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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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are made ultimately manifest because this is the result of his following the advice of this pseudo-counselor<br />

throughout the majority of the poem. The relationship between the two men is a deliberate inversion of<br />

the counselor/counseled binary and the model of virtuous friendship framed in the Consolation. In his<br />

depiction of Pandarus and his accompanying relationship with Troilus, Chaucer also lambasts the lofty<br />

expectations of the chivalric romance, asserting that the two male protagonists are unable to reach their<br />

ultimate, singular goal of bringing Troilus “bliss” through his possession of Criseyde. Pandarus is, in<br />

essence, pimping for Troilus, the deviant, and this act inverts the honorable, idealized expectations of the<br />

romantic genre. Their depraved aims – and their subsequent failures – can be nothing more than a flawed<br />

performance for the audience to wonder at.<br />

Unlike Troilus and Pandarus, Criseyde is not an inversion of any specific character in the Consolation,<br />

which only features discourse between Boethius and Lady Philosophy. Chaucer, somewhat paradoxically,<br />

creates Criseyde as both an embodiment of Boethian pragmatism and the unfortunate object of Troilus‟<br />

affection. For despite Criseyde‟s ultimate loss of honor and lack of agency in the poem, she proves to be<br />

the only character with rationality and any semblance of a moral compass. In the narrative, she represents<br />

the virtuous qualities that the character of Boethius eventually embodies in the Consolation, including<br />

practicality and wisdom. From the outset, Criseyde does not hesitate to tell Pandarus her feelings in<br />

regards to his intimations to “do wey your barbe” and “lat us daunce.” (Chaucer <strong>II</strong>. 110, 111). As a young<br />

widow, Criseyde reasonably wants to retain her honorable reputation. In reply to Pandarus, she exclaims,<br />

“„I! God forbade! Be ye mad? / Is that a widewes life? / … / It satte me wel bet ay in a cave /To bidde and<br />

rede on holy seyntes lives‟” (Chaucer <strong>II</strong>. 113-114, 116-117). Rather than submitting to Pandarus‟ request,<br />

Criseyde asserts herself through her principles, which, as a widow with an absentee father and a conniving<br />

uncle, are truly her only possessions.<br />

Her most assertive moments in the text, such as the exchange with Pandarus alluded to above, come<br />

when Criseyde‟s loyalty to her faith, as a pious widow, is put to the test. Indeed, Criseyde‟s faithful<br />

94

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