Добавил:
Upload Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
435991_38769_lekcii_konspekt_lekciy_po_literatu...rtf
Скачиваний:
150
Добавлен:
17.08.2019
Размер:
462.93 Кб
Скачать

The literature of the 14th century

The protest against the Catholic Church and the growth of national feeling during the first years of the war found an echo in literature. There appeared poor priests who wandered from one village to another and talked to the people. They protested not only against rich bishops but also against churchmen who were ignorant and could not teach the people anything.

Wiliam Langland (1332–1400). One such poor priest was the poet William Langland. His parents were poor but free peasants. He renounced the rich churchmen and said that everybody was obliged to work. His name is remembered for a poem he wrote, "The Visions of William Concerning Piers the Ploughman".

The content is as follows. On a fine May day, the poet William went to the Malvem Hills. After a time he fell asleep in the open. Piers the Ploughman is a peasant who appears in the dream of the poet. piers tells him about the hard life of the people. It is the peasants alone who work and keep the monks and the lords in comfort, and the monks think they do quite enough by praying for the peasants.

Langland's attacks on the evils of the Church are the most outspoken of hid time. The poem helped the people to concentrate their minds on the necessity to fight for their rights. Before the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, the poem was used to formulate proclamations which easily spread among the people.

John Wyclif (1320–1384). John Wyclif was also a poor English priest. He started to write much later than Langland. He was a student at Oxford, later he was employed as counsel for the Crown in a debate about papal claims. The was sent on a mission to Bruges (Flanders) in 1374. He challenged everything that set the Pope of Rome above the English.

Lecture 6

The Theme: GEOFFREY CHAUCER

The Plan

  1. His Life and work.

  2. The Canterbury tales:

    1. the Prologue;

    2. Prologue to the tale of the Canon’s Yeoman;

    3. The Tale of the Canon’s Yeoman;

    4. Second part of the tale of the Canon’s Yeoman;

    5. The Pardoner’s tale;

    6. Chauer’s Contribution to literature.

Literature

1. Аракин В.Д. Практический курс английского языка. – М.: Владос, 1998. – 536 с.

2. Abbs B. Starting Strategies. - Longman, 1977. Aston H. Streets Ahead. - Book 1. - OUP,1990.

3. Bell J. Pre-Intermediate. - Longman, 1995.

4. Black V. Fast Forward 1 .- OUP, 1986. - P. 7.

5. Hartley B. Streamline English Departures. – OUP, 1978. - P. 2 - 6.

6. Richards J. Interchange 1/-CUP, 1990. - P. 2 - 8.

7. Sinclair B. Active Your English. Pre-Intermediate. - CUP, 1995/

8. Soars L. Headway. Elementary.- OUP, 1993/

9. Swan M. The New Cambridge English Course. - CUP, 1991/

10. Vimey P. Grapevine 1 .- OUP, 1989.

11. Volosova T.D., Rogoff V.V. English Literature. – M.: Prosvescheniye, 1994. – 240 p.

Geoffrey chaucer (1340–1400) His Life and Work

The greatest writer of the 14th century was Geoffrey Chaucer. He was born in London, soon after the Hundred Years' War broke out. His father. John Chaucer, was a London wine merchant. He had connections with the court and hoped for a courtier's career for his son, and at seventeen Geoffrey became page to a lady at the court of Edward HI.

At twenty, Chaucer was in France serving as a squire (arms-bearer to a knight) and was then taken prisoner by the French. His friends helped to ransom 'im.

On his return to England. Chaucer- passed into attendance on John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, the fourth son of the king.

During 1373 and the next few years. Chaucer travelled much and lived a busy life He went to France on a mission connected with a peace-treaty. He made three journeys to Italy, which made a deep impression upon him. Italy was the first country where the bourgeosie triumphed over feudalism, and it was there that Chaucer saw the first city-republics; Italian literature was at its height and opened to Chaucer a new world of art.

Chaucer's earliest poems were written in imitation of the French romances. He translated from French a famous allegorical poem of the 13th century, "The Romance of the Rose". Though the poem is very long, its plot is simple: a young man falls asleep and dreams of a garden in which there is a Rose that he desires to own. He is helped by such virtues as Beauty, Wealth and Hospitality, and hampered by such vices as Pride, Poverty and Evil Report. After a long time he i gets the Rose.

The second period of Chaucer's literary work was that of the influence. To this period belong the following poems: "The House of Fame", a didactic poem; "The Parliament of Fouls (birds), an allegorical poem satirizing Parliament; "Troilus and Cressida Ftrouilas and 'kresidaF, considered to be the predecessor of the psychological novel in England, and 'The Legend of Good Women", a dream-poem.

Chaucer was well read in ancient literature. Italian literature o{ the time taught him the importance of national literature in the life of a nation.

When Chaucer came back to England, he received the post of Controller of the Customs in the port of London. Chaucer held this position ten years. IHe devoted his free time to hard study and writing.

In 1377 King Edward III died. His ten-year-old grandson Richard succeeded him. A band of uncles who disagreed with each other acted as regents. At first all went well with Chaucer. He was appointed "Knight for the shire of Kent", which meant that he sat in Parliament as a representative for Kent. He often had to go on business to Kent and there he observed me pilgrimages to Canterbury Travelling in those days , was very dangerous, and several times Chaucer was robbed of money which was in his charge.

However, these duties grew very tiresome to the poet; he longed) for leisure to write. He petitioned the king several times for permission to give up his post, and finally the king granted, him a pension so that he could enjoy the leisure he so desired. But after his patron John of Gaunt went to Spain, Chaucer lost his offices and all his pension. He became so poor that he had to borrow money for food.

The third period of Chaucer's creative work begins in the year 1384-lwhen he started writing his masterpiece, "The Canterbury Tafes".

When the new king. Henry IV, came to the throne in 1399, the poet immediately addressed a poem to him, "The Complaints of Chaucer to His Empty Purse", with the result that his old pension was given back to him and a new one granted; Chaucer died in 1400 and was buried in Westminster Abbey. Chaucer was the last

English writer of the Middle Ages and the first of the Renaissance.