sions and additions. The narrator, whose name we learn is Graunde Amoure, courts the lady La Belle Pucelle and wins her by conquering two giants and a dragon; he lives long, dies, and recites his own epitaph. Hawes claims again to be imitating Lydgate and does indeed produce a very medieval moral allegory, but there are some features in the Pastime that hint at the Renaissance, probably in spite of their author. The hero of the Pastime explicitly chooses a secular life, and is inspired on his way by the reports of the goddess Famea reliable lady quite different from Chaucer's capricious counterpart. The allegory throughout is uneasily secularized: the monsters are the traditional enemies of the lover, Slander, Delay, and Malice, but are conquered with St. Paul's armor of righteousness; Venus and Cupid are on Graunde Amoure's side, but the marriage is performed by Lex Ecclesie. To win his lady Graunde Amoure has to go through an extensive educational scheme, visiting the towers of the seven liberal arts for instruction; this is followed up by a visit to the Tower of Chivalry, where he learns to fight. Most interesting of all, in the tower of Rhetoric the instruction consists of a lengthy exposition of the processes of writing poetry; and this, clumsy as it is, is the first ars poetica in the English language. Graunde Amoure learns that poetry is produced by rhetoric, but with one important exception-one cannot draw the subject matter of poetry from the rhetorical rule books: poetry rises from the powers of the brain, and is then shaped by the rules of art. Hawes is maddeningly woolly in details: he uses "poet," "clerke," and ''philosophre" as if they were all fully interchangeable, and he makes it clear only that he thinks the primary task of poets is "fables to fayne," and to pronounce "trouthe under cloudy fygures" (lines 717-720). The purpose of poetry is "to eschewe ydlenes," to improve knowledge, "to dysnull vyce and the vycyous to blame," and to preserve the fame of noble men (771-780). Although Hawes was himself a cautious experimenter in meter, he is fully medieval in his official indifference to any metrical component of poetry. When Hawes talks about poetry, he does so in terms of cloaked truth, misty fumes, feigned fables, and delightful rhetoric.
|
The end of The Pastime is noteworthy for the unexpected appearances, one after another, of the characters Death, Fame, Time, and Eternity (all described by the now-defunct narrator). These characters owe an obvious debt to Petrarch's Trionfi , probably mediated through a series of tapestries or paintings. They are iconographically very interesting, and make a surprisingly effective ending to the poem. But it must
|
|