Chaucer portrait: Thomas Hoccleve, Regiment of Princes British Library MS Harley 4866, fol. 88r
Language: English (Southeast Midland)
Manuscript date: ca. 1411
Portraits of Geoffrey Chaucer appear in the Ellesmere Canterbury Tales and
in a few other Thomas Hoccleve Regiment manuscripts (see the image of
an Ellesmere page, “Geoffrey Chaucer, Canterbury Tales,” p. 137). Hoccleve
wrote the Regiment of Princes for Henry, Prince of Wales, in the years
preceding 1413, the date of his accession as Henry V. A mirror for princes
and begging poem, it survives in over forty manuscripts. Hoccleve asserts
that he knew Chaucer, and he states in these lines (4990–5017 in printed
editions) that he is afraid others will forget his “worthy maistir.” He also
compares the mnemonic function of his portrait to why saints are depicted
in churches, which has resonances for Lollardy (see “Plays and Representa-
tions,” p. 262).
Primary documents and further reading Carlson, D. R. (1991) “Thomas Hoccleve and the Chaucer Portrait.” Huntington Library Quarterly 54: 283–300.
Hoccleve, T. (1999) The Regiment of Princes, ed. C. R. Blyth. Kalamazoo, MI:
Medieval Institute.
Knapp, E. (2001) The Bureaucratic Muse: Thomas Hoccleve and the Literature of Late Medieval England. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press.
Krochalis, J. (1986) “Hoccleve’s Chaucer Portrait.” Chaucer Review 21: 234–45.
Seymour, M. C. (ed.) (1981) Selections from Hoccleve. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Spielmann, M. H. (1900) The Portraits of Geoffrey Chaucer. London: Kegan Paul,
Trench, Trübner.
Spurgeon, C. F. E. (1960) [1908–17] Five Hundred Years of Chaucer Criticism and Allusion, 1357–1900, 7 vols. Repr. 3 vols. New York: Russell and Russell.