Chaucer’s Art of Characterization

 

What is the art of characterization?

Characterization is the concept of creating characters in a piece of literature. It can be said without any doubt that the worth of every writer is judged by the delineation of his characters. Geoffrey Chaucer stands above the head and shoulder of all other English writers in the art of Characterization. His characters breathe, walk and talk as we do and their wishes and aspirations, their likes and dislikes are quite akin to men of “flesh and blood”. They are so universal in nature that we meet these characters daily in every society; therefore, they do not look unreal to us at all.


Chaucer’s Prologue is a picture gallery. His pilgrims are like twenty-nine pictures hung on a wall. These pilgrims are from different walks of life. They are so carefully chosen that they represent the whole of English society and fully reveal social, moral, material, commercial, romantic and chivalric trends prevailing in the society. He presents each of them with minute details about their dresses, physical features, habits, peculiarities of manner, speech etc.


Chaucer follows the methods common to all painters. He paints with words and not with a brush. He had the seeing eye, the retentive memory and the judgment to select rightly. Many of his characters are drawn from his own acquaintances. For example, the host Hairy Bailey is drawn from an actual host known to Chaucer. Similarly, the Wife of Bath and the Oxford Clerk are also drawn from individuals with whom he came in contact in his life. That is why his characters are life-like. They are living and breathing human beings having the force of reality. His picture gallery is made up of real men and women.


In many respects, Chaucer shows a marked preference for brilliant colours, both in dress and appearance. On entering his picture gallery, one is at once impressed by the remarkable brightness of his portraits. For example, the gown of the Squire is embroidered, 


as it were a meede 

Al ful of fresshe floures, wyite and reede;


Similarly, the Friar is dressed all in green and the hose of the Wife of Bath is of fine scarlet red. The face of the Summoner is fiery red and the Miller has a reddish beard. The atmosphere of Chaucer's portrait gallery is sunlit, bright and colourful.

In the portraits of the Prologue Chaucer excels the art of the painter. He has an advantage over the painter. He can make use of sounds which the artist with the brush cannot do. He hears the jingling of the bells of the Monk’s palfrey, notes the nasal tones of the Prioress, and the lisping of the Friar.


He highlights one set of characters by presenting it as a foil to another. The refined and delicate Prioress is contrasted with the coarse and broad-speaking Wife of Bath. His ecclesiastical characters represent the degeneration of the church and the corruption that had overtaken the clergy of the times. His Monk, the Friar, the Pardoner and the Summoner have all forgotten their duties. They have grown greedy and selfish and are given to all sorts of corrupt practices. They have been individualized by noting their personal peculiarities and oddities. For example, the Monk has been individualized by his eyes.


His eyen stepe and rollynge in his heed,

That seemed as a forneys of a leed;


Chaucer uses apt similes and metaphors to present his characters. His similes are always drawn from common, familiar and homely aspects of life and nature. His pictorial imagination constantly uses such imagery. He makes his characters gleam and glow as on a canvas. For example, the merry nature of the Squire is described in a single line by, saying that “he was as bright as is the month of May.” The brightness of the Friar’s eyes is his most peculiar feature and it is emphasized through an equally apt image:


His eyen twynkled in his heed aryght,

As doon the sterres in the frosty nyght.


Chaucer portrays his characters objectively and impartially. He is so broadminded that he shows his equal sympathy to all the characters, the just and the unjust, the pious and the sinner. Chaucer’s characters are types as well as individuals: they are the symbols of some particular class, age group, or profession, but they also have their own peculiar traits, their own idiosyncrasies, and their own ways of talking and doing things. Each of the twenty-nine pilgrims in the Prologue is morally and socially representative, but he is also an individual with marked peculiarities of his own. For example, his Knight is a typical Knight of his age representing the fast-fading chivalry of the middle ages. But he is also an individual who, for his personal qualities, had been honoured in foreign lands above all other knights and who had been the guest of honour at many a feast. His son, the young Squire, represents the jollity of youth as well as the spirit of the rising chivalry of the times. He is not, like his father, interested so much in war and adventure as in singing and dancing and Jove-making. He is also an individual, who has a fondness for bright colours and fine apparel,


Embrouded was he,as it were a meede

Al ful of fresshe floures, wyite and reede;


Another worth mentioning about Chaucer's characterization is that he has the gift of seeing the universal in the particular and he presents both these aspects of life in the picture of pilgrims. These pilgrims possess all those traits, humour and habits that characterize men and women of all ages and nations in this world. They are not, of an age but of all ages, “They are timeless, creations on a time-determined stage.” The Squire, the Monk, the Prioress, the Franklin, the Wife of Bath etc., may have changed their names, and the title by which they are known, but they are all human beings having the same passions, desires and instincts as are common to humanity. All of us feel at home in their company, for we all recognize in them an element of our own selves.


His characters are not static: they constantly grow and develop like real men and women. They talk to each other, narrate their own tales, and comment on the tales told by others. They reveal a hundred aspects of their natures. They are shown to us as moving, acting, talking and disputing just like men of flesh and blood. In short, it can be said that there is nothing of the dreamer about Chaucer-nothing of the stern moralist and social reformer. Like Shakespeare, he makes it his business in The Canterbury Tales, to paint life as he sees it, and leaves others to draw the moral.


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