Langland, Piers Plowman (C-text): Difference between revisions
Line 612: | Line 612: | ||
=== DREAM III === | === DREAM III === | ||
:dreamer sees tall man | |||
::dreamer asks him who he is | |||
::Thought responds | |||
::dreamer asks Thought where Dowel is | |||
::Thought says Dowel is true of tong, Dobet preaches, Dobest is a bishop | |||
::dreamer still doesn't understand | |||
::Thought recommends Wit | |||
:Thought and dreamer walk, debating Dowel; come upon Wit | |||
::Thought asks Wit about Dowel, Dobet, Dobest | |||
::Wit responds by describing human nature as a castle (X.127) | |||
::dreamer asks what Kind is | |||
::Wit responds Kind is creator; man with inwit has treasure enough from Truth to provide for himself; speaks on marriage (X.151) |
Revision as of 01:13, 10 October 2010
thinking about version of the Church that emerges from Piers Plowman in secondary literature, Wycliffism has status -- stand-in for modern liberalism; brings modern scholars closer to what they wished medieval people believed
observing dis/continuities with Langland's own theology
interested in listening to versions of Wycliff that get spread outside of Oxford
some critics think about Langland as uneducated, as a "clever grammar school boy" -- but he engages with 14th century theology very seriously
question of the Reformation -- how does Langland fit into Eamon's version of the Middle Ages? what does this say about Duffy's construction of the late medieval Church?
restless poem; seems opaque, but great deal of dialectical control
Prologue
"I've become a problem to myself" -- famous lines from the Confessions
models of the Middle Ages as static and hierarchical; this prologue doesn't know them
"Conscience in the Middle Ages" -- is Piers Plowman's "Conscience" Thomistic?
Andrew Galloway, commentary on Piers Plowman
allegorical figures -- high stylistic of Kynde Wit clashes with final lines, full of ordinary life
"fragmentation of the forms of inquiry"; Will is given maps for finding his way -- give the possibility of a unified inquiry; how do we go on if the ground we're put on doesn't match the maps we're given?
when reason can't control us, we have anarchy; we *need* the cat -- all the forces of reform swallowed up in image of human beings who have become mice and rats
put him to pride -- put him to the plow -- concretized images
friars: mobile figures; answerable to papacy, not bishops
Structure
PROLOGUE
Will, dressed as a sheep -- falls asleep
DREAM I
- sees tower of Truth to the east, valley of Death to the West, field full of folk between
- Conscience comes to accuse them (Pr.95)
- Kynde Wit speaks to the king and commons (Pr.147)
- Conscience speaks to the clergy and king (Pr.151)
- Conscience and king go to court
- crowd of rats come to hold council about cat (Pr.165)
- rat of renown suggests putting a bell around the cat's neck (Pr.176)
- crowd of rats applaud his plan (Pr.190)
- mouse steps forward, suggests one cat or another will always bother them; better to suffer in silence; rats could never rule themselves (Pr.196)
- dreamer doesn't know how to interpret this vision; goes on to see diverse people
PASSUS II
- Holy Church indicates people, says the only heaven they think of is here (I.5)
- dreamer asks what it means (I.11)
- Holy Church discusses tower of Truth (I.12)
- dreamer asks to whom the world's treasure belongs (I.41)
- Holy Church answers "Reddite Cesari" (I.44)
- dreamer asks what the deep, dark dale means (I.55)
- Holy Church answer it's the Castle of Care; evil lives there (I.57)
- dreamer asks who she is (I.71)
- Holy Church says I am Holy Church (I.72)
- dreamer falls to knees, begs grace
- dreamer asks how to save his soul (I.80)
- Holy Church answers when all treasures have been tested, truth is the best (I.81)
- dreamer asks why devil wants to be on the north, instead of the east (I.I.112)
- Holy Church answers hell is wherever the devil is (I.114)
- dreamer asks for "kynde knowying" (I.137)
- Holy Church says he's a dummy, didn't learn enough Latin; discusses "kind knowynge" (I.139)
- Holy Church starts to leave
PASSUS II
- dreams kneels before her, begs for grace (II.1)
- dreamer begs her to stay (II.1)
- Holy Church indicates Falsehood and Favel to the left (II.5)
- dreamer looks to the left; sees Meed
- dreamer asks Holy Church who this is (II.18)
- Holy Church answers it's Meed, describes Meed's Marriage (II.19)
- Holy Church leaves (II.53)
- dreamer sees Meed's marriage (II.54)
- Liar leaps forth
- Liar says Guile gave a charter to False and Meed (II.69)
- Civil and Simony look over charter (II.72)
- Simony says Meed is married more for her riches than her high birth (II.75)
- Wrong steps forward as witness (II.109)
- several craftsman, a beadle and a pardoner step forth, seal the deed (II.110)
- Theology gets angry (II.116)
- Theology says to Simony that Meed is legitimate, the daughter of Amends and Favel; warns about wedding (II.117)
- Civil agrees (II.155)
- Simony doesn't agree (II.155)
- Favel comes with florins, orders Guile to give out the gold (II.157)
- everyone thanks Favel, pledge to help him marry Meed to False (II.162)
- Favel and False are pleased
- everyone goes to Westminster; allegories ride reeves and jurors (II.173)
- Civil says he and Simony will ride adulterous rich men (II.183)
- Truthful sees them riding, says nothing; passes them to go to king's court and warn Conscience (II.200)
- Conscience tells the king he wants to catch False and Favel and Liar (II.204)
- Conscience commands constable to arrest False, behead Guile, bring Meed in (II.211)
- Dread hears, goes to tell False he'd better flee (II.217)
- False flees to friars (II.220)
- Guile flees for his life; merchants meet him and take him in (II.221)
- Liar leaps away; pardoners take him in (II.225)
- Simony and Civil went to Rome to appeal to pope (II.243)
- Conscience accuses them to the king (II.245)
- Conscience says Holy Church may be damaged beyond repair if nothing is done (II.246)
- all flee except Meed (II.250)
PASSUS III
- Meed brough before King (III.2)
- King tells clerk to look after Meed, that he'll examine her (III.5)
- Clerk brings Meed to chamber (III.9)
- mirth and minstrelsy amuse Meed (III.12)
- judges try to appear Meed not to be sad, they'll help (III.17)
- Meed thanks them, offers them gifts (III.21)
- clerics comfort Meed (III.25)
- Meed promises them rewards (III.30)
- confessor offers to absolve her (III.38)
- Meed kneels before him, confessees (III.45)
- confessor absolves her (III.50)
- confessor tells her they'll have her name engraved on a window (III.51)
- Meed replies (III.55)
prophetic voice breaks through, warns against such kinds of meed; direct address (III.68)
- King calls for Meed (III.127)
- King chastises Meed, asks her if she'll have Conscience as a husband (II.133)
- Meed responds that she will (III.147)
- Conscience is called; kneels (III.149)
- King asks Conscience if he'll marry Meed (III.153)
- Conscience says no (III.155)
- Meed asks to speak in her defense (III.215)
- King grants her wish (III.218)
- Meed speaks in defense of the reward system (III.220)
- King says to Conscience that Meed has made her point well (III.283)
- Conscience refuses; uses grammatical metaphor (III.285)
- King says to Conscience he doesn't understand the metaphor (III.340)
- Conscience explains (III.243)
- Meed is angry (III.483)
- Conscience retorts that she's misunderstanding (III.491)
PASSUS IV
- King asks them to stop arguing, kiss (IV.1)
- Conscience refuses (IV.4)
- King tells Conscience to fetch Reason (IV.6)
- Conscience agrees (IV.13)
- Conscience rides to Reason (IV.14)
- Conscience tells Reason what's going on (IV.14)
- Reason agrees to come (IV.16)
- Reason calls Cato and Tom True-tongue to sattle up (IV.17)
- Conscience and Reason leave together (IV.24)
- Wily-fellow and Clever-man, &c., follow them (IV.27)
- Conscience warns Reason against them (IV.33)
- Conscience and Reason ride on (IV.40)
- King greats Reason (IV.42)
- Peace comes with petition to parliament about how Wrong had wronged him (IV.45)
- Peace explains Wrong's wrongs (IV.49)
- King knows it's true because of Conscience (IV.64)
- Wrong is afraid (IV.66)
- Wrong tries to explain himself (IV.69)
- Meed notices Wrong (IV.71)
- Peace shows his bloody skull from Wrong (IV.74)
- Peace explains he didn't deserve this wound (IV.75)
- Wisdom and Wit try to overcome the King with Meed (IV.78)
- King throws Wrong in irons (IV.81)
- someone wise says this isn't right (Iv. 83)
- Wit agrees (IV.88)
- Meed begs mercy, gives Peace gold (IV.90)
- Meed vouches Wrong will never do it again (IV.92)
- Peace asks the king to have mercy on Wrong, since Wisdom has had Meed pay amends (IV.94
- King refuses for Conscience's sake (IV.99)
- some advise Reason to pity Wrong, look to Conscience to counsel the King (IV.105)
- Reason refuses to take pity (IV.108)
- Clerks attempt to translate Reason 's speech (IV.146)
- Meed winks at lawyer, asking them to stop Reason (IV.148)
- just men declare Reason 's truth, see that Meekness overcomes Meed (IV.151)
- Love and Loyalty think little of Meed (IV.156)
- Love and Loyalty tell Conscience and the King no one should marry Meed for money (IV.158)
- Meed mourns, is taken out of chamber (IV.160)
- Sheriff's clerk cries out to Meed (IV.164)
- King calls Conscience and Reason into his council (IV.166)
- King chastise lawyers for losing him revenue (IV.169)
- Conscience speaks to King, encourages commons' help (IV.175)
- Reason agrees (IV.179)
- King asks Reason and Conscience to stay and be his council (IV.183)
- Reason agrees (IV.187)
- King orders Conscience to fire his officers (IV.195)
dreamer awakes (IV.196)
AWAKE
PASSUS V
dreamer awakes, clothed like a loller (V.2)
- Reason rebukes him for not using his skills usefully (V.12)
- dreamer says he's too weak (V.22)
- Reason tells him not to waste/beg (V.26)
- dreamer says he's never found a life he likes better than lolling (V.25)
- Conscience says dreamer is wrong in his reasoning (V.89)
- dreamer admits wasting time (V.92)
- Reason advises him to get started on the good life (V.103)
- Conscience backs up reason (V.104)
dreamer goes to church, kneels, tells his sins, falls asleep (V.105)
DREAM II
- DREAM
- dreamer sees Reason preaching as the pop not to waste time (V.114)
- Reason orders people not to be wasteful; enters apocalyptic mode (V.136)
- Reason counsels king to love his people (V.180)
- Reason commands peace as penance and perpetual forgiveness (V.194)
PASSUS VI
- Repentence runs in (VI.1)
- Will weeps (VI.2)
- Purnel repents (VI.3)
- Repentence orders repentence
- Pride repents
- Repentence ask God to give him grace to amend
- Envy repents (VI.63)
- Repentence says he'll be sorry (VI.91)
- Envy says he is (VI.93)
- Wrath wakes up
- Wrath confesses
- Repentence orders repentence (VI.164)
- Repentence absolves Wrath
- Lechery confesses
- Covetousness comes
- Covetousness confesses
- Repentance asks if he's never repented
- Covetousness says he once stole from someone
- Repentance calls that a lousy restitution; asks if he practiced usuary?
- Covetousness says no, just a little when young
- Repentance asks if he ever lend to a lord for protection
- Covetousness has
- Repentance demands restitution before absolution
- Covetousness confesses more
- Repentance says he's an "unkynde" creature; he can't absolve him until restitution (VI.296)
- Welshman says he'll make restitution
- Robert the Rifler noticed the law of reddite, weeps because he has nothing to make restitution with
- Robert begs forgiveness
- dreamer doesn't know what happened to Robert, but notes his genuine torment
- Repentence says he's heading for heaven if his heart is right (VI.331)
- Glutton goes to confession, stops at bar on the way
- Glutton gets drunk, ends up vomiting (VI.412)
- Glutton's wife and daughter put him to bed
- Glutton confesses to Repentance
PASSUS VII
- Sloth comes to confess, falls asleep
- Repentance orders him awake
- Sloth confesses
- Repentance asks if he doesn't repent?
- Repentance faints; is awoken
- Repentance recommends repentance to Sloth
- Sloth sits up, corsses himself
- Sloth confesses
prophetic narrative voice on sloth; direct address (VII.70)
- Repentance advises all to kneel
- Repentance prayers for forgiveness (VII.121)
- Hope takes up the horn
- a thousand men throng together, crying for Christ, grace and Truth; but no one knows the way
- pilgrim enters (VII.160)
- folks ask him where he's from
- Pilgrim describes journies
- folks ask where Truth lives
- Pilgrim doesn't know
- Piers Plowman says he knows the way; Conscience and Kynde Wit gave him directions (VII.182)
- folks offer Piers money
- Piers refuses; describes the journey to Truth
- several people don't think they have any kin there
- Piers prods them on with mercy
- one leaves
- one says he has to plow first
- he asks Piers to excuse him to Truth
- Active can't go because his wife is too wiled to be left alone
- Contemplation says he'll follow Piers
PASSUS VIII
- Piers wants to plow the half-acre
- Woman asks what the women should do
- Piers says sew sacks
- Knight asks what he could do
- Piers says keep them safe
- Knight pledge to do so
- Piers asks him not to trouble any tenant unless Truth agrees; don't oppose Conscience or Holy Church
- Knight assents
- Piers dresses as a pilgrim
- Piers says he'll sow, then go on a pilgrimage for pardon
- Piers commands his wife, daughter and son to obedience
- Piers dictates his will (VIII.95)
- Piers and pilgrims begin plowing (VIII.112)
- Piers lets his plow stand, begins to act as overseer
- Others sit down in idleness
- Piers tells them to get up and work
- they tell Piers they can't work, make excuses, pray to him
- Piers calls them false
- Waster gets angry
- Piers complains to the knight
- Knight warns waster to improve
- Waster refuses
- Piers calls on Hunger
- Hunger grabs Waster around the belly
- Piers asks Hunger for mercy on them
- phonies are frightened, take up working
- Piers is proud, puts them to work
- Piers pities them
- Piers tells Hunger to leave (VIII.206)
- Hunger says Wasters must work
- Piers asks if he might be sinless if he does as Hunger wants
- Hunger says yes; shows that everyone must work for their food
- Piers says he'll show this proverb to those who beg and won't work; says his stomach hurts
- Hunger says he's eaten too much; has to work harder
- Piers says he can go now
- Hunger says he won't go away until he's dined and drunk
- Piers says he doesn't have anything to eat
- poor bring Hunger what they have
- Hunger eats it all, asks for more
- poor people give him more, with harvest coming
- Waster refuses to work
prophetic voice, direct address; warns people to get ahead while they can; hope God of his goodness grants us a truce (VIII.343)
PASSUS IX
- Truth obtains a pardon for Piers and his heirs, tells him to stay home and plow -- he'll pardon whoever does
prophetic voice breaks through to describe who is included in the pardon; merchants (who pray for Piers for bringing them this bull (IX.42); poverty of women; beggars with bags won't be pardoned -- if you have your health, you should work; every now and then voice merges with Piers' voice (IX.37,159-161
- Priest asks Piers if he can read his pardon
- Piers unfolds the pardon, shows last lines of Athanasian Creed
- Priest says the only pardon is Dowel and have well; do evil and have evil, be damned
- Priest and Piers argue about pardon
dreamer awakes
AWAKE
dreamer wanders, "meatless and moneyless" on Malvern Hills; thinks about pardon
dreamer comments on dreams, and Dowel
prophetic voice bursts through at the end, advising rich men to account for their actions
PASSUS X
dreamer roams, looking for Dowel; comes upon two friars
- dreamer asks friars where Dowel resides
- friars say he's with the friars
- dreamer disputes
- friars tells story of man in a boat tossed about by sin
- dreamer says he has no kynde wit to understand; says eh'll keep looking
dreamer wander alone in savage wilderness, listens to birds
dreamer falls asleep
DREAM III
- dreamer sees tall man
- dreamer asks him who he is
- Thought responds
- dreamer asks Thought where Dowel is
- Thought says Dowel is true of tong, Dobet preaches, Dobest is a bishop
- dreamer still doesn't understand
- Thought recommends Wit
- Thought and dreamer walk, debating Dowel; come upon Wit
- Thought asks Wit about Dowel, Dobet, Dobest
- Wit responds by describing human nature as a castle (X.127)
- dreamer asks what Kind is
- Wit responds Kind is creator; man with inwit has treasure enough from Truth to provide for himself; speaks on marriage (X.151)