16th Century English Literature example essay topic
During the Middle Ages, some of the traditional Old English beliefs were kept, but with a few changes. The patriarchal system remained, although unlike the literature of the 8th and 9th century, women were now finding their place in many written works. For example, when Chaucer writes of The Wife of Bathe, he depicts a colorful character who would never have surfaced in Beowulf. Another change is found in the idea of the Ahero.
@ During the Middle Ages, the hero has become less hardened; he has acquired values and morals. The idea of a chivalrous knight has taken the place of a uni dimensional warrior who grunts and boasts and drags his knuckles as he walks. The Knight 2 most prolific change, however, was in the new presence of the Christian Church, which took the place of the Anglo-Saxon ='s fatalistic culture and influenced almost all of the aspects of the society of the Middle Ages. The Renaissance, with its rebirth of art and science, brought about further change to the literature of England. Where the stories of knights and warriors fighting Grendel's and dragons once dominated the literature, beautifully scripted sonnets and tales of romance now took the literary forefront. Take, for example, women ='s roles in written works.
Women carried very little importance in the literature of Beowulf ='s time, but by the time Chaucer wrote The Canterbury Tales, female characters were more prevalent. Although the Wife of Bathe was a comical character, it is noteworthy that she is also a strong character– stronger, even than some of Chaucer ='s male characters: She was a worthy woman al hir live; Housbondes at church dore she had five, Withouten other compaignye in you the– But thereof need eth nought to spoke as nou the. (Chaucer 90) The Wife of Bathe is a A remarkable culmination of many centuries of an antifeminism that was particularly nurtured by the medieval church (Abrams 117). Chaucer shows her as large, ugly, and strong-willed; this last notion was taken by critics of the day as a satirical idea in a satirical work, but now is seen more as an accurate assessment than an ironic one. With the removal of the medieval church, as one of the influences upon literature, women were given more substantial roles, and the suppressed idea of romantic love was allowed to come forward in the works of such Renaissance writers as Spenser and Shakespeare. Where Chaucer wrote of women such as Alison, the unfaithful miller ='s wife, Spenser wrote Knight 3 of his woman: Her lips did steel like gillyflowers, Her ruddy cheeks like unto roses red; Her snowy browns lyke budded bellamoures, Her lovely eyes like pinks but newly speed, Her goodly bosom lyke a strawberry bed, Her neck lyke to a bunch of cullambynes (417).
Likewise, Shakespeare wrote in Sonnet 18, A Shall I compare thee to a summer ='s day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate@ (491). The fall of the Catholic church from dominance enabled sonnets and plays such as these to surface, and with the education of the middle class, the popularity of these kinds of writings was only increasing, while the popularity of morality plays and poems of the Middle Ages was rapidly decreasing. Poems of the 16th century were not epic verses filled with violence, such as Beowulf, but instead, relatively brief, usually with the purpose of praising some aspect of love or nature.
Another difference can be found in the idea of the literary Ahero. @ The change from Beowulf to the knight in Chaucer ='s Tales is equalled only by the change from Chu acer ='s knight to the tragic heroes of Shakespeare or Spenser ='s Red Crosse Knight. Starting with Beowulf: A... bloody from my foes, I came from a fight where I had bound five, destroyed a family of giants, and at night in the waves slain water monsters... @ (31). Next, of Chaucer ='s knight, ATo ride out he loved chivalry e. Trou the and honour, freedom and curteisye@ (80).
Finally, Spenser writes of his Red Crosse Knight, Athe eye of reason was with rage [blinded]@ (289). These three quotes show a gradual change from a brutish warrior to a chivalrous fighter, dedicated to his church, his king, and his lady, and from this fighter to a tragic hero with all too human qualities and flaws. The fall of the Roman Catholic Church, the movement toward literacy of the lower classes, Knight 4 and the appreciation of love and nature all helped to bring about the changes in English literature present during the Renaissance. These changes are most recognizable in the gradual change of the literary hero, the lessened influence of the church in literature, and the abrupt acknowledgement and praise of women in literary works. It is this rise in the traditional, more artistic ideas of life shared by the Greeks and Romans that made the Renaissance what it was– a rebirth in science, art and romance.