Uzbekistan state world languages university english philology faculty


THE IMPORTANCE OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF ENGLISH LITERATURE


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SOLIKHA MUKHAMMADRAFIKOVA 1938

2. THE IMPORTANCE OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF ENGLISH LITERATURE.
Chaucer, who is hailed as one of the greatest poets of the world, derived his stimulus and example from French and Italian poetry and enriched England with a Literature that rivals to this hour the greatest productions of human genius and has confessedly influenced the likes of Shakespeare and Milton. Chaucer was not just a first rate literary artist; he was the pivotal figure in English Literature who encompassed many of the earlier traditions, genres, and subjects of Literature and applied them in the context of a new, highly active and developing society. His contribution to the literature and language of English is ground-breaking by virtue of which the highest position in the hierarchy of literary figures has been granted to him.
Chaucer was the first great national poet of England who gave full expression to the new hopes and aspirations of the people of his time. This could be achieved because Chaucer was a realist who found fitting subjects for his poetry not in the Gods and heroes of a Golden Age but in the life that unfolded before his eyes. Chaucer mixed freely with mankind and had the innate instinct to catch within his purview the soul of his generation in all its fullness and depth. Chaucer’s realism and his true significance as a national poet is distinctly discernible in his Canterbury Tales where he has painted a truthful picture of the 14th-century life through a group of pilgrims. By introducing pilgrims from different classes and society and giving an analysis of their manners, virtues and follies, clothes and habits, Chaucer did not just give voice to the tendencies of his age but he also made a significant contribution to the act of characterization.
In the literature of the 14th century, when so few poets had any perception of fun in life, Chaucer’s humor was both delightful and invigorating. Before Chaucer, English humor was synonymous with buffoonery or horse play but he refined and raised it to the standard of literary humor which was kind and patronizing as in the case of Clerk of Oxenford and semi-farcical in case of the Wife of Bath. Chaucer also introduced pathos which is amply present in The Legend of Good Women. By his remarkable observation of inconsistencies in conduct and power of selecting what is typical in manners, Chaucer also showed the way to satirists of the 17th and 18th centuries. Chaucer sowed the seeds of the novel in Troilus and Criseyde and also in Canterbury Tales which were later nourished by Fielding. The prologue to Canterbury Tales is the prologue to modern fiction and the tales with their characters and atmosphere are miniature novels. Not just this, in the Canterbury Tales we also find all the elements of Elizabethan comedy. The Host, the Miller, the Reve, the Wife of Bath and the likes were the English models for Flagstaff, Bottom, Dogberry and so on. Chaucer set the ball rolling for secular drama.
No list carrying Chaucer’s contributions can ever complete without mentioning his contributions to English language and poetry. It was Chaucer’s works which made London English, the Midland dialect, the sole literary language of England for all ages to come. He inculcated into the Midland dialect all the delicacy and refinement of French poetry, breathed into it a higher political life and gave the poets of his succeeding generation a ready and well-formed medium of poetical expression. He virtually imported the decasyllabic line from France and used it in both stanzaic and couplet forms. He also introduced the Rhyme Royale which was first used in Parliament of Fowls.
We can summarize Chaucer’s achievements and importance by saying that he is the earliest of the great moderns. He enlarged the scope and range of the poet, introduced minute observation of life around him, gave a vivid and clear description of the condition of his times, excelled in characterization, humor, pathos, made narration an art and above all gave a new form and shape to language and versification. He is truly the father of English Language and Poetry.

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