The poet does not labour the point. Indeed, the whole of this rich climactic scene takes up less than twenty lines. Yet with extraordinary sophistication he has uncovered the springs of human narcissism, the ways we lie to ourselves in order to preserve the image we have of ourselves and the ways in which we try to maintain that image even at the cost of extreme self-mortification. For, as Dostoevsky understood so well, self-mortification is usually only the sign of a refusal to face up to what one really is, which is in turn the result of a feeling that there is no one to pardon us.
The poet also shows us what happens when the symbolic systems we live by come under pressure. At the moment of crisis, with his encounter with the Green Knight suddenly imminent, Gawain instinctively opts for the magic girdle, as so many, for example, have opted for collaboration with the enemy when under occupation. The lesson he has to learn is that he should have trusted those symbols of a world in which he professed to believe, and no doubt imagined he believed, the pentangle and Mary's image, and that his real danger arose only when he surrendered that trust. But the poem takes up no moralistic stance, it merely shows the consequences of the action Gawain actually chose, just as Proust merely shows what happens when Marcel tries to hold on to his mother. Neither writer suggests that his protagonist, in the course of living through the dense web that is his life, could have done otherwise, though both recognise that it would have been better for them had they not done what they did. Now, they will have to live with the consequences for the rest of their lives.
In his other major poem, Pearl, this extraordinary anonymous fourteenth-century English poet was also concerned with the difficulty of reconciling our system of beliefs with our gut reactions, only this time he deals with it directly rather than through the prism of romance. The protagonist is a bereaved parent who cannot accept, cannot, we would say, come to terms with, the death of his child. He describes her as his ‘precious pearl’, who, he says, slipped through his fingers one summer's day and fell into the earth where she was lost. The little girl appears to him in a dream and, in an extended debate, tries to make him see that she is now happy and fulfilled in Paradise and that he has no reason to grieve. But though he can grasp what she says intellectually he cannot accept the loss to him her death entails. In the end, desperate to join her on the other side of the river which has separated them throughout their conversation, he rushes forward to seize hold of her. But the shock of his contact with the cold water of the river wakes him up. As with Gawain's painful discovery that the Green Knight had known of his cowardice all along, the shock effects a change in his whole being which mere argument had failed to do. Like Gawain in the face of Arthur's injunction to the court to wear identical girdles to his, the bereaved father is now at last able to let his child go, to understand with his whole being and not just his mind that we cannot ever fully comprehend what happens to us or protect ourselves against the blows of fate. And he understands at the same time that we must learn not merely not to resent this fact but actively to celebrate it. The last stanza of the poem, so reminiscent of George Herbert, has the father partaking of the daily ritual of the Mass, where the bread of life is eaten and where the act of participation implies a recognition that life goes on despite the losses we suffer, and that this is itself a good which cannot be questioned:
To pay the Prince other sete saghte
Hit is full ethe to the god Krystyin:
For I haf founded hym, bothe day and naghte,
A God, a Lorde, a frende ful fyin.
Over this hyul this lote I laghte,
For pyty of my perle enclyin,
And sythen to God I hit betaghte
In Krystes dere blessyng and myn,
That in the forme of bred and wyn
The preste uus schewes uch a daye.
He get uus to be hys homly hyne
And precious perles unto his pay.
Amen. Amen.
*The poet is deliberately vague about Gawain's confession, as he is about Arthur's childishness in the first scene; it may be that Gawain does tell the priest about the girdle, but since he makes no effort to restore it to its owner, such a confession is worthless. See John Burrow's excellent discussion in A Reading of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, p. 200.
15 ‘A Goose which Has Grown in Scotland on a Tree’
In 1638 Georg Christoph Stirm, a German student, wrote a letter home from England in which he described what he saw in the famous house-museum of the horticulturalist, John Tradescant. The letter gives a startling insight not only into the contents of Tradescant's museum but also into the mind of the writer who reports on those objects. ‘In the museum itself,’ writes Stirm,
we saw a salamander, a chameleon, a pelican, a remora, a lanhado from Africa, a white partridge, a goose which has grown in Scotland on a tree, a flying squirrel, another squirrel like a fish, all kinds of bright coloured birds from India, a number of things changed into stone, all kinds of shells, the hand of a mermaid, the hand of a mummy: a very natural wax hand under glass, all kinds of precious stones, coins, a picture wrought in feathers, a small piece of wood from the cross of Christ …, many Turkish and other foreign shoes and boots, a sea-parrot, a toad-fish, an elk's hoof with three claws, a bat as large as a pigeon, a human bone weighing 42lbs., Indian arrows such as are used by the executioners in the West Indies — when a man is condemned to death they lay open his back with them and he dies of it — an instrument used by the Jews in circumcision, some very light wood from Africa, the robe of the King of Virginia …, a passion of Christ carved very daintily on a plumstone, a large magnet stone, a S. Francis in wax under glass, as also a S. Jerome, the Pater Noster of Pope Gregory XV, pipes from the East and West Indies, a stone found in the West Indies in the water, whereon are graven Jesus, Mary and Joseph, a beautiful present from the Duke of Buckingham, which was of gold and diamonds affixed to a feather by which the four elements were signified, Isidor's MSS of de natura hominis, a scourge with which Charles V is said to have scourged himself, a hat band of snake bones …
At first we might think that there is not much difference between this and the lists drawn up by Cromwell's inspectors of the relics harboured by the religious houses of England, such as the coals on which St Lawrence was ‘toasted’, the paring of St Edmund's nails or the boots and penknife of St Thomas; but a moment's reflection will serve to bring out the differences. The Reformers' zeal reduces all the relics to inventory lists, but, as we have seen, it was not out of curiosity that the pilgrims went in search of the nails or the boots, but in order to enter the presence of the holy man. The coals, nails and boots stand for the saint himself, they evoke his presence. The pilgrim, in sixteenth-century England as much as in the countries of the Mediterranean in the late Roman Empire, was still ‘going to a place to meet a person’; the visitor to John Tradescant's museum, on the other hand, was going to satisfy his curiosity and to be filled with wonder at the sheer quantity and variety of objects collected there.