In honor of the holidays I thought I would talk about my favorite Christmas story – Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Much ink has been spilt about Gawain and his verdant foe, but I thought today I would try and pull a Christmas message – and maybe some cheer – out of the notoriously grim story. The poem, an anonymous fourteenth-century alliterative tale, begins, fittingly enough, with a Christmas party, and no tacky office party, but a feast to go down in the history books. In the spirit of the season, the Green Knight bursts in on the party. Unlike Santa, though, he chooses to come in while everyone's awake, and to use the front door rather than the chimney. And instead of toys for the good and coal for the bad, he brings with him a bow of holly and an axe. Holly, which blooms bright red amid the frozen winter landscape, is a fitting gift of this holiday, a reminder of the hope that comes with the cycle of the seasons. Spring will come again, and color will return to the land. The axe, however, is a far more chilling gift. Even more dangerous than a Red Ryder BB Gun, it's a violent offering in conjunction with a violent game. While the young knights and ladies of the court have been playing flirtatious games where the stakes are kisses, the stakes of the Green Knight's game are life and death, severed head for severed head. (Of course, the Green Knight's game turns out to be a kissing game, too, but one with serious repercussions.) The light, superficial tone of the opening celebration is shattered as the Green Knight confronts the court and asks to test their pride. He offers the axe to anyone who will play his beheading game. He'll take a blow from a Round Table knight this evening in return for a blow from him in one year at the mysterious Green Chapel. When Gawain takes the challenge, he has no way of knowing that the Green Knight can pick up his head and keep talking once the blow is given. When the Green Knight departs, however, severed head in hand, the court returns to its frivolous ways.
As the year passes between that Christmas and the one in which Gawain will need to seek out the Green Knight and fulfill his promise, the court maintains a polite, artificial veneer. They are thinking that Gawain doesn't stand a chance, but they tell him that he'll be fine. They continue with laughter and games as Gawain's journey looms near. And when the day arrives for Gawain to set out, they spend pages and pages arming him beautifully, setting up a hard and beautiful exterior meant to define him as a knight. Little do they know that the true test is an interior one, and that the armor will not help him at all for that. As if to hint that Gawain's preparation is faulty, barely a line is given to the great monsters and foes that Gawain meets on the road. He dispatches dragon and troll with ease, but finds the cold harder to bear (armor doesn't provide much protection from a blizzard). When his prayers are answered and a castle appears, he thinks of it as a welcome respite from his trials. He doesn't realize that the true test will occur within the safety and warmth of the castle walls. In fact, he moves ever more into the interior of the castle – first to a private chamber and then into a curtained bed – signifying his personal move toward the interior as the test continues. The lord of the castle greets him warmly, as does his lady wife, a mysterious old woman, and everyone else in the castle. They've heard stories of the courtly Gawain and are pleased to welcome him to their holiday celebrations. The host tells Gawain to rest up before his continued journey. The Green Chapel that he seeks is near, and he can sleep away the days until the new year. In fact, the host will add some Christmas cheer with a game. He will hunt each day for three days and exchange his winnings for whatever the knight can win inside the castle.
While the lord's away hunting, the lady of the castle tempts our valiant hero in his bedroom, and the stakes of that temptation rise each day in conjunction with the stakes of the hunting going on outside the castle walls. The emotions Gawain feels during these scenes of temptation are many -- fear, anger, annoyance, lust. Yet he shows none of these. He remains diplomatic and polite, managing to refuse the lady without insulting her. Each day Gawain escapes with a chaste kiss (one more for each day), and passes those kisses on to his host in exchange for the fruits of the hunt. The last day, however, the lady manages to give him a gift as well, a green girdle. He refuses all her love tokens and rich offerings, but finally gives in when she tells him that the girdle will protect him from all violence. His love for his own life and fear of death win out, and he accepts the gift. He even promises not to tell anyone. That evening, when the lord asks him if he won anything besides kisses, seeing no way to honor both his word to the lady and the lord, he tells him that he did not. The next morning, he heads with a (terribly frightened) guide to the Green Chapel, which could perhaps be more aptly called a Green Mound, to meet the Green Knight. The Green Knight makes Gawain wait and listen while he sharpens the axe with which he'll behead him, and then comes to complete the year-long beheading game. He moves to strike Gawain with his axe, but stops when Gawain twitches. He moves to strike again, and stops again. He moves to strike a third time, and this time nicks Gawain on the neck. [SPOILER ALERT] Gawain is confused, but quick, and moves away to put shield and sword between himself and his giant opponent. Having fulfilled his obligation to the game, he'll not take another swing without a fight. But the Green Knight laughs and reveals himself to be the same man who has graciously hosted Gawain for the last three nights. The old lady in the Castle was Morgan La Fey, and she used her magic to transform him. The first two swings were for the first two days, in which Gawain resisted temptation and kept his word. The third swing, resulting in a cut, and a scar, was for the third day, in which Gawain failed just a little in not telling of his gift. A small cut for a small failing. Yet Gawain responds with shame and anger. His blush in response to the Green Knight's words is a physical response which can neither be hidden nor controlled. Its speaks of his shame in a way none of his carefully measured words could do. His angry outburst that follows his blush continues with the trend. Gawain finally has a completely honest communication, and though it's not pretty, it does signal a move to a new kind of authenticity.
When Gawain returns to his court, he wears the scar and the girdle as badges of his failing. Though he left as a representative of the court, his journey has taken him on an individual path that his fellow Round Table knights cannot fully understand. They all adopt the green girdle as a fashion statement, an act of seeming solidarity. But no one can truly comprehend what Gawain's been through. Maybe Gawain's too hard on himself, and maybe he misunderstands the lesson. It may even be that his attempt to render his newfound authenticity externally, the only way he knows how, is doomed to fail. The poem has been read as a social critique, as fatalistic, and even as apocalyptic. And it is all of these things. Yet there is something hopeful as well as dreadful in a story of one person's journey set against such a large backdrop. Seasons change, cities rise and fall, and yet amid all this we focus in on a single knight's struggle to know himself. Maybe he is too hard on himself, and maybe no one else in the court understands or learns anything. But Gawain learns. He learns some humility. He learns some honesty. He learns something about himself and about the kinds of battles that really matter in life. His is not a story of the knight in shining armor fighting a dragon, though that surely takes place on his journey, but rather the struggle of an individual to be a good person. Gawain grows introspective over the course of the poem. He reexamines his values and his intentions as well as his actions. Yes, this is a painful process, and he can't go through it for anyone else in the court, but it's a process that leaves him more aware of himself and the world. Perhaps we could all take some time this holiday season to be a little introspective, to take a moment's break from shiny wrapping paper and colored lights and think about what we've learned this year, what we've done well and what we could work on. And though Gawain doesn't seem to change the course of Camelot, perhaps his story can help make us think a little bit. And maybe that is the best gift of all.
Showing posts with label Gawain-Poet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gawain-Poet. Show all posts
Monday, December 26, 2011
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
The Poetics of Grief: Considering Pearl and Wm. Paul Young's The Shack.
Grief has a funny way of choking out your perspective and
balance. It's so easy to let that creeping vine take hold, and once you do, it's
so very hard to wrench yourself free.
Grief can become, during our darker moments, a trickster-friend. You get
so used to its presence that you forget how to live without it, insidious though
the relationship might be.
Having spent the better part of this Fall attempting to
journey forward after an intensely personal and awful loss (I miscarried right
before the start of the term), I've found myself thinking a lot about how humans
grieve, and on the literature that has been born out of these moments of agony. So much has been written on this topic, but for me, poetic works
and their explorations of how we suffer and grapple with loss have
always moved me the most and have helped to
transport me (or at least begin the journey) out of those dark spaces.
The journey to a place of peace and balance after experiencing a profound loss is
always a difficult one, and I have grown fascinated with, and taken
considerable comfort from, those who have written about their own journeys
through grief as a result.

Simultaneously, I've found myself thinking as well about a far
more recent work: The Shack. The
novel is, at its core, a framed dream vision. The first eighty pages or so chronicle
the protagonist's (Mac's) loss of his youngest daughter, Missy. This portion of
the novel is agonizing, and it ends in the very place where the authorities find clear evidence of Missy's murder – a dilapidated shack in the wilds of Oregon.
Mac returns to the shack after receiving a cryptic invitation from
"Papa" – the name that his wife, Nan, uses for God. He falls asleep in the shack after a fit of
rage and an ensuing mental breakdown, and when he "wakes" he enters into
a dream vision in which he finds the comfort he's been searching for and his
release from grief and anger.
What strikes me the most about both of these works is the
candor with which they recount the deeply personal and awful grief that comes
with the loss of a child (or any loved one). Both Mac and the narrator of Pearl are angry, lost, and utterly
encased in their grief at the outset of these works. As I returned to them both over the past few
weeks, I immediately identified with these characters because of that. Their questions,
their hurt, but most of all, their journeys through grief to a place of balance
felt so deeply familiar and so strangely comforting.
As I kept thinking about these two works (largely in
isolation at first), I began to realize just how much they actually share. Granted,
there are NUMEROUS differences (cultural, structural, and theological) that separate
them, but I found certain aspects profoundly intertwined nonetheless. For
starters, both the Pearl narrator and
Mac have — as I mentioned earlier — allowed their grief to consume all
aspects of their lives by the time that we're introduced to them. Take, for
instance, stanza five of Pearl:
Bifore that spot my honde I spenned
For care ful colde that to me caght.
A deuely dele in my hert denned
Thagh resoun sette myselven saght.
I playned my perle that ther was penned
Wyth fyrce skylles that faste faght.
Thagh kynde of Kryst me comfort kenned,
My wreched wylle in wo ay wraghte.
I felle upon that floury flaght -
Suche odour to my hernes schot,
I slode upon a slepyng-slaghte
On that precios perle wythouten spot. (49-56)
For care ful colde that to me caght.
A deuely dele in my hert denned
Thagh resoun sette myselven saght.
I playned my perle that ther was penned
Wyth fyrce skylles that faste faght.
Thagh kynde of Kryst me comfort kenned,
My wreched wylle in wo ay wraghte.
I felle upon that floury flaght -
Suche odour to my hernes schot,
I slode upon a slepyng-slaghte
On that precios perle wythouten spot. (49-56)
Before
that spot my hands I clasped / For care full cold that seized upon me / A
desolating grief in my heart lay deep / Though reason would have reconciled me.
/ I mourned my pearl that there was trapped / With fierce arguments that fast
contended, / My wretched will in woe nature wrought . . .
The speaker here kneels over the very spot where he
"lost" his pearl — which is often interpreted as a young daughter — and laments
that the awareness of this loss "does nothing but pierce my heart sharply,
/ Swell and burn my breast painfully" (17-18).
Mac's grief after Missy's abduction and and murder is
similarly all-consuming:
Little distractions like the ice
storm were a welcome although brief respite from the haunting presence of his
constant companion: The Great Sadness,
as he referred to it. Shortly after the summer that Missy vanished, The Great Sadness had draped itself
around Mack's shoulders like some invisible but almost tangibly heavy
quilt. The weight of its presence dulled
his eyes and stooped his shoulders. Even his efforts to shake it off were
exhausting, as if his arms were sewn into its bleak folds of despair, and he
had somehow become part of it. He ate, worked, loved, dreamed, and played in
this garment of heaviness, weighed down as if he were wearing a leaden bathrobe
– trudging daily through the murky despondency that sucked the color out of
everything.
At times he could feel The Great Sadness slowly tightening
around his chest and heart like the crushing coils of a constructor, squeezing
liquid from his eyes until he thought there no longer remained a reservoir.
Other times he would dream that his feet were stuck in cloying mud as he caught
brief glimpses of Missy running down the wooded path ahead of him, her red cotton
summer dress gilded with wildflowers flashing through the trees. She was
completely oblivious to the dark shadow tracking her from behind. Although he
frantically tried to scream warnings to her, no sound emerged and he was always
too late and too impotent to save her. He would bolt upright in bed, sweat
dripping from his tortured body, while waves of nausea and guilt and regret
rolled over him like some surreal tidal flood. (27)
Both protagonists find themselves utterly consumed by their
awareness of what they have lost. It dominates their thoughts and oppresses any
capacity for joy. Seeking (whether they realize it or not) an end to
their suffering, both journey to origin point of their pain: to the places
where they lost their beloved children. The Pearl narrator moves into a garden (often interpreted as a graveyard) where
his pearl "sprang away" from him,
while Mac journeys to the shack where they found Missy's dress and an awful
blood-stain, clear evidence of her murder.
It is through this return to a place of complete pain that
their dream visions occur. The dreamer in Pearl
"awakens" to find himself in a transcendent and beautiful landscape,
where he soon encounters the Pearl Maiden — a figure who both represents the
child he lost and the Divine Wisdom he so desperately needs. Mac, in turn,
wakes from his despair-induced slumber inside the shack and exits in complete
frustration, only to find the landscape slowly transform itself from Winter to Spring and the desolate shack reshape itself into a warm and inviting log
cabin, with clear signs of life inside. Mac is soon greeted by three humans,
each of whom is revealed as an aspect of the Trinitarian God.
From here, The Shack
diverges markedly from Pearl in a number
manner of ways, but a pivotal moment in the second half of the novel shares
much with the medieval dream vision as well.
In this particular episode, Mac finds himself and his outlook —
overshadowed as it is by The Great
Sadness — challenged and questioned by Sophia. Just as the Pearl Maiden challenges the narrator's misguided, grief-stricken perceptions, chiding him at
one point for having misinterpreted and incorrectly contextualized his loss
(5.265-76), Sophia forces Mac to face his destructive worldview in a
similarly blunt and masterful way. At
the end of their dialogue — which proves as cathartic and transformative as
the dialogue between the Pearl narrator and the Pearl Maiden — Mac is given a
glimpse of Missy in the afterlife. He sees her playing with his other children
(who are, themselves, experiencing dream visions of their own), and she
eventually runs directly towards him. An invisible force (represented by a
waterfall) separates them, but Mac is told that she knows that he is there
"on the other side of the waterfall." Mac tries desperately to get to
her, but the invisible force won't let him move. Once he stops, however, and
simply gazes on her, taking in "every detail of her expression and hair
and hands" she smiles at him and mouths "It's okay, I . . . love
you." Sophia tells him at this point that while Missy cannot see him, she
knows that he is there, and that she herself chose for their meeting to be this
way. Eventually "the water roared down from above, directly in front of
him, and obliterated all the sights and sounds of his children" and he
finds himself in a grotto behind a waterfall (exactly where he had entered to
talk with Sophia). Like the Pearl narrator, then, Mac is challenged in this portion
of the narrative by a female counselor who speaks with Divine authority. His resulting vision of his daughter, in turn,
challenges his attachment to The Great
Sadness and affirms what he has learned from Sophia. Just as the Pearl
Maiden chides the narrator for becoming too attached to his limited perception
of the world, Mac learns that he cannot – in the end – be the world's, or God's,
judge, and that the more he accepts the limitations of his perception, the more
free and more joyful he will become. The
Great Sadness, then, loses its power because it can only hang over him
so long as he convinces himself that his perceptions are wholly accurate.
The water imagery in this scene, I should add, also parallels
Pearl, because in both the protagonists
meet their lost children but are separated from them by an impassable body of
water. The water prevents the dreamer from completely accessing the afterlife
and those within it. Both Mac and the
Pearl narrator try frantically to cross these bodies of water at certain points
and rejoin their beloved children, only to realize that their reunion cannot
come to pass while they are both alive. Both find their attempts to ford the
barrier to be in vain — the Pearl narrator is held back initially by the maiden's
words, and eventually wakes up because he tries to ford the stream. Mac, in
turn, tries repeatedly to force his way through the invisible barrier, but to
no avail, and Sophia eventually explains that the barrier is truly
impenetrable. The fact that they want so desperately to experience the physical
presence of their lost ones speaks, rather poignantly, to their reliance upon their limited sensory perceptions.
What they learn — in no small part through these vain attempts — is
that true vision and wisdom lie in a state beyond the senses. They learn, as a
little prince once said, that "One sees clearly only with the heart. What
is essential is invisible to the eye."
As Pearl winds its way to a close, as the narrator comes to discover
a world and a worldview much larger than his grief, the word "delyt" appears frequently, suggesting that the narrator has begun to move forward from the place of grief that brought him into the dream vision. Mac too finds a way to reclaim his life from The Great Sadness and to live in joy not
in spite of his loss, but because of it. Both works, in their own way, explore
the ways in which we can locate a sense of purpose in the midst of these awful
losses. And this isn't to say, as Mac mistakenly observes, that these events
come to pass for the benefit of our souls and psyches, but rather that
"grace doesn't depend on suffering to exist, but where there is suffering
you will find grace in many facets and colors" (The Shack, 188).
Ultimately, I'm not seeking to argue here that the author of
The Shack drew inspiration from Pearl. Rather, my point in drawing out
this comparison is to suggest that both of these works — separated as they are by centuries, by theological nuance, by culture — tap into the same mysteries
of loss in uncannily similar ways, and that these similarities can — if we let
them — remind us that we are never truly alone in our grief, deeply and
intensely personal as those experiences always are. Considering these works alongside each other can offer us the deep and
abiding comfort of knowing that when we experience the intensity of loss and grief, that we
are entering into a strange and beautiful communion with all who have (and all who
will) endure the same. This may seem terribly bleak at first,
but it's actually — in my mind at least — quite beautiful to know that even with full knowledge of
the pain that will come with the loss of our beloved "pearles," that
we can never quite keep ourselves away from love. That we are always invited and drawn back
into relationship with others and with ourselves because of these risks. Pearls of great price, indeed.
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