English Literature: Its Background and Development
Introduction
English Literature is one of the richest literatures of the world. Being the literature of a great nation which, though inhabiting a small island off the west coast of Europe, has made its mark in the world on account of her spirit of adventure, perseverance, and tenacity, it reflects these characteristics of a great people.
It has vitality, rich variety and continuity. As literature is the reflection of society, the various changes which have come about in English society, from the earliest to the modern time, have left their stamp on English literature. Thus, to appreciate properly the various phases of English literature, knowledge of English Social and Political History is essential. For example, we cannot form a just estimate of Chaucer without considering the characteristics of the period in which he was living, or of Shakespeare without taking proper notice of the great events which were taking place during the reign of Elizabeth. The same is the case with other great figures and important movements in English literature.
When we study
the history of English literature from the earliest to modern times, we find
that it has passed through certain definite phases, each having marked
characteristics. These phases may be termed as ‘Ages’ or ‘Periods’, which are
named after the central literary figures or the important rulers of England. Thus,
we have the ‘Ages’ of Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Dryden, Pope, Johnson.
Wordsworth, Tennyson, Hardy; and, on the other hand, the Elizabethan Age, the
Jacobean Period, the Age of Queen Anne, the Victorian Age, the Georgian Period.
Some of these phases are named after certain literary movements, as the
Classical Age, the Romantic Age, while others after certain important historical
eras, as the Medieval Period, Anglo-Saxon Period, Anglo-Norman Period. These
literary phases are also named by some literary historians after the centuries,
as the Seventeenth Century Literature, Eighteenth-Century Literature,
Nineteenth-Century Literature and Twentieth-Century Literature. These ‘Ages’
and ‘Periods’ naturally overlap each other, and they are not to be followed
strictly, but it is essential to keep them in mind to follow the growth of
English literature, and its salient and distinctive characteristics during the
various periods of its development.
Now let us have a critical
survey of the background and development of English literature from the
earliest times up to the present age.
The Anglo-Saxon Or Old-English Period
(670-1100)
The earliest phase of
English literature started with Anglo-Saxon literature of the Angles and Saxons
(the ancestors of the English race) much before they occupied Britain. English
was the common name and tongue of these tribes. Before they occupied Britain
they lived along the coasts of Sweden and Denmark, and the land which they
occupied was called Engle-land. These tribes were fearless, adventurous and
brave, and during the later years of the Roman occupation of Britain, they kept the
British coast in terror. Like other nations, they sang at their feasts about
battles, gods and their ancestral heroes, and some of their chiefs were also
bards. It was in these songs of religion, wars and agriculture, that English
poetry began in the ancient Engle-land while Britain was still a Roman
province.
Though much of this Anglo-Saxon poetry is lost, there are
still some fragments left. For example, Widsith describes continental courts visited in
imagination by a far-wandering poet; Waldhere tells how Walter of Aquitaine withstood a
host of foes in the passes of the Vosges; the splendid fragment called The Fight at Finnesburg deals with the same favourite theme of the battle
against fearful odds, and Complaint of Deor describes the disappointment of a lover. The
most important poem of this period is Beowulf. It is a tale of the adventures of
Beowulf, the hero, who is a champion and slayer of monsters; the incidents in
it are such as may be found in hundreds of other stories, but what makes it
really interesting and different from later romances, is that is full of all
sorts of references and allusions to great events, to the fortunes of kings and
nations. There is thus a historical background.
After the
Anglo-Saxons embraced Christianity, the poets took up religious themes as the subject matter of their poetry. In fact, a major portion of Anglo-Saxon poetry
is religious. The two important religious poets of the Anglo-Saxon period were
Caedmon and Cynewulf. Caedmon sang in series the whole story of the fate of
man, from the Creation and the Fall to the Redemption and the Last Judgment,
and within this large framework, the Scripture history. Cynewulf’s most
important poem is the Crist, a metrical narrative of leading events of Christ’s
ministry upon earth, including his return to judgment, which is treated with
much grandeur.
Anglo-Saxon poetry is
markedly different from the poetry of the next period—Middle English or
Anglo-Norman period—for it deals with the traditions of an older world, and
expresses another temperament and way of living; it breathes the influence of
the wind and storm. It is the poetry of a stern and passionate people,
concerned with the primal things of life, moody, melancholy, and fierce, yet
with a great capacity for endurance and fidelity.
The Anglo-Saxon period was
also marked by the beginning of English prose. Through the Chronicles, which
probably began in King Alfred’s time, and through Alfred’s translations from Latin common available prose was established, which had all sorts of possibilities
in it. In fact, unlike poetry, there was no break in prose of the Anglo-Saxon
period and the Middle English period, and even the later prose in England was a continuation of Anglo-Saxon prose. The tendency of the Anglo-Saxon prose is
towards observance of the rules of ordinary speech, that is why, though one must
make a considerable effort to read a verse of the Anglo-Saxons, it is
comparatively easy to understand their prose. The great success of Anglo-Saxon
prose is in religious instructions, and the two great pioneers of English prose
were Alfred the Great, the glorious king of Wessex, who translated several
Latin Chronicles in English, and Aelfric, a priest, who wrote sermons in a sort
of poetic prose.
The Angles and
Saxons first landed in England in the middle of the fifth century, and by 670
A.D. they had occupied almost the whole of the country. Unlike the Romans who
came as conquerors, these tribes settled in England and made her their
permanent home. They became, therefore, the ancestors of the English race. The
Anglo-Saxon kings, of whom Alfred the Great was the most prominent, ruled till
1066, when Harold, the last of Saxon kings, was defeated at the Battle of
Hastings by William the Conqueror of Normandy, France. The Anglo-Saxon or Old
English Period in English literature, therefore, extends roughly from 670 A.D.
to 1100 A.D.
As it has been made clear
in the First Part of this book that the literature of any country in any period
is the reflection of the life lived by the people of that country in that period,
we find that this applies to the literature of this period. The Angles and
Saxons combined in themselves opposing traits of character—savagery and
sentiment, rough living and deep feeling, splendid courage and deep melancholy
resulting from thinking about the unanswered problem of death. Thus, they lived
a rich external as well as internal life, and it is especially the latter that
is the basis of their rich literature. To these brave and fearless fighters,
love of untarnished glory, and happy domestic life and virtues, made a great
appeal. They followed in their life five great principles—love of personal
freedom, responsiveness to nature, religion, love for womanhood, and struggle
for glory. All these principles are reflected in their literature. They were
full of emotions and aspirations and loved music and songs. Thus, we read
in Beowulf:
Music and song
where the heroes sat—
The glee—wood
rang, a song uprose
When Hrothgar’s
scop gave the hall good cheer.
The Anglo-Saxon
language is only a branch of the great Aryan or Indo-European family of
languages. It has the same root words for father and mother, for God and man,
for the common needs and the common relations of life, as we find in Sanskrit,
Iranian, Greek, and Latin. And it is this old vigorous Anglo-Saxon language
that forms the basis of modern English.
Middle-English Or Anglo-Norman Period (1100-1500)
The Normans, who were
residing in Normandy (France) defeated the Anglo-Saxon King at the Battle of
Hastings (1066) and conquered England.
The Norman Conquest
inaugurated a distinctly new epoch in the literary as well as the political history
of England. The Anglo-Saxon authors were then as suddenly and permanently
displaced as the Anglo-Saxon king.
The literature afterwards
read and written by Englishmen was thereby as completely transformed as the
sentiments and tastes of English rulers. The foreign types of literature
introduced after the Norman Conquest first found favour with the monarchs and
courtiers and were deliberately fostered by them, to the disregard of native
forms. No effective protest was possible by the Anglo-Saxons, and English thought
for centuries to come was largely fashioned in the manner of the French.
Throughout the whole period, which we call the Middle English period (as
belonging to the Middle Ages or Medieval times in the History of Britain) or
the Anglo-Norman period, in forms of artistic expression as well as of
religious service, the English openly acknowledged a Latin control.
It is true that before the Norman Conquest the Anglo-Saxons
had a body of native literature distinctly superior to any European vernacular.
But one cannot deny that the Normans came to their land when they greatly
needed an external stimulus. The Conquest effected a wholesome awakening of
national life. The people were suddenly inspired by a new vision of a greater
future. They became united in a common hope. In course of time, the Anglo-Saxons
lost their initial hostility to the newcomers, and all became part and parcel
of one nation. The Normans not only brought with them soldiers and artisans and
traders, but they also imported scholars to revive knowledge, chroniclers to
record memorable events, minstrels to celebrate victories or sing of adventure
and love.
The great difference between the two periods—The anglo-Saxon period and the Anglo-Norman period, is marked by the disappearance of the old
English poetry. There is nothing during the Anglo-Norman period like Beowulf or Fall of the Angels. The later religious poetry has little in it to
recall the finished art of Cynewulf. Anglo-Saxon poetry, whether derived from
heathendom or from the Church, has ideas and manners of its own; it comes to
perfection, and then it dies away. It seems that Anglo-Saxon poetry grows to
rich maturity, and then disappears, as with the new forms of language and under
new influences, the poetical education started again, and so the poetry of the
Anglo-Norman period has nothing in common the Anglo-Saxon poetry.
The most obvious change in literary expression appears in
the vehicle employed. For centuries Latin had been spoken or written by the
clergy in England. The Conquest which led to the reinvigoration of the
monasteries and the tightening of the ties with Rome determined its more
extensive use. Still more important, because of foreign sentiment in court and
castle, it caused writings in the English vernacular to be disregarded, and
established French as the natural speech of the cultivated and the high-born.
The clergy insisted on the use of Latin, the nobility on the use of French; no
one of influence saw the utility of English as a means of perpetuating thought,
and for nearly three centuries very few works appeared in the native tongue.
Despite the English language having been thrown into the
background, some works were composed in it, though they echoed in the main the
sentiments and tastes of the French writers, as French then was the supreme
arbiter of European literary style. Another striking characteristic of medieval
literature is its general anonymity. Of the many who wrote the names of but few
are recorded, and of the history of these few we have only the most meagre
details. It was because originality was deplored as a fault, and independence
of treatment was a heinous offence in their eyes.
The most popular form of
literature during the Middle English period was the romances. No literary
productions of the Middle Ages are so characteristic, none so perennially
attractive as those that treat romantically of heroes and heroines of by-gone
days. These romances are notable for their stories rather than their poetry,
and they, like the drama afterwards, furnished the chief mental recreation of
time for the great body of the people. These romances were mostly borrowed from
Latin and French sources. They deal with the stories of King Arthur, The War of
Troy, the mythical doings of Charlemagne and of Alexander the Great.
The Miracle and Morality Plays
In the Middle English
period, Miracle plays became very popular. From the growth and development of
the Bible story, scene by scene carried to its logical conclusion, this
drama—developed to an enormous cycle of sacred history, beginning with the
creation of man, his fall and banishment from the Garden of Eden and extending
through the more important matters of the Old Testament and life of Christ in
the New to the summoning of the quick and the dead on the day of final
judgment. This kind of drama is called the miracle play—sometimes
less correctly the mystery play—and it flourished throughout
England from the reign of Henry II to that of Elizabeth (1154-1603).
Another form of drama that
flourished during the Middle Ages was Morality plays. In these plays, the
uniform theme is the struggle between the powers of good and evil for the
mastery of the soul of man. The personages were abstract virtues, or vices,
each acting and speaking in accordance with his name; and the plot was built
upon their contrasts and influences on human nature, with the intent to teach
right living and uphold religion. In a word, allegory is the distinguishing
mark of moral plays. In these moral plays the protagonist is always an
abstraction; he is Mankind, humans, the Pride of Life, and there is an attempt
to compass the whole scope of man’s experience and temptations in life, as
there had been a corresponding effort in the Miracle plays to embrace the
complete range of sacred history, the life of Christ, and the redemption of the
world.
William Langland (1332...?)
One of the greatest poets
of the Middle Ages was William Langland, and his poem, A Vision of
Piers the Plowman holds an important place in English literature. Despite
its archaic style, it is a classic work in English literature. This poem, which
is a satire on corrupt religious practices, throws light on the ethical
problems of the day. The character assumed by Langland is that of the prophet,
denouncing the sins of society and encouraging men to aspire to a higher life.
He represents the dissatisfaction of the lower and the more thinking classes of
English society, as Chaucer represents the content of the aristocracy and the
prosperous middle class. Although Langland is essentially a satiric poet, he
has decided views on political and social questions. The feudal system is his
ideal; he desires no change in the institution of his days, and he thinks that all
would be well if the different orders of society would do their duty. Like
Dante and Bunyan, he ennobles his satire by arraying it in a garb of allegory;
and he is intensely real.
John Gower (1325 —1408)
Gower occupies an important
place in the development of English poetry. Though it was Chaucer who played
the most important role in this direction, Gower’s contribution cannot be
ignored. Gower represents the English culmination of that courtly medieval
poetry that had its rise in France two or three hundred years before. He is a
great stylist, and he proved that English might compete with the other
languages which had most distinguished themselves in poetry. Gower is mainly a
narrative poet, and his most important work is Confession Amantis,
which is in the form of a conversation between the poet and a divine interpreter.
It is an encyclopedia of the art of love and satirizes the vanities of the
current time. Throughout the collection of stories that form the major
portion of Confession Amantis, Gower presents himself as a
moralist. Though Gower was inferior to Chaucer, it is sufficient that they were
certainly fellow pioneers, fellow schoolmasters, in the task of bringing
England to literature. Up to their time, the literary production of England had
been exceedingly rudimentary and limited. Gower, like Chaucer, performed the
function of establishing the form of English as a thoroughly equipped medium of
literature.
Chaucer (1340...1400)
It was, in fact, Chaucer
who was the real founder of English poetry, and he is rightly called the
‘Father of English Poetry’. Unlike the poetry of his predecessors and
contemporaries, which is read by few except professed scholars, Chaucer’s
poetry has been read and enjoyed continuously from his own day to this, and the
greatest of his successors, from Spenser and Milton to Tennyson and William
Morris, have joined in praising it. Chaucer, in fact, made a fresh beginning in
English literature. He disregarded altogether the old English tradition. His
education as a poet was two-fold. Part of it came from French and Italian
literature, but part of it came from life. He was not a mere bookman, nor was
he in the least a visionary. Like Shakespeare and Milton, he was, on the
contrary, a man of the world and of affairs.
The most famous and
characteristic work of Chaucer is the Canterbury Tales, which is a
collection of stories related by the pilgrims on their way to the shrine of
Thomas Becket at Canterbury. These pilgrims represent different sections of
contemporary English society, and in the description of the most prominent of
these people in the Prologue Chaucer’s powers are shown at
their very highest. All these characters are individualized, yet their
thoroughly typical quality gives unique value to Chaucer’s picture of men and
manners in the England of his time.
The Canterbury
Tales is a landmark in the history of English poetry because here
Chaucer enriched the English language and metre to such an extent, that now it
could be conveniently used for any purpose. Moreover, by introducing a variety
of highly finished characters into a single action, and engaging them in an
animated dialogue, Chaucer fulfilled every requirement of the dramatist, short
of bringing his plays on the stage. Also, by drawing finished and various
portraits in verse, he showed the way to the novelists to portray characters.
Chaucer’s works fall into
three periods. During the first period, he imitated French models, particularly
the famous and very long poem Le Roman de la Rose of which he
made a translation—Romaunt of the Rose. This poem which gives an
intimate introduction to the medieval French romances and allegories of courtly
love is the embryo out of which all Chaucer’s poetry grows. During this period
he also wrote the Book of the Duchess, an elegy, which in its
form and nature is like the Romaunt of the Rose; Complaint unto
Pity, a shorter poem and ABC, a series of stanzas religious in tone,
in which each opens with a letter of the alphabet in order.
The poems of the second
period (1373-84) show the influence of Italian literature, especially of
Dante’s Divine Comedy and Boccaccio’s poems. In this period he
wrote The Parliament of Fowls, which contains very dramatic
and satiric dialogues between the assembled birds; Troilus and
Criseyde, which narrates the story of the Trojan prince Troilus and
his love for a damsel, Creseida; The Story of Griselda, in
which is given a pitiful picture of womanhood; and The House of
Fame, which is a masterpiece of comic fantasy, with a graver undertone
of contemplation of human folly.
Chaucer’s third period
(1384-90) may be called the English period because in it he threw off foreign
influences and showed native originality. In the Legend of Good
Woman he employed for the first time the heroic couplet. It was during
this period that he wrote The Canterbury Tales, his greatest
poetic achievement, which places us in the heart of London. Here we find his
gentle, kindly humour, which is Chaucer’s greatest quality, at its very best.
Chaucer’s importance in the
development of English literature is very great because he removed poetry from
the region of Metaphysics and Theology, and made it hold as “twere the mirror
up to nature”. He thus brought back the old classical principle of the direct
imitation of nature.
Sources: http://www.cssforum.com.pk/css-optional-subjects/group-v/english-literature/57970-comprehensive-history-english-literature.html
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