Monday, 23 June 2008

Of þat pryuy perle wythouten spot.

My brain is a bit tired to be reading this in a technical vein, so consider this an introductory post and set the tone as you like with your own post. I tend towards an informal style.

I’m interested in the poem as a dream-vision, as a medieval projection of the ideal Christian womanhood and as a portrayal of the process of grieving. I’m also in love with the way the poem sounds when read aloud; the metrical complexity on top of the repetition, emotion and familiar tropes are very whole, very rounded. (Like a pearl. Hmm.) There’s that sense of expectation and return, and steady rhythm, that contributes to the idea of the perfect pearl.

I know I’m muddling about witlessly in the shallows , but where to start?

There are 5 stanzas in the first section. Each stanza ends with a phrase concerning the ‘perle wythouten spot’, the first two describing it as ‘pryuy’ and the last three as ‘precios’. In the MED, we’re probably dealing with the 2nd definition of ‘pryuy’, beginning with ‘Private, personal, one's own; individual, special, peculiar’ but not excluding the 3rd; ‘Unseen, invisible, imperceptible; inner, internal; of a wound; so deep that the bottom is not visible’. A fitting word used of grief, no? ‘Precios’ is used in the same sense in which we use it today, bar a tad more religious significance.

This first section is what Tolkien called a ‘self-contained allegory’ (Tolkien 11), noting in his prickly way of talking about allegory that though the round and glistening pearl may be a symbol of a young girl-child, it does not necessarily mean that the symbolism is carried through to the entire narrative which then becomes a coherent allegory. Tolkien’s comment is aimed at W. H. Schofield (Tolkien 10), who in 1904 apparently proposed the poem to be neither elegiac nor autobiographical but purely allegorical--a lament over the purity of maidenhood (Or some such whatsit; I couldn’t find the article despite my threats and bribes. Bibliographical info below, in case my birthday comes early.).

Anyway, in all his crankiness, people agreed more with Tolkien’s crowd than Schofield; the MLN folks were a bit sceptical, too (Northup 21). I can’t really see the point of trying to make Pearl more complex than it is--there’s something appealing about the complexity and the sincerity that brings to mind Christopher Ryan’s comment on Dante (don’t know where it is, now), that it is where we find reason and love working in harmony, sharpening one another, that we also find the highest sense of morality.

This statement, of course, implies a Christian worldview and one that, in a fit of oh-so-unscholarly subjectivity, finds this particular poem quite appealing. It's entirely true; I approve very readily of the poems in this manuscript. I hope this doesn't create too much of an obstacle to a critical look at the poem. Hmm.

6 comments:

Gabriel said...

Guess who (despite his silence) has actually been keeping up with his Pearl reading? Which is to say, I read it a month or two ago and have looked at some secondary stuff.

On the subject of allegory/elegy, J. Allen Mitchell in his article "Figuring the Unfigurable" (Chaucer Review 35.1) suggests that New Critical approaches to the Pearl splintered along those lines. Is the proper way to treat to poem to understand it contextually as an elegy to a specific beloved and deceased girl (daughter?) or to abstract it entirely to the level of allegory. He spends the article arguing against Elizabeth Salter who in 1968 proposed a figural/typological reading of the poem as a way to unify those two methods. More to come on that later (mostly because I read that article kind of recently).

I can see why the allegorical method would appeal to someone since we don't have access even to the name or precise historical circumstances of the poet, let alone the subject of the elegy. Why talk about something we can't know anything about when there are things to be discussed that we CAN know at least something about . But there's definitely something going on here beyond the abstract-represented-by-concrete allegorizing of Prudentius or the Roman de la Rose.

r. mentzer said...

Schofield mentions (and I think Kim Philips does, too, in 'Medieval Maidens') that there was thought about the poem being an elegy for maidenhood in general--making the semi-abstract figure logical--though the grief would be the author's and not the character's, in order to maintain the personal connection with the narrator. A very silly muddle but there it is.

The allegorical method also fits in with a number of other ME texts on the perfect maid; again, mentioned stuffily by Schofield.

I'd like to know more about the New Critical approaches etc. Have you any source material/references?

Gabriel said...
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Gabriel said...

Michell's article is responding to an article which seeks to solve the problems and inadequacies of the New Critical approaches. While I don't think that Mitchell cites New Critics, I bet that Salter does. I'll see if I can come up with her article somewhere.

r. mentzer said...

Forgive my ignorance, but I'm not sure I understand who the corporate "New Critics" are. I've looked up definitions and understand them but am not sure if these writers are of avowed cults or simply following a meme. Help?

By hook and crook I now possess Mitchell's article and will read it before I come back.

r. mentzer said...

Mitchell's article is a very interesting one; an anagogical reading of Pearl is something I hadn't thought of in this context. It does fit with what the narrator says of himself, though, which is encouraging.

Do you really think he is against Salter all the way? Seems mostly as if he disagrees only slightly... Her article would be an interesting one to read; according to the bibliography it was in the Gollancz (ed. of the EETS Nero A.X.) lectures edited by J.A. Burrow.

I'll read Mitchell's article again before I say anything further on the subject. Look forward to your post.