CHAPTER II. COURT OF EDWARD III. GEOFFREY CHAUCER; THE RESPECT PAID TO HIM; THE BEAUTY AND GRACE OF HIS PERSON; HIS REPUTATION; HIS YOUTH; HIS ACQUIREMENTS. THE FATHER OF ENGLISH POETRY.—AN ASTRONOMER; A PHILOSOPHER. HIS LINEAGE DOUBTFUL. STATED TO BE THE SON OF A CHAUCER APPEARS TO TAVERN-KEEPER; FULLER'S JEST ON THIS POINT. OF THOLOUSE. A FAVOURITE AT COURT. HAVE BEEN OF GOOD BIRTH; HIS NAME ORIGINATES FROM LE CHAUSIR, IN SOME OF THE CHARACTERS DESCRIBED. BY CHAUCER. ' - CHAPTER II. COURT OF EDWARD III. CHAUCER APPEARS TO GEOFFREY CHAUCER; THE RESPECT PAID TO HIM; THE BEAUTY AND GRACE OF HIS PERSON; HIS REPUTATION; HIS YOUTH; HIS ACQUIREMENTS. THE FATHER OF ENGLISH POETRY. -AN ASTRONOMER; A PHILOSOPHER. HIS LINEAGE DOUBTFUL. STATED TO BE THE SON OF A TAVERN-KEEPER; FULLER'S JEST ON THIS POINT. HAVE BEEN OF GOOD BIRTH; HIS NAME ORIGINATES FROM LE CHAUSIR, IN CHAUSSIERS. -A GENTLEMAN BY NATURE AND BY EDUCATION.-BORN IN THE CITY OF LONDON, IN A THEN PLEASANT AND WELL OCCUPIED PART. HIS CLAIMS TO GENTILITY SHOWN. A FAVOURITE AT COURT. -OLD WOODSTOCK, HIS RESIDENCE.-DESCRIBED IN CHAUCER'S' DREAM.'-POEM OF THE FLOWRE AND THE LEAFE.' FAMOUS FLORAL GAMES FOUNDED BY ISAURE, COUNTESS REMARKS OF WARTON ON THE IMMORALITY OF THE DARK CHAUCER'S FRIENDSHIP WITH JOHN OF GAUNT AND THE DUCHESS PHILIPPA.-HIS APPOINTMENTS AND SUCCESS. AR OF THE REFORMATION'; HIS LABOURS. - · GEOFFREY CHAUCER. 25 CHAPTER II. IN reviewing the progress of social literature, one image is called up forcibly before the mind. It is that of a very young man, towards whom, in deference and courtesy, all faces turn, as he mingles with the great and gay in the court of Edward the Third. Time has passed on since the halls in which Coeur de Lion touched the harp were thronged with troubadours from Provence: and now a native poet stands in the presence of the lettered and chivalric Edward. Even if the fame of his great acquirements had not procured him respect, the surpassing beauty and grace of this youthful author's person would have commanded success in the world for the young poet laureate, Geoffrey Chaucer. His fair complexion, his full and roseate lips, his perfect contour of face, and height of body, are, however, but vulgar attractions compared with the rare intellect which in its inherent dignity gave dignity and ease to his deportment even when royalty was present. The youth whom we have been accustomed to venerate as 'Old Chaucer,' brings with him to that stately circle a reputation for all that it seems to require a life time to compass. The winning boy-for he was when first he became famous little more than a boy-is even then reported to have been ‘a ready logician, a smooth rhetorician, a pleasant poet, a grave philosopher, an ingenious mathematician, and a holy divine.' |