Word as Bond in English Literature from the Middle Ages to the RestorationFor centuries, the transmission of power in feudal European society depended on a code of fidelity, of political allegiance, and truth to one's word. The word as bond extended to include not only the pledge of allegiance between subject and king, but the troth-plight between lovers, the vow of friendship, and the judicial oath. Society was ultimately based upon a gentleman's or gentlewoman's word that was itself underwritten by the Word of God. J. Douglas Canfield argues that English literature of the feudal epoch placed this master trope of word as bond at the center of conflict. The trope does not passively reflect social reality; rather, it helps to define, to constitute the society and its values. Both society and literature were preoccupied by the contest between fidelity on the one hand and its antithesis, betrayal (with the political and sexual anarchy that it threatened) on the other. In literature, the conflict was usually resolved through supernatural aid, the intervention of the Logos, which guaranteed the validity of the word. Canfield analyzes over 25 representative works, focusing on Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Dryden, in the five dominant modes of aristocratic literature-romance, comedy, lyric, tragedy, and satire. In each chapter, he offers three examples, one from the Middle Ages, one from the Renaissance, and one from the Restoration. Canfield's study proceeds synchronically, attempting to show that the trope is always under stress. The language of heroic romance coexists with the language of subversive comedy and absurdist satire. In an Afterword, he suggests why the trope disappears--not from the discourse, where it remains to this day, but from the center of conflict in English literature after 1688. |
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... lover whom he anticipates as arguing that " oathes made in reverentiall feare / Of Love , and his wrath , any may for- sweare " as made under duress , or that " lovers contracts . . . Binde but till sleep . " The poet could " Dispute ...
... lovers . In a very witty poem attempting to dissuade his mistress from incurring her father's wrath by running away with him disguised as a page , the poet appeals to her by " all the oathes which I / And thou have sworne to seale joynt ...
... Lovers sit in State together , As they were giving Laws to half Mankind . Th'impression of a smile left in her face , Shows she dy'd pleas'd with him for whom she liv'd , And went to charm him in another World . ( 5.1.508-12 ) Serapion ...
Contents
HEROIC ROMANCE | 3 |
TRAGICOMIC ROMANCE | 45 |
SOCIAL COMEDY | 83 |
Copyright | |
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