Chaucer had rewritten a stellar version of …
Years: 1389 - 1389
Chaucer had rewritten a stellar version of the romantic “tragedy,” Troilus and Criseyde in about 1385.
In the work’s five books and more than eighty-two hundred lines in rhyme royal stanzas, Chaucer transforms Boccaccio's stylized Filostrato by his penetrating analysis of common human motives within a Boethian and ultimately Christian overview.
Chaucer had served in 1385 as justice of peace for Kent, and in 1386 had been elected representative to Parliament from Kent, having that year given up his two posts of customs controller, both of which were important for the king's revenues.
He had in 1387 begun his Canterbury Tales, a collection of twenty-four tales, with frequent dramatic links, told to pass the time during a spring pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Thomas a Becket in Canterbury.
For a comic effect in his “Tale of Sir Thopas,” written in mock epic style around 1387, Chaucer employs doggerel: monotonous, excessively regular verse, predictable in both rhythm and rhyme to the point of banality.
Appointed clerk of the king's works in 1389, Chaucer continues to receive, in addition to salary, gifts and annuities for his service to the Crown.
