Michael Foster. Textual Voices - Self-Representation and Religious
Instruction in the Works of the Pearl-Poet pp. 187~214 ( 28 pages)
Abstract
This paper explores the presence of a narrative voice in the poems
preserved in Cotton Nero A.x commonly ascribed to the Pearl-poet. It
argues that the poet constructs a series of cohesive themes in the
four poems which all inform one another, and that the poet"s
authority is both implied and asserted by the author"s manipulation
of narrator personae and use of an absent or silent narrator in
Cleanness and Patience. Meanwhile, the intimate narrative voice of
Pearl functions to create a sense of shared theological and
ideological positionality between audience and narrator, which this
paper suggests is a rhetorical move to gain the trust and
benevolence of an audience that may be otherwise hostile. Having
captured the attention of the audience and made the theological
arguments of Cleanness and Patience, the final poem invites the
audience to trust in the Pearl-poet by differentiating the authority
of texts versus rumors.
Key words
Pearl, Patience, Cleanness, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,
Pearl-poet, Gawain-poet, self-deprecation, narrative voice,
authority, medievaltheology, didactic poetry, religious poetry