Chaucer:
"Nun's Priest's Tale" - A mock epic
According
to Aristotle:
An epic is the tragedy of a conspicuous man, who is involved in
adventures events and meets a tragic fall on account of some error of judgment
i.e. Hamartia which throws him from prosperity into adversity; his death is not
essential.
So, the
subject matter of an epic is grand and that’s why it is written in bombastic
language in heroic couplets. Its style, too, is grand. On the contrary, a
mock-epic is a satire of an epic. It shows us that even a trivial event can
also be treated on epical scope.
A
mock-epic is a literary parody of heroic style. It imitates serious characters
and grave events in a comic manner. The subject matter is trivial and unfit for
an epic but the subject is clothed in the conventional epic style. For example,
in “The Nun’s Priest’s Tale” the ordinary event of taking away of a cock is
compared and contrasted with famous and grave historical events of the past.
Nun’s
Priest’s Tale is a mock-epic. The tale is ordinary and common. There is a
widow, having two daughters. She has cattle and sheep as is usual with the
villagers. She has a cock and many hens. Once, a cock is carried away by a fox
but later escapes. Though the subject is trivial, yet this trivial subject has
been exalted because fowls have been invested with the qualities of learned
human begins. The cock and the hen behave, talk, argue and conduct like
extraordinary human beings. We find the cock and the hen having learned and
philosophical discussion on dreams which later includes some vital issues of
human life. This is not at all a fanciful discussion; it is substantially
learned. They also make historical references and illustrations to substantiate
their respective points of view. We hardly believe that they are fowls. We are
always reminded of two philosophers. Both stick to their own points of view on
the reality of dreams and the discussion ends in no conclusion. So an animal
fable has been elevated to the level of a philosophical poem, having deep
thoughts and ideas. The cock is raised to the status of a hero and, thus the
tale becomes a mock-epic.
Chaucer’s
style in the poem is grand. He employs bombastic words for a trivial subject.
For example, Chanticleer is called a gentle cock and his crowing is sweeter
than that of any other cock. Pertelote, likewise, has the best colouring on her
throat and she is called “a fair damsel”. She is courteous, discreet, gracious
and companionable. So the description of the cock and the hen is sufficiently
comic.
Humour is
one of the essential prerequisite of a mock-epic and this tale is full of
humour. Most of the comedy is introduced through the incongruity and
disproportion between grand style and trivial subject. The trivial events have been
enlarged to look lofty and grand. For example, the fox has been called “The
False Murderer” and the false dissembler and has been compared to various
notorious rascals of the past – Judas, Iscariot, Simon, Gauclon, etc. Likewise,
the ordinary event of the taking away of the cock has been equated with
well-known, historical events of the past e.g. the capture of Troy, the murder
of King Priam etc. The outcry and lamentation raised by Pertelote at the event
is louder than the hue and cry raised by Hasdrubal’s wife at his painful death.
The sorrowful cries of the hens have been identified with the woeful
lamentation, uttered by the senators’ wives when their husbands were burnt
alive by Nero. On the taking away of the cock whole village – human beings as
well animals – madly run after the fox and there is a stale of chaos as if it
is the day of judgment whereas the carrying away of the cock by the fox is not
a grave event. The awful noise produced at that time has been compared with the
uproar created by the members of the Peasant’s Revolt. The chase of the fox is
described in an inflated tone.
As
essential prerequisites of an epic as well as mock-epic is the moral. There can
be no mock-epic without moral. In “Nuns Priest’s Tale” moral is explicit as
well as implicit. Though this story, Chaucer wanted to discuss important and
vital issues of life, such as flattery predestination, the qualities of a good
man and a good woman, the nature of dreams and irony of fate etc.
In short,
we can say that “Nun’s Priest’s Tale” is a parody of an epic in which all the
leading epic features and conventions are brought in connection with a very
trifling theme.
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