would answer
‘Yes,’; but, Lord, they’re liars!
Busy and apprehensive, old and cold
And sad, who think of love as crazed desires;
But it shall happen to them as I told;
They shall forgo their silver and their gold
And live in grief; God grant they don’t recover,
And God advance the truth of every lover!
(III, 196, p 159)
I wish to God those
wretches that dismiss
Love and its service sprouted ears as long
As Midas did, that man of avarice;
Would they were given drink as hot and strong
As Crassus swallowed, being in the wrong,
To teach such folk that avarice is vicious
And love is virtue, which they think pernicious.
(III, 197, p 160)
Chaucer’s World
After
centuries of patriarchal concerns with war and honor, medieval women
take center stage, and love flourishes in song (troubadours), in verse
and prose
(The Divine Comedy and The Decameron
as well as Troilus and Criseyde), in letters (Heloise and Abelard).
Consider Mary of Burgundy and the world she imagines thorough reading in
her book of Hours:
Reading Mary of
Burgundy
Consider six changes
from Greek culture which contribute to such new habits of attention.
A. Monotheistic belief
now assumes a creator who moves creatures through desire.
Among the most powerful of desires are sexual and familial love.
Love makes the world go ’round.
B. This world prepares
souls for life after death, for some in heaven, for some in hell.
The exercise of desire in this life establishes not just the direction
of life after death,
but more the development of character which will flourish or seethe in
heaven or in hell.
C. Since every soul is
unique, and the actions of every individual will lead
to heaven or to hell, the study of the psyche, psychology, takes
precedence.
Character no longer arises from the pursuit of excellence, from earned
pride.
Character takes shape from the company one keeps, from the practice of
love.
D. Pleasure and pain
are pointers to heaven and hell. To recollect
personal experiences of intense pleasure is to shape directions to
future bliss,
to salvation. To recollect personal experiences of pain is to shape
directions
away from future suffering, from damnation. Fearful isolation
characterizes damnation.
Cooperative company characterizes salvation.
E. Conversion,
re-orientation, changes not just what we see and do,
but how we see and act. Conversions may arise from the discovery of
generative patterns
in astronomy, in mathematics, in music (the medieval trivium).
Conversions may appear
in the discovery of a religious calling. But conversion most commonly
appears
when individuals fall in love.
E. Scripture directs
attention and focuses desire. The speaking soul anticipates,
discovers and actualizes the language of love. In the beginning was the
word . . .
Medieval Love
Lyrics
Chaucer identifies himself, not as a lover, but as a student of
love. He works to trace the sensations, the feelings and thoughts, the
language and actions of specific lovers as they unfold in specific
places at specific times. As an author, he stimulates us to
participation in the lover’s world, a necessary prerequisite if informed
judgments are to follow. Observation of actual experience, not just the
empty exercise of presuppositions, feeds recollection and recognition.
Consider the evidence of natural desire,
working just before dawn (at matins), equally apparent
in wildlife and in people
—
I have a gentil cock
I have a gentil cock,
Croweth me the day;
He doth me risen erly,
My matins for to say.
I have a gentil cock;
Comen he is of gret:
His comb is of red coral,
His tayil is of jet.
I have a gentil cock;
Comen he is of kynde;
His comb is of red coral,
His tayil is of Inde.
His legges been of
asor,
So gentil and so smale;
His spures arn of silver-whyt
Into the wortewale.
His eyen arn of
crystal,
Looking all in aumber;
And every nyght he percheth him
In myn lady’s chaumber.
The splendor of nature
appears through the rooster’s shape, coloration, gestures and voice. A
lover would himself perch in his lady’s chamber. Sexual passion
surely inspires this voice. The plumage, gestures,
voice and actions of birds draw attention to the
richness and energy of creation.
Consider now the
appearance of a mother at sunset.
Her shape, coloration, gestures and voice also demonstrate natural
passion. As the sun sets
(at vespers), as darkness grows, as chill spreads,
her memories pierce and fade —
Nu goth Sonne
Nu goth Sonne under
wode.
Me rueth, Mary, thy faire rode.
Nu goth Sonne under tree.
Me rueth, Mary, thy Sone and thee.
Now goes the sun below trees
I pity, Mary, thy faire face.
Now goes the sun (Son) under tree (cross).
I pity, Mary, thy son and thee.
Mary, of course,
recalls her son’s crucifixion. Her recollection, however, springs from
the natural events, so common but so potentially affecting, she senses
and inhabits. If spring and dawn evoke the promise of birth, of new
life, of beginnings, autumn recalls sufferings attending age,
experiences of mortality, endings. The observer, however, is not just
Mary, but also the speaker, who sorrows with Mary, not by understanding
her feelings, but by inhabiting her circumstances. Passion originates
with suffering (recall the Valentine convention, a heart pierced with
Cupid’s arrow), the heart contracts, and compassion with a fellow
sufferer follows.
Complementary
associations and desires arise
in the appearance of flourishing girl —
Stetit Puella
There stood the girl
In the crimson dress
At the softest press,
How that tunic rustled:
Eia!
There stood the girl,
Rosebud on a vine;
Face ashine,
Mouth a reddish bloom.
Eia!
Slender, lithe, dressed to impress, she invites, deserves and receives
attention. Appreciative observers, drawn by the blush animating her
mobile, expressive face, trace her attitudes, gestures, approaches,
anticipating closer acquaintance. Eyes may be windows of the soul,
widening, glistening when aroused in anticipation.
Here lips invite carnal knowledge, attracting through texture, through
gesture. Her lips invite not just
a momentary bliss, but further acquaintance with
the language of love.
Medieval observers
would recall a parallel scene,
the Stabat Mater, where Mary stood suffering as a lance pierced her
crucified son’s heart. Stetit Puella would replace such attentions with
current attractions.
But experiences of carnal passion and experiences
of familial compassion are related, facing pages
of common, essential experience.
Mary, of course, is an
exceptional, a matchless mother. Medieval approaches to her, however,
emphasize circumstances evident in many mothers. The recognition
of pregnancy engenders appropriate surprise. Mary’s exceptional
situation develops from the commonest
of the evidences of love: the desire of a mother for fruitful life, her
desire for her child’s happiness, her awareness
of inevitable pain —
I singe of a Maiden
I singe of a Maiden
That is makeless;
King of all kinges
To her Sone she ches.
He cam all so stille
Ther his Moder was,
As dew in Aperille
That falleth on the grass.
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