Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • The outstanding english poet Geoffrey Chaucer,

  • renown before shakespeare, is considered the first finder of our english language.

  • His Canterbury Tales ranks as one of the greatest public works English literature.

  • Renowned author, Chauser also contributed importantly the second half of the

  • fourteenth century

  • to the management of public affairs as a courtier,

  • diplomat and civil servant.

  • In a career that spanned three successive kings

  • Chaucer was praised and trusted.

  • But it is his advocation,

  • the writing of poetry,

  • for which he is remembered.

  • Geoffrey Chaucer was born around 1342, likely in London.

  • His family name derives from the french "Chaucier",

  • meaning shoemaker,

  • though Chaucer's father was a wine merchant.

  • Chaucer's his first appearance in historic records is in 1357 as a

  • member of the household of Elizabeth,

  • Countess of Ulster, Wife of Lyonel third son of King Edward III.

  • Geoffery's father presumably have been able to place him

  • among a group of young men and women

  • serving in that royal household:

  • a customary arrangement whereby families provide their children with opportunity

  • necessary and for courtly education and connections to advance their careers.

  • especially since Chaucer reportedly had sixteen siblings, this

  • was going to excel him in society.

  • Though this ment Chaucer had to leave his family when work is a page in service

  • to a knight.

  • He was only fifteen years old.

  • bu age seventeen,

  • Chaucer was a member of King Edward III's army in France, and was even

  • captured during the unsuccessful siege of Rhymes.

  • The king himself contributed to Chaucer's ransom

  • to save him in order to returned him to his majesty's service.

  • Chaucer surfaces again in historic record on February 22,

  • 1366, when the King of Navare issued a certificate of safe

  • conduct

  • for Chaucer

  • three companions and their servants to enter the country Spain.

  • This occasion is the first of a number of diplomatic missions to the continent

  • of Europe over the succeeding ten years.

  • At the age of t25, Chaucer had moved

  • from a household servant,

  • a soldier, to that of a

  • trusted diplomat.

  • So much responsibility and

  • activity in public matters

  • appears to have left Chaucer with little time for writing.

  • However, his time traveling did expose Chaucer

  • to the works of Dante,

  • Partouche,

  • and Boccaccio.

  • Which was later to the profound influence on his own writing.

  • No information exists concerning Chaucer's early education,

  • although doubtless he would have been fluent in French, as was the Middle

  • English of the time,

  • he also became competent in Latin and Italian.

  • His rank showed that he is closely familiar with many important books this time.

  • In1366, Chaucer had married his longtime friend, Filippa Pann, a

  • lady-in-waiting to the queen of England, and continued his work for his Majesty

  • as a diplomat.

  • With Chaucer's career prospering, and his first important poem,

  • Book of the Duchess,

  • becoming popular,

  • Chaucer continued to connect to himself with persons in high places.

  • This first poem

  • was more than thirteen hundred lines long,

  • probably written in late 1369 or early 1370, it was written

  • for the funeral of Blanche,

  • Duchess of Lancaster,

  • Wife of John of Gaunt -

  • who died of plagued in September, 1369.

  • John of Gaunt

  • was Chaucer's his best friend.

  • "Lord, but my heart is maketh light,

  • when I think on that sweetest right,

  • a commonly one to see

  • and wish to God it might so be

  • that she would hold me for her knight,

  • my Lady fair and bright."

  • When RIchard II ascended the throne, Chaucer was appointed Clerk of the King's Work.

  • His pay raises more than thirty pounds a year and a pitcher of the wine daily.

  • He became responsible for the construction at Westminster,

  • the Tower of London,

  • and several castles and manors,

  • but times were still hard for Chaucer.

  • It is during this same time that Chaucer was caught up in illegal scandal.

  • The charges were dropped an Chaucer was found not guilty.

  • But regardless, Chaucer's place in society great changed.

  • He resigned, or was removed, it is not clear,

  • but Chaucer left the court and moved to Kent:

  • after which is wife, Philippa

  • died due to poor health,

  • leaving Chaucer with two sons

  • and two daughters.

  • Between the years of 1387

  • and 1400,

  • Chaucer devoted much of his time writing his most famous work,

  • Canterbury Tales.

  • The humor of the work is sometimes very subtle

  • but is often broad and outspoken when compared to other works

  • written at the same time.

  • Chaucer's original plan for the Canterbury Tales

  • called for two tales each

  • through over twenty pilgrims making the journey from Southport England to the

  • Shrine of Saint Thomas Beckett of Canterbury England.

  • He later modified the plan to write only one tale

  • for each pilgram on the road to Canterbury,

  • but he only finished twenty-four tales out of the one hundred and twenty

  • stories it is believed he had been planning.

  • Chaucer introduces each of these pilgrims as vivid, brief sketches,

  • a lively mix of a variety of genres

  • told by the travelers of all aspects of society.

  • The tale survives in groups connected by a prologues, or introductions, and epilogues,

  • conclusions.

  • But the proper arrangement of these groups is not altogether clear.

  • At this time in Medieval England,

  • literature was separated into very distinct styles,

  • focused more on audience - the lower

  • middle, and upper classes -

  • than its characters.

  • Chaucer, however, moves freely between all of these styles

  • showing favoritism to none.

  • He not only considers the reader of his work

  • as his intended audience,

  • but the other pilgrims within the story as well,

  • creating a multi-layer

  • rhetorical puzzle of ambiguities.

  • Chaucer's work thus far surpasses the ability

  • of any single Medieval theory to uncover.

  • Chaucer avoid targeting any specific audience or social class of reader,

  • focusing instead

  • on the characters of the story.

  • The characters

  • are written

  • with a skill proportional to their social status and learning.

  • Chaucer draws on his own unique background, knowledge, literary influences,

  • and life experiences.

  • The characters are all divided into three distinct classes.

  • The classes begin with those who prayed,

  • the clergy,

  • the highest of all of the classes in Medieval England,

  • Those who fight,

  • the nobility, and those who work, the communist and the peasantry.

  • Chaucer also breathes new life into his female characters, giving them, for a

  • first time,

  • a voice as narrator.

  • Until now,

  • Medieval literature only classified women as wives,

  • virgins,

  • and prostitutes.

  • They were never given a primary role in a story.

  • When Henry IV takes the throne

  • Chaucer hoped to find a new job under a new king.

  • And while Chaucer's reputation for loyalty earned him a small pension

  • Chaucer went months without pay and was near penniless.

  • Nevertheless, on the strength of his expectations, on the fourth of December 1399

  • he released a tenement in the garden St. Mary's

  • Chapel at Westminster,

  • and it is probably hear and that he died on the 25 of the following

  • October.

  • He was buried in Westminster Abbey and his tomb a nucleus of what

  • is now known as Poet's Corner.

  • It is unclear how he died,

  • and some have even speculated that he may have been murdered.

  • Little is known about this great man's end.

  • Even with such a unique and varied life,

  • Chaucer's Canterbury Tales

  • praises the poet as the greatest English Poet of all time,

  • and the first to truly show

  • what the language was capable of

  • becoming.

  • His work has influenced

  • all to come after him.

  • The work of Shakespeare,

  • Marlowe,

  • Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Dickens,

  • and even author JK Rowling credits Chaucer

  • as a strong influence.

  • A very modest plaque was placed at Geoffery Chaucer's tomb when he died;

  • however, one hundred and fifty years later, in 1556,

  • as a testament

  • to his great poetic works,

  • poet Nicholas Burnham

  • constructed a more magnificent tomb

  • in honor

  • of the father and finder

  • of our English language.

  • Today Chaucer's tomb still stands and hundreds of visitors pay him homage each

  • day.

  • His works in his unconventional creativity in the fourteenth century

  • credit him

  • with not only found in the English language

  • for capturing the voice of kings and commoners alike.

The outstanding english poet Geoffrey Chaucer,

字幕と単語

ワンタップで英和辞典検索 単語をクリックすると、意味が表示されます

B1 中級

ジェフリー・ショーサー私たちの言語の創始者 (Geoffrey Chaucer: The Founder of Our Language)

  • 80 11
    Chia-Yin Huang に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語