Dictionary Definition
cleanness
Noun
1 the state of being clean; without dirt or other
impurities [ant: dirtiness]
2 without moral defects
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The state of being clean and free of contamination; cleanliness, clarity or purity.
Extensive Definition
confuse Cleanliness
Cleanness is a Middle
English alliterative poem written in the late 14th
century. Its unknown author, designated the Pearl poet or
Gawain
poet, also appears, on the basis of dialect and stylistic
evidence, to be the author of
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl, and
Patience,
and may have composed St.
Erkenwald.
The poem is found solely in the Pearl manuscript,
Cotton
Nero A x. That manuscript also contains Pearl, Patience, and
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. None of the poems has a title or
divisions of chapters, but the breaks are marked by large initial
letters of blue, and each poem has a single, full page
illustration. Each of these poems is entirely unique to this one
manuscript. Cleanness (which is an editorial title) is also known
by the editorial title Purity.
The manuscript, Cotton
Nero A.x is in the British
Museum. The first published edition was in Early English
Alliterative Poems in the West Midland Dialect of the fourteenth
century, printed by the
Early English Text Society.
Cleanness is a description of the virtues of
cleanliness of body and the delights of married love. It takes
three subjects from the Bible as its
illustrations: the Flood, the
destruction of Sodom
and Gomorrah, and the fall of Belshazzar. Each
of these is described powerfully, and the poetry is among the
finest in Middle English. In each case, the poet warns his readers
about the dangers of defilement and, at the same time, the joys of
purity.
Genre and poetics
A didactic, homiletic poem, Cleanness consists of 1812 lines. Alliteration is used consistently throughout the poem, usually with three alliterating words per line. The unidentified narrator or preacher speaks in the first person throughout the work.Narrative
The opening lines of the poem (ll. 1–50) function as a peroration in which the narrator states his theme by contrasting cleanness or purity with filth. He also points out that God hates filth and banishes those who are not properly dressed.A paraphrase of the parable of the Wedding Guest
follows in lines 51–171. This exemplum, explained by lines
171–192, follows directly from the previous sartorial metaphor and serves to show why
the hearers should give attention to cleanness. Following this,
lines 193–556 expound on God’s forgiveness and wrath, using the
Fall of the Angels, the Fall of Adam and Eve (Gen 3), and the story
of Noah (Gen 6: 5–32, 7, 8) (the first major exemplum of the poem) to
demonstrate these divine attributes.
A transition (ll. 557–599), including a comment
on how God reacts to sin (esp. lechery), follows.
In a second exemplum the poet retells the stories
of Abraham
and Lot (Gen.
18:1–19, 28) (ll. 600 - 1048), including a description of the
Dead Sea
as the poet understood it.
In another transition (ll. 1050–1148), the
narrator explains the symbolism of the second exemplum, ending with
a description of God as strongly vengeful.
The third, and by far the longest, exemplum (ll. 1149–1796)
recounts the conquest of Jerusalem by
Nebuchadnezzar
and the transfer of the Temple treasures to Babylon where they
were treated with reverence by the king. But after Nebuchadnezzar
died, Belshazzar, a man given to the indulgence of his lusts,
succeeded him. During an enormous drunken feast, he ordered that
the Temple vessels be brought in and that everyone be served in
them. God then determines to punish him. A huge hand appears,
writes a message on the wall, and vanishes. No one can interpret
this message. At the Queen’s suggestion, Daniel is called,
and he interprets the three words and predicts Belshazzar’s
downfall.
In his conclusion (ll. 1797–1812), the narrator
summarizes by asserting that uncleanness angers God, but cleanness
comforts Him.
Technique
It uses the homiletic principles of education with entertainment (Horace's utile et dulce) and is primarily rooted in Biblical stories. The reference to the fall of the angels is drawn from pseudepigrapha. The technique of presenting exempla and then explicating them as demonstrations of moral principles is characteristic of many sermons of the medieval period. Here the poet uses three exempla with explication in the transitions between them.References
Editions
- Andrew, Malcolm and Waldron, Ronald. 2002. The Poems of the Pearl Manuscript Berkeley: University of California Press. (4th ed.) ISBN 0-85989-514-9.
- Vantuono, William, ed. (1984) The Pearl Poems : an omnibus edition New York: Garland Pub. ISBN 0-8240-5450-4 (v. 1) ISBN 0-8240-5451-2 (v. 2) Text in both Middle English and Modern English
Translations
- Finch, Casey. “The Complete Works of the Pearl Poet” 1993. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-07871-3.
Commentary and criticism
- Hamilton, Ruth E. “The Power of Words and the Power of Narratives: Cleanness” Essays in Medieval Studies, 3: 162 - 173,
- Morse, C.C. “The Pattern of Judgment in the “Queste” and “Cleanness.” ” Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1978.
- Keiser, E.B. “Desire and Medieval Homophobia: The Legitimation of Sexual Pleasure in Cleanness and Its Contexts” New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1997
- Keiser, Elizabeth. “The Festive Decorum of “Cleanness.”” In “Chivalric Literature” ed. by Larry D. Benson and John Leyerle, London, 1980.
- Kelly, T.D. and J. T. Irwin. “The Meaning of “Cleanness”: Parable as Effective Sign.” Mediaeval Studies 35: 232 - 60.
- Lecklider, J.K. “Cleanness: Structure and Meaning” Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK; Rochester, NY, USA: DS Brewer, 1997
- Schreiber, Earl G. "The Structures of Clannesse." In The Alliterative Tradition in the Fourteenth Century, ed. Bernard S. Levy and Paul E. Szarmach. Kent, OH: Kent State Univ. Press, 1981.