Everything about John Gower totally explained
John Gower (c.
1330 – October
1408) was an English
poet, a contemporary of
William Langland and a personal friend of
Geoffrey Chaucer. He is remembered primarily for three major works, the
Mirroir de l'Omme,
Vox Clamantis, and
Confessio Amantis, three long poems written in French, Latin, and English respectively, which are united by common moral and political themes.
Life
Few details are known of Gower's early life. He was probably born to an affluent family from
Kent (Southeast England), and may have been a landowner. It is thought that he practised law in or around London.
While in
London, he became closely associated with the nobility of his day. He was apparently personally acquainted with
Richard II: in the prologue of the first edition of the
Confessio Amantis, he tells how the king, chancing to meet him on the Thames (probably circa
1385), invited him aboard the royal barge, and that their conversation then resulted in a commission for the work that would become the
Confessio Amantis. Later in life his allegiance switched to the side of the future
Henry IV, to whom later editions of the
Confessio Amantis were dedicated.
Gower's friendship with Chaucer is also well documented. When Chaucer was sent as a diplomat to Italy in
1378, Gower was one of the men to whom he gave power of attorney over his affairs in
England. The two poets also paid one another compliments in their verse: Chaucer dedicated his
Troilus and Criseyde in part to "moral Gower", and Gower reciprocated by placing a speech in praise of Chaucer in the mouth of
Venus at the end of the
Confessio Amantis.
Towards the end of his life, he took up residence in rooms provided by the Priory of St Mary Overeys (now
Southwark Cathedral). In 1398, while living here, he married, probably for the second time: his wife, Agnes Groundolf, was to survive him. In his last years, and possibly as early as
1400, he became blind.
After his death in
1408, Gower was interred in an ostentatious tomb in the Priory church (now
Southwark Cathedral), which remains today.
Works
Gower's verse is by turns religious, political, historical, and moral—though he's been narrowly defined as "moral Gower" ever since Chaucer graced him with the epithet. His primary mode is
allegory, although he shies away from sustained abstractions in favour of the plain style of the raconteur.
His earliest works were probably
ballades in
Anglo-Norman French, some of which may have later been included in his work the
Cinkante Ballades. The first work which has survived is in the same language, however: it's the
Speculum Meditantis, also known by the French title
Mirour de l'Omme, a poem of just under 30,000 lines, containing a dense exposition of religion and morality.
Gower's second major work, the
Vox Clamantis, was written in Latin: it takes as its subject the state of England, and incorporates commentary on the
Peasants' Revolt that occurred during the composition of the poem. Gower takes the side of the aristocracy, and appears to have admired the techniques Richard II used to suppress the revolt.
His third work is the
Confessio Amantis, a 30,000-line poem in octosyllabic
English couplets, which makes use of the structure of a Christian
confession (presented allegorically as a confession of sins against Love) as a
narrative frame within which a multitude of individual tales are told. Like his previous works, the theme is very much morality, even where the stories themselves have a tendency to describe rather immoral behaviour. One scholar asserts that
Confessio Amantis "almost exclusively" made Gower's "poetic reputation."
In later years Gower wrote a number of minor works in all three languages: the
Cinkante Ballades, a series of French ballades on romantic subjects, and several poems addressed to the new
Henry IV—in return for which he was granted a pension, in the form of an annual allowance of wine.
Gower's poetry has had a mixed critical reception. In the fifteenth century, he was generally regarded alongside Chaucer as the father of English poetry. Over the years, however, his reputation declined, largely on account of a perceived didacticism and dullness. During the twentieth century he's received more recognition, notably by C.S. Lewis in
The Allegory of Love. However, he hasn't obtained the same following or critical acceptance as other major poets of the period.
List of works
- Mirour de l'Omme, or Speculum Hominis, or Speculum Meditantis (French, c.1376–1379)
- Vox Clamantis (Latin, c.1377–1381)
- Confessio Amantis (English, c.1386–1393)
- Traité (French, 1397)
- Cinkante Balades (French, 1399-1400)
- Cronica Tripertita (Latin, c.1400)
- In praise of peace (English, c.1400)
Further Information
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