Chapter VI. The Drama From About 1550 To 1642
THE INFLUENCE OF CLASSICAL COMEDY AND TRAGEDY.
In
Chapter IV we left the drama at that point, toward the middle of the sixteenth
century, when the Mystery Plays had largely declined and Moralities and Interlude-Farces,
themselves decadent, were sharing in rather confused rivalry that degree of
popular interest which remained unabsorbed by the religious, political, and
social ferment. There was still to be a period of thirty or forty years before
the flowering of the great Elizabethan drama, but they were to be years of new,
if uncertain, beginnings.
The
first new formative force was the influence of the classical drama, for which,
with other things classical, the Renaissance had aroused enthusiasm. This force
operated mainly not through writers for popular audiences, like the authors of
most Moralities and Interludes, but through men of the schools and the
universities, writing for performances in their own circles or in that of the
Court. It had now become a not uncommon thing for boys at the large schools to
act in regular dramatic fashion, at first in Latin, afterward in English
translation, some of the plays of the Latin comedians which had long formed a
part of the school curriculum. Shortly after the middle of the century,
probably, the head-master of Westminister
School, Nicholas Udall,
took the further step of writing for his boys on the classical model an
original farce-comedy, the amusing 'Ralph Roister Doister.' This play is so
close a copy of Plautus' 'Miles Gloriosus' and Terence's 'Eunuchus' that there
is little that is really English about it; a much larger element of local
realism of the traditional English sort, in a classical framework, was
presented in the coarse but really skillful 'Gammer Gurton's Needle,' which was
probably written at about the same time, apparently by the Cambridge student
William Stevenson.
Meanwhile
students at the universities, also, had been acting Plautus and Terence, and
further, had been writing and acting Latin tragedies, as well as comedies, of
their own composition. Their chief models for tragedy were the plays of the
first-century Roman Seneca, who may or may not have been identical with the
philosopher who was the tutor of the Emperor Nero. Both through these university
imitations and directly, Seneca's very faulty plays continued for many years to
exercise a great influence on English tragedy. Falling far short of the noble
spirit of Greek tragedy, which they in turn attempt to copy, Seneca's plays do
observe its mechanical conventions, especially the unities of Action and Time,
the use of the chorus to comment on the action, the avoidance of violent action
and deaths on the stage, and the use of messengers to report such events. For
proper dramatic action they largely substitute ranting moralizing declamation,
with crudely exaggerated passion, and they exhibit a great vein of melodramatic
horror, for instance in the frequent use of the motive of implacable revenge
for murder and of a ghost who incites to it. In the early Elizabethan period,
however, an age when life itself was dramatically intense and tragic, when
everything classic was looked on with reverence, and when standards of taste
were unformed, it was natural enough that such plays should pass for masterpieces.
A
direct imitation of Seneca, famous as the first tragedy in English on classical
lines, was the 'Gorboduc, or Ferrex and Porrex,' of Thomas Norton and Thomas
Sackville, acted in 1562. Its story, like those of some of Shakespeare's plays
later, goes back ultimately to the account of one of the early reigns in
Geoffrey of Monmouth's 'History.' 'Gorboduc' outdoes its Senecan models in
tedious moralizing, and is painfully wooden in all respects; but it has real
importance not only because it is the first regular English tragedy, but
because it was the first play to use the iambic pentameter blank verse which
Surrey had introduced to English poetry and which was destined to be the
verse-form of really great English tragedy. When they wrote the play Norton and
Sackville were law students at the Inner Temple, and from other law students
during the following years came other plays, which were generally acted at
festival seasons, such, as Christmas, at the lawyers' colleges, or before the
Queen, though the common people were also admitted among the audience. Unlike
'Gorboduc,' these other university plays were not only for the most part crude
and coarse in the same manner as earlier English plays, but in accordance also
with the native English tradition and in violent defiance of the classical
principle of Unity, they generally combined tragical classical stories with
realistic scenes of English comedy (somewhat later with Italian stories).
Nevertheless, and this is the main thing, the more thoughtful members of the
Court and University circles, were now learning from the study of classical
plays a sense for form and the fundamental distinction between tragedy and
comedy.
THE CHRONICLE-HISTORY PLAY.
About
twenty years before the end of the century there began to appear, at first at
the Court and the Universities, later on the popular stage, a form of play
which was to hold, along with tragedy and comedy, an important place in the
great decades that were to follow, namely the Chronicle-History Play. This form
of play generally presented the chief events in the whole or a part of the
reign of some English king. It was largely a product of the pride which was
being awakened among the people in the greatness of England
under Elizabeth, and of the consequent desire to
know something of the past history of the country, and it received a great
impulse from the enthusiasm aroused by the struggle with Spain and the
defeat of the Armada. It was not, however, altogether a new creation, for its
method was similar to that of the university plays which dealt with monarchs of
classical history. It partly inherited from them the formless mixture of
farcical humor with historical or supposedly historical fact which it shared
with other plays of the time, and sometimes also an unusually reckless
disregard of unity of action, time, and place. Since its main serious purpose,
when it had one, was to convey information, the other chief dramatic
principles, such as careful presentation of a few main characters and of a
universally significant human struggle, were also generally disregarded. It was
only in the hands of Shakespeare that the species was to be moulded into true
dramatic form and to attain real greatness; and after a quarter century of
popularity it was to be reabsorbed into tragedy, of which in fact it was always
only a special variety.
JOHN LYLY.
The
first Elizabethan dramatist of permanent individual importance is the comedian
John Lyly, of whose early success at Court with the artificial romance
'Euphues' we have already spoken. From 'Euphues' Lyly turned to the still more
promising work of writing comedies for the Court entertainments with which
Queen Elizabeth was extremely lavish. The character of Lyly's plays was largely
determined by the light and spectacular nature of these entertainments, and
further by the fact that on most occasions the players at Court were boys.
These were primarily the 'children [choir-boys] of the Queen's Chapel,' who for
some generations had been sought out from all parts of England for
their good voices and were very carefully trained for singing and for dramatic
performances. The choir-boys of St.
Paul's Cathedral, similarly trained, also often acted
before the Queen. Many of the plays given by these boys were of the ordinary
sorts, but it is evident that they would be most successful in dainty comedies
especially adapted to their boyish capacity. Such comedies Lyly proceeded to
write, in prose. The subjects are from classical mythology or history or
English folk-lore, into which Lyly sometimes weaves an allegorical presentation
of court intrigue. The plots are very slight, and though the structure is
decidedly better than in most previous plays, the humorous sub-actions
sometimes have little connection with the main action. Characterization is
still rudimentary, and altogether the plays present not so much a picture of
reality as 'a faint moonlight reflection of life.' None the less the best of
them, such as 'Alexander and Campaspe,' are delightful in their sparkling
delicacy, which is produced partly by the carefully-wrought style, similar to
that of 'Euphues,' but less artificial, and is enhanced by the charming lyrics
which are scattered through them. For all this the elaborate scenery and
costuming of the Court entertainments provided a very harmonious background.
These
plays were to exert a strong influence on Shakespeare's early comedies,
probably suggesting to him: the use of prose for comedy; the value of snappy
and witty dialog; refinement, as well as affectation, of style; lyric atmosphere;
the characters and tone of high comedy, contrasting so favorably with the usual
coarse farce of the period; and further such details as the employment of
impudent boy-pages as a source of amusement.
PEELE, GREENE, AND KYD.
Of
the most important early contemporaries of Shakespeare we have already
mentioned two as noteworthy in other fields of literature. George Peele's
masque-like 'Arraignment of Paris' helps to show him as more a lyric poet than
a dramatist. Robert Greene's plays, especially 'Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay,'
reveal, like his novels, some real, though not very elaborate, power of
characterization. They are especially important in developing the theme of
romantic love with real fineness of feeling and thus helping to prepare the way
for Shakespeare in a very important particular. In marked contrast to these men
is Thomas Kyd, who about the year 1590 attained a meteoric reputation with
crude 'tragedies of blood,' specialized descendants of Senecan tragedy, one of
which may have been the early play on Hamlet which Shakespeare used as the
groundwork for his masterpiece.
CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE, 1564-1593.
Peele
and Greene were University men who wrote partly for Court or academic
audiences, partly for the popular stage. The distinction between the two sorts
of drama was still further broken down in the work of Christopher Marlowe, a
poet of real genius, decidedly the chief dramatist among Shakespeare's early
contemporaries, and the one from whom Shakespeare learned the most.
Marlowe
was born in 1564 (the same year as Shakespeare), the son of a shoemaker at Canterbury. Taking his
master's degree after seven years at Cambridge,
in 1587, he followed the other 'university wits' to London. There, probably the same year and the
next, he astonished the public with the two parts of 'Tamburlaine the Great,' a
dramatization of the stupendous career of the bloodthirsty Mongol
fourteenth-century conqueror. These plays, in spite of faults now conspicuous
enough, are splendidly imaginative and poetic, and were by far the most
powerful that had yet been written in England. Marlowe followed them with 'The
Tragical History of Dr. Faustus,' a treatment of the medieval story which two
hundred years later was to serve Goethe for his masterpiece; with 'The Jew of
Malta,' which was to give Shakespeare suggestions for 'The Merchant of Venice';
and with 'Edward the Second,' the first really artistic Chronicle History play.
Among the literary adventurers of the age who led wild lives in the London taverns Marlowe is
said to have attained a conspicuous reputation for violence and irreligion. He
was killed in 1593 in
a reckless and foolish brawl, before he had reached the age of thirty.
If
Marlowe's life was unworthy, the fault must be laid rather at the door of
circumstances than of his own genuine nature. His plays show him to have been
an ardent idealist and a representative of many of the qualities that made the
greatness of the Renaissance. The Renaissance learning, the apparently
boundless vistas which it had opened to the human spirit, and the consciousness
of his own power, evidently intoxicated Marlowe with a vast ambition to achieve
results which in his youthful inexperience he could scarcely even picture to
himself. His spirit, cramped and outraged by the impassable limitations of
human life and by the conventions of society, beat recklessly against them with
an impatience fruitless but partly grand. This is the underlying spirit of
almost all his plays, struggling in them for expression. The Prolog to
'Tamburlaine' makes pretentious announcement that the author will discard the
usual buffoonery of the popular stage and will set a new standard of tragic
majesty:
From
jigging veins of rhyming mother wits,
And such conceits as clownage keeps in pay,
We'll lead you to the stately tent of war,
Where you shall hear the Scythian Tamburlaine
Threatening the world with high astounding terms,
And scourging kingdoms with his conquering sword.
And such conceits as clownage keeps in pay,
We'll lead you to the stately tent of war,
Where you shall hear the Scythian Tamburlaine
Threatening the world with high astounding terms,
And scourging kingdoms with his conquering sword.
Tamburlaine
himself as Marlowe presents him is a titanic, almost superhuman, figure who by
sheer courage and pitiless unbending will raises himself from shepherd to
general and then emperor of countless peoples, and sweeps like a whirlwind over
the stage of the world, carrying everywhere overwhelming slaughter and
desolation. His speeches are outbursts of incredible arrogance, equally
powerful and bombastic. Indeed his blasphemous boasts of superiority to the
gods seem almost justified by his apparently irresistible success. But at the
end he learns that the laws of life are inexorable even for him; all his
indignant rage cannot redeem his son from cowardice, or save his wife from
death, or delay his own end. As has been said,
[Footnote:
Professor Barrett Wendell, 'William Shakespeare,' p. 36.] 'Tamburlaine'
expresses with 'a profound, lasting, noble sense and in grandly symbolic terms,
the eternal tragedy inherent in the conflict between human aspiration and human
power.'
For
several other reasons 'Tamburlaine' is of high importance. It gives repeated
and splendid expression to the passionate haunting Renaissance zest for the
beautiful. It is rich with extravagant sensuous descriptions, notable among
those which abound gorgeously in all Elizabethan poetry. But finest of all is
the description of beauty by its effects which Marlowe puts into the mouth of
Faustus at the sight of Helen of Troy:
Was
this the face that launched a thousand ships
And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?
And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?
Much
of Marlowe's strength, again, lies in his powerful and beautiful use of blank
verse. First among the dramatists of the popular stage he discarded rime, and
taking and vitalizing the stiff pentameter line of
'Gorboduc,'
gave it an immediate and lasting vogue for tragedy and high comedy. Marlowe,
virtually a beginner, could not be expected to carry blank verse to that perfection
which his success made possible for Shakespeare; he did not altogether escape
monotony and commonplaceness; but he gained a high degree of flexibility and
beauty by avoiding a regularly end-stopped arrangement, by taking pains to
secure variety of pause and accent, and by giving his language poetic
condensation and suggestiveness. His workmanship thoroughly justifies the
characterization 'Marlowe's mighty line,' which Ben Jonson in his tribute to
Shakespeare bestowed on it long after Marlowe's death.
The
greatest significance of 'Tamburlaine,' lastly, lies in the fact that it
definitely established tragedy as a distinct form on the English popular stage,
and invested it with proper dignity.
These
are Marlowe's great achievements both in 'Tamburlaine' and in his later more
restrained plays. His limitations must also be suggested. Like other
Elizabethans he did not fully understand the distinction between drama and
other literary forms; 'Tamburlaine' is not so much a regularly constructed
tragedy, with a struggle between nearly equal persons and forces, artistically
complicated and resolved, as an epic poem, a succession of adventures in war
(and love). Again, in spite of the prolog in 'Tamburlaine,' Marlowe, in almost
all his plays, and following the Elizabethan custom, does attempt scenes of
humor, but he attains only to the coarse and brutal horse-play at which the
English audiences had laughed for centuries in the Mystery plays and the
Interludes. Elizabethan also (and before that medieval) is the lack of
historical perspective which gives to Mongol shepherds the manners and speech
of Greek classical antiquity as Marlowe had learned to know it at the
university. More serious is the lack of mature skill in characterization.
Tamburlaine the man is an exaggerated type; most of the men about him are his
faint shadows, and those who are intended to be comic are preposterous. The
women, though they have some differentiating touches, are certainly not more
dramatically and vitally imagined. In his later plays Marlowe makes gains in
this respect, but he never arrives at full easy mastery and trenchantly
convincing lifelikeness either in characterization, in presentation of action,
or in fine poetic finish. It has often been remarked that at the age when
Marlowe died Shakespeare had produced not one of the great plays on which his
reputation rests; but Shakespeare's genius came to maturity more surely, as
well as more slowly, and there is no basis for the inference sometimes drawn
that if Marlowe had lived he would ever have equalled or even approached
Shakespere's supreme achievement.
THEATRICAL CONDITIONS AND THE THEATER
BUILDINGS.
Before
we pass to Shakespeare we must briefly consider those external facts which
conditioned the form of the Elizabethan plays and explain many of those things
in them which at the present time appear perplexing.
TIMON
OF ATHENS, v, 4. OUTER SCENE.
Trumpets
sound. Enter Alcibiades with his Powers before Athens.
"Alc. Sound to this Coward, and lascivious Towne, Our terrible approach."
Sounds a parly. The Senators appears upon the Wals.
"Alc. Sound to this Coward, and lascivious Towne, Our terrible approach."
Sounds a parly. The Senators appears upon the Wals.
AN ELIZABETHAN STAGE
The
medieval religious drama had been written and acted in many towns throughout
the country, and was a far less important feature in the life of London than of many other
places. But as the capital became more and more the center of national life,
the drama, with other forms of literature, was more largely appropriated by it;
the Elizabethan drama of the great period was altogether written in London and belonged
distinctly to it. Until well into the seventeenth century, to be sure, the London companies made frequent tours through the country,
but that was chiefly when the prevalence of the plague had necessitated the
closing of the London
theaters or when for other reasons acting there had become temporarily
unprofitable. The companies themselves had now assumed a regular organization.
They retained a trace of their origin in that each was under the protection of
some influential noble and was called, for example, 'Lord Leicester's Servants,'
or 'The Lord Admiral's Servants.' But this connection was for the most part
nominal--the companies were virtually very much like the stock-companies of the
nineteenth century. By the beginning of the great period the membership of each
troupe was made up of at least three classes of persons. At the bottom of the
scale were the boy-apprentices who were employed, as Shakespeare is said to
have been at first, in miscellaneous menial capacities. Next came the paid
actors; and lastly the shareholders, generally also actors, some or all of whom
were the general managers. The writers of plays were sometimes members of the
companies, as in Shakespeare's case; sometimes, however, they were independent.
Until
near the middle of Elizabeth's reign there were no special theater buildings,
but the players, in London or elsewhere, acted wherever they could find an
available place--in open squares, large halls, or, especially, in the
quadrangular open inner yards of inns. As the profession became better
organized and as the plays gained in quality, such makeshift accommodations
became more and more unsatisfactory; but there were special difficulties in the
way of securing better ones in London.
For the population and magistrates of London were prevailingly Puritan, and the
great body of the Puritans, then as always, were strongly opposed to the
theater as a frivolous and irreligious thing--an attitude for which the lives
of the players and the character of many plays afforded, then as almost always,
only too much reason. The city was very jealous of its prerogatives; so that in
spite of Queen Elizabeth's strong patronage of the drama, throughout her whole
reign no public theater buildings were allowed within the limits of the city
corporation. But these limits were narrow, and in 1576 James Burbage
inaugurated a new era by erecting 'The Theater' just to the north of the
'city,' only a few minutes' walk from the center of population. His example was
soon followed by other managers, though the favorite place for the theaters
soon came to be the 'Bankside,' the region in Southwark just across the Thames
from the 'city' where Chaucer's Tabard Inn had stood and where pits for
bear-baiting and cock-fighting had long flourished.
The
structure of the Elizabethan theater was naturally imitated from its chief
predecessor, the inn-yard. There, under the open sky, opposite the street
entrance, the players had been accustomed to set up their stage. About it, on
three sides, the ordinary part of the audience had stood during the performance,
while the inn-guests and persons able to pay a fixed price had sat in the open
galleries which lined the building and ran all around the yard. In the
theaters, therefore, at first generally square-built or octagonal, the stage
projected from the rear wall well toward the center of an unroofed pit (the
present-day 'orchestra'), where, still on three sides of the stage, the common
people, admitted for sixpence or less, stood and jostled each other, either
going home when it rained or staying and getting wet as the degree of their
interest in the play might determine. The enveloping building proper was
occupied with tiers of galleries, generally two or three in number, provided
with seats; and here, of course, sat the people of means, the women avoiding embarrassment
and annoyance only by being always masked. Behind the unprotected front part of
the stage the middle part was covered by a lean-to roof sloping down from the
rear wall of the building and supported by two pillars standing on the stage.
This roof concealed a loft, from which gods and goddesses or any appropriate
properties could be let down by mechanical devices. Still farther back, under
the galleries, was the 'rear-stage,' which could be used to represent inner
rooms; and that part of the lower gallery immediately above it was generally
appropriated as a part of the stage, representing such places as city walls or
the second stories of houses. The musicians' place was also just beside in the
gallery.
The
stage, therefore, was a 'platform stage,' seen by the audience from almost all
sides, not, as in our own time, a 'picture-stage,' with its scenes viewed
through a single large frame. This arrangement made impossible any front
curtain, though a curtain was generally hung before the rear stage, from the
floor of the gallery. Hence the changes between scenes must generally be made
in full view of the audience, and instead of ending the scenes with striking
situations the dramatists must arrange for a withdrawal of the actors, only
avoiding if possible the effect of a mere anti-climax. Dead bodies must either
get up and walk away in plain sight or be carried off, either by stage hands,
or, as part of the action, by other characters in the play. This latter device
was sometimes adopted at considerable violence to probability, as when
Shakespeare makes Falstaff bear away Hotspur, and Hamlet, Polonius. Likewise,
while the medieval habit of elaborate costuming was continued, there was every
reason for adhering to the medieval simplicity of scenery. A single potted tree
might symbolize a forest, and houses and caverns, with a great deal else, might
be left to the imagination of the audience. In no respect, indeed, was realism
of setting an important concern of either dramatist or audience; in many cases,
evidently, neither of them cared to think of a scene as located in any precise
spot; hence the anxious effort of Shakespeare's editors on this point is beside
the mark. This nonchalance made for easy transition from one place to another,
and the whole simplicity of staging had the important advantage of allowing the
audience to center their attention on the play rather than on the
accompaniments. On the rear-stage, however, behind the curtain, more elaborate
scenery might be placed, and Elizabethan plays, like those of our own day, seem
sometimes to have 'alternation scenes,' intended to be acted in front, while
the next background was being prepared behind the balcony curtain. The lack of
elaborate settings also facilitated rapidity of action, and the plays, beginning
at three in the afternoon, were ordinarily over by the dinner-hour of five.
Less satisfactory was the entire absence of women-actors, who did not appear on
the public stage until after the Restoration of 1660. The inadequacy of the
boys who took the part of the women-characters is alluded to by Shakespeare and
must have been a source of frequent irritation to any dramatist who was
attempting to present a subtle or complex heroine.
Lastly
may be mentioned the picturesque but very objectionable custom of the young
dandies who insisted on carrying their chairs onto the sides of the stage
itself, where they not only made themselves conspicuous objects of attention
but seriously crowded the actors and rudely abused them if the play was not to
their liking. It should be added that from the latter part of Elizabeth's reign
there existed within the city itself certain 'private' theaters, used by the
boys' companies and others, whose structure was more like that of the theaters
of our own time and where plays were given by artificial light.
SHAKESPEARE, 1564-1616.
William
Shakespeare, by universal consent the greatest author of England, if not
of the world, occupies chronologically a central position in the Elizabethan
drama. He was born in 1564 in
the good-sized village of Stratford-on-Avon in Warwickshire, near the middle of
England,
where the level but beautiful country furnished full external stimulus for a
poet's eye and heart. His father, John Shakespeare, who was a general dealer in
agricultural products and other commodities, was one of the chief citizens of
the village, and during his son's childhood was chosen an alderman and shortly
after mayor, as we should call it. But by 1577 his prosperity declined,
apparently through his own shiftlessness, and for many years he was harassed
with legal difficulties. In the village 'grammar' school William Shakespeare
had acquired the rudiments of book-knowledge, consisting largely of Latin, but
his chief education was from Nature and experience. As his father's troubles
thickened he was very likely removed from school, but at the age of eighteen,
under circumstances not altogether creditable to himself, he married Anne
Hathaway, a woman eight years his senior, who lived in the neighboring village of Shottery. The suggestion that the
marriage proved positively unhappy is supported by no real evidence, but what
little is known of Shakespeare's later life implies that it was not
exceptionally congenial. Two girls and a boy were born from it.
In
his early manhood, apparently between 1586 and 1588, Shakespeare left Stratford to seek his fortune in London. As to the circumstances, there is
reasonable plausibility in the later tradition that he had joined in poaching
raids on the deer-park of Sir Thomas Lucy, a neighboring country gentleman, and
found it desirable to get beyond the bounds of that gentleman's authority. It
is also likely enough that Shakespeare had been fascinated by the performances
of traveling dramatic companies at Stratford and
by the Earl of Leicester's costly entertainment of Queen Elizabeth in 1575 at
the castle of Kenilworth, not many miles away. At any
rate, in London
he evidently soon secured mechanical employment in a theatrical company,
presumably the one then known as Lord Leicester's company, with which, in that
case, he was always thereafter connected. His energy and interest must soon
have won him the opportunity to show his skill as actor and also reviser and
collaborator in play-writing, then as independent author; and after the first
few years of slow progress his rise was rapid. He became one of the leading
members, later one of the chief shareholders, of the company, and evidently
enjoyed a substantial reputation as a playwright and a good, though not a
great, actor. This was both at Court (where, however, actors had no social
standing) and in the London
dramatic circle. Of his personal life only the most fragmentary record has been
preserved, through occasional mentions in miscellaneous documents, but it is
evident that his rich nature was partly appreciated and thoroughly loved by his
associates. His business talent was marked and before the end of his dramatic
career he seems to have been receiving as manager, shareholder, playwright and
actor, a yearly income equivalent to $25,000
in money of the present time. He early began to devote
attention to paying the debts of his father, who lived until 1601, and
restoring the fortunes of his family in Stratford.
The death of his only son, Hamnet, in 1596, must have been a severe blow to
him, but he obtained from the Heralds' College the grant of a family coat of
arms, which secured the position of the family as gentlefolks; in 1597 he
purchased New Place, the largest house in Stratford; and later on he acquired
other large property rights there. How often he may have visited Stratford in the twenty-five years of his career in London we have no information; but however enjoyable London life and the
society of the writers at the 'Mermaid' Tavern may have been to him, he
probably always looked forward to ending his life as the chief country
gentleman of his native village. Thither he retired about 1610 or 1612, and
there he died prematurely in 1616, just as he was completing his fifty-second
year.
Shakespeare's
dramatic career falls naturally into four successive divisions of increasing
maturity. To be sure, no definite record of the order of his plays has come
down to us, and it can scarcely be said that we certainly know the exact date
of a single one of them; but the evidence of the title-page dates of such of
them as were hastily published during his lifetime, of allusions to them in
other writings of the time, and other scattering facts of one sort or another,
joined with the more important internal evidence of comparative maturity of
mind and art which shows 'Macbeth' and 'The Winter's Tale,' for example, vastly
superior to 'Love's Labour's Lost'--all this evidence together enables us to
arrange the plays in a chronological order which is certainly approximately
correct. The first of the four periods thus disclosed is that of experiment and
preparation, from about 1588 to about 1593, when Shakespeare tried his hand at
virtually every current kind of dramatic work. Its most important product is
'Richard III,' a melodramatic chronicle-history play, largely imitative of
Marlowe and yet showing striking power. At the end of this period Shakespeare
issued two rather long narrative poems on classical subjects, 'Venus and
Adonis,' and 'The Rape of Lucrece,' dedicating them both to the young Earl of
Southampton, who thus appears as his patron. Both display great fluency in the
most luxuriant and sensuous Renaissance manner, and though they appeal little
to the taste of the present day 'Venus and Adonis,' in particular, seems to
have become at once the most popular poem of its own time. Shakespeare himself
regarded them very seriously, publishing them with care, though he, like most
Elizabethan dramatists, never thought it worth while to put his plays into
print except to safeguard the property rights of his company in them. Probably
at about the end of his first period, also, he began the composition of his
sonnets, of which we have already spoken.
The
second period of Shakespeare's work, extending from about 1594 to about 1601,
is occupied chiefly with chronicle-history plays and happy comedies. The
chronicle-history plays begin (probably) with the subtile and fascinating,
though not yet absolutely masterful study of contrasting characters in 'Richard
II'; continue through the two parts of 'Henry IV,' where the realistic comedy
action of Falstaff and his group makes history familiarly vivid; and end with
the epic glorification of a typical English hero-king in 'Henry V.' The
comedies include the charmingly fantastic 'Midsummer Night's Dream'; 'The
Merchant of Venice,' where a story of tragic sternness is strikingly contrasted
with the most poetical idealizing romance and yet is harmoniously blended into
it; 'Much Ado About Nothing,' a magnificent example of high comedy of character
and wit; 'As You Like It,' the supreme delightful achievement of Elizabethan
and all English pastoral romance; and 'Twelfth Night,' where again charming
romantic sentiment is made believable by combination with a story of comic
realism. Even in the one, unique, tragedy of the period, 'Romeo and Juliet,'
the main impression is not that of the predestined tragedy, but that of ideal
youthful love, too gloriously radiant to be viewed with sorrow even in its
fatal outcome.
The
third period, extending from about 1601 to about 1609, includes Shakespeare's
great tragedies and certain cynical plays, which formal classification
mis-names comedies. In these plays as a group Shakespeare sets himself to
grapple with the deepest and darkest problems of human character and life; but
it is only very uncertain inference that he was himself passing at this time
through a period of bitterness and disillusion.
'Julius
Casar' presents the material failure of an unpractical idealist (Brutus);
'Hamlet' the struggle of a perplexed and divided soul; 'Othello' the ruin of a
noble life by an evil one through the terrible power of jealousy; 'King Lear'
unnatural ingratitude working its hateful will and yet thwarted at the end by
its own excess and by faithful love; and
'Macbeth'
the destruction of a large nature by material ambition. Without doubt this is
the greatest continuous group of plays ever wrought out by a human mind, and
they are followed by 'Antony
and Cleopatra,' which magnificently portrays the emptiness of a sensual passion
against the background of a decaying civilization.
Shakespeare
did not solve the insoluble problems of life, but having presented them as
powerfully, perhaps, as is possible for human intelligence, he turned in his
last period, of only two or three years, to the expression of the serene
philosophy of life in which he himself must have now taken refuge. The noble
and beautiful romance-comedies, 'Cymbeline,' 'The Winter's Tale,' and 'The
Tempest,' suggest that men do best to forget what is painful and center their
attention on the pleasing and encouraging things in a world where there is at
least an inexhaustible store of beauty and goodness and delight.
Shakespeare
may now well have felt, as his retirement to Stratford suggests, that in his
nearly forty plays he had fully expressed himself and had earned the right to a
long and peaceful old age. The latter, as we have seen, was denied him; but
seven years after his death two of his fellow-managers assured the preservation
of the plays whose unique importance he himself did not suspect by collecting
them in the first folio edition of his complete dramatic works.
Shakespeare's
greatness rests on supreme achievement--the result of the highest genius
matured by experience and by careful experiment and labor--in all phases of the
work of a poetic dramatist. The surpassing charm of his rendering of the
romantic beauty and joy of life and the profundity of his presentation of its
tragic side we have already suggested. Equally sure and comprehensive is his
portrayal of characters. With the certainty of absolute mastery he causes men
and women to live for us, a vast representative group, in all the actual
variety of age and station, perfectly realized in all the subtile diversities
and inconsistencies of protean human nature. Not less notable than his strong
men are his delightful young heroines, romantic Elizabethan heroines, to be
sure, with an unconventionality, many of them, which does not belong to such
women in the more restricted world of reality, but pure embodiments of the
finest womanly delicacy, keenness, and vivacity. Shakespeare, it is true, was a
practical dramatist. His background characters are often present in the plays
not in order to be entirely real but in order to furnish amusement; and even in
the case of the chief ones, just as in the treatment of incidents, he is always
perfectly ready to sacrifice literal truth to dramatic effect. But these things
are only the corollaries of all successful playwriting and of all art.
To
Shakespeare's mastery of poetic expression similarly strong superlatives must
be applied. For his form he perfected Marlowe's blank verse, developing it to
the farthest possible limits of fluency, variety, and melody; though he
retained the riming couplet for occasional use (partly for the sake of variety)
and frequently made use also of prose, both for the same reason and in
realistic or commonplace scenes. As regards the spirit of poetry, it scarcely
need be said that nowhere else in literature is there a like storehouse of the
most delightful and the greatest ideas phrased with the utmost power of
condensed expression and figurative beauty. In dramatic structure his greatness
is on the whole less conspicuous. Writing for success on the Elizabethan stage,
he seldom attempted to reduce its romantic licenses to the perfection of an
absolute standard. 'Romeo and Juliet, 'Hamlet,' and indeed most of his plays,
contain unnecessary scenes, interesting to the Elizabethans, which Sophocles as
well as Racine would have pruned away. Yet when Shakespeare chooses, as in 'Othello,'
to develop a play with the sternest and most rapid directness, he proves
essentially the equal even of the most rigid technician.
Shakespeare,
indeed, although as Ben Jonson said, 'he was not for an age but for all time,'
was in every respect a thorough Elizabethan also, and does not escape the
superficial Elizabethan faults. Chief of these, perhaps, is his fondness for
'conceits,' with which he makes his plays, especially some of the earlier ones,
sparkle, brilliantly, but often inappropriately. In his prose style, again,
except in the talk of commonplace persons, he never outgrew, or wished to
outgrow, a large measure of Elizabethan self-conscious elegance. Scarcely a
fault is his other Elizabethan habit of seldom, perhaps never, inventing the whole
of his stories, but drawing the outlines of them from previous works--English
chronicles, poems, or plays, Italian 'novels,' or the biographies of Plutarch.
But in the majority of cases these sources provided him only with bare or even
crude sketches, and perhaps nothing furnishes clearer proof of his genius than
the way in which he has seen the human significance in stories baldly and
wretchedly told, where the figures are merely wooden types, and by the power of
imagination has transformed them into the greatest literary masterpieces,
profound revelations of the underlying forces of life.
Shakespeare,
like every other great man, has been the object of much unintelligent, and
misdirected adulation, but his greatness, so far from suffering diminution, grows
more apparent with the passage of time and the increase of study.
[Note:
The theory persistently advocated during the last half century that
Shakespeare's works were really written not by himself but by Francis Bacon or
some other person can never gain credence with any competent judge. Our
knowledge of Shakespeare's life, slight as it is, is really at least as great
as that which has been preserved of almost any dramatist of the period; for
dramatists were not then looked on as persons of permanent importance. There is
really much direct contemporary documentary evidence, as we have already
indicated, of Shakespeare's authorship of the plays and poems. No theory,
further, could be more preposterous, to any one really acquainted with
literature, than the idea that the imaginative poetry of Shakespeare was
produced by the essentially scientific and prosaic mind of Francis Bacon. As to
the cipher systems supposed to reveal hidden messages in the plays: First, no
poet bending his energies to the composition of such masterpieces as
Shakespeare's could possibly concern himself at the same time with weaving into
them a complicated and trifling cryptogram. Second, the cipher systems are
absolutely arbitrary and unscientific, applied to any writings whatever can be
made to 'prove' anything that one likes, and indeed have been discredited in
the hands of their own inventors by being made to 'prove' far too much. Third,
it has been demonstrated more than once that the verbal coincidences on which
the cipher systems rest are no more numerous than the law of mathematical
probabilities requires. Aside from actually vicious pursuits, there can be no
more melancholy waste of time than the effort to demonstrate that Shakespeare
is not the real author of his reputed works.]
NATIONAL LIFE FROM 1603 TO 1660.
We
have already observed that, as Shakespeare's career suggests, there was no
abrupt change in either life or literature at the death of Queen Elizabeth in
1603; and in fact the Elizabethan period of literature is often made to include
the reign of James I, 1603-1625 (the Jacobean period [Footnote: 'Jaco'bus' is
the Latin form of 'James.']), or even, especially in the case of the drama,
that of Charles I, 1625-1649 (the Carolean period). Certainly the drama of all
three reigns forms a continuously developing whole, and should be discussed as
such. None the less the spirit of the first half of the seventeenth century
came gradually to be widely different from that of the preceding fifty years,
and before going on to Shakespeare's successors we must stop to indicate
briefly wherein the difference consists and for this purpose to speak of the
determining events of the period. Before the end of Elizabeth's reign, indeed, there had been a
perceptible change; as the queen grew old and morose the national life seemed
also to lose its youth and freshness. Her successor and distant cousin, James
of Scotland (James I of England),
was a bigoted pedant, and under his rule the perennial Court corruption,
striking in, became foul and noisome. The national Church, instead of
protesting, steadily identified itself more closely with the Court party, and
its ruling officials, on the whole, grew more and more worldly and intolerant.
Little by little the nation found itself divided into two great factions; on
the one hand the Cavaliers, the party of the Court, the nobles, and the Church,
who continued to be largely dominated by the Renaissance zest for beauty and,
especially, pleasure; and on the other hand the Puritans, comprising the bulk
of the middle classes, controlled by the religious principles of the
Reformation, often, in their opposition to Cavalier frivolity, stern and
narrow, and more and more inclined to separate themselves from the English
Church in denominations of their own. The breach steadily widened until in
1642, under the arbitrary rule of Charles I, the Civil War broke out. In three
years the Puritan Parliament was victorious, and in 1649 the extreme minority
of the Puritans, supported by the army, took the unprecedented step of putting
King Charles to death, and declared England a Commonwealth. But in four
years more the Parliamentary government, bigoted and inefficient, made itself
impossible, and then for five years, until his death, Oliver Cromwell strongly
ruled England
as Protector. Another year and a half of chaos confirmed the nation in a
natural reaction, and in 1660 the unworthy Stuart race was restored in the
person of the base and frivolous Charles II. The general influence of the
forces which produced these events shows clearly in the changing tone of the
drama, the work of those dramatists who were Shakespeare's later contemporaries
and successors.
BEN JONSON.
The
second place among the Elizabethan and Jacobean dramatists is universally
assigned, on the whole justly, to Ben Jonson, who both in temperament and in
artistic theories and practice presents a complete contrast to Shakespeare.
Jonson, the posthumous son of an impoverished gentleman-clergyman, was born in London in 1573. At Westminster School he received a permanent bent
toward classical studies from the headmaster, William Camden, who was one of
the greatest scholars of the time. Forced into the uncongenial trade of his
stepfather, a master-bricklayer, he soon deserted it to enlist among the
English soldiers who were helping the Dutch to fight their Spanish oppressors.
Here he exhibited some of his dominating traits by challenging a champion from
the other army and killing him in classical fashion in single combat between
the lines. By about the age of twenty he was back in London and married to a
wife whom he later described as being 'virtuous but a shrew,' and who at one
time found it more agreeable to live apart from him. He became an actor (at
which profession he failed) and a writer of plays. About 1598 he displayed his
distinguishing realistic style in the comedy 'Every Man in His Humour,' which
was acted by Shakespeare's company, it is said through Shakespeare's friendly
influence. At about the same time the burly Jonson killed another actor in a duel
and escaped capital punishment only through 'benefit of clergy' (the exemption
still allowed to educated men).
The
plays which Jonson produced during the following years were chiefly satirical
attacks on other dramatists, especially Marston and Dekker, who retorted in
kind. Thus there developed a fierce actors' quarrel, referred to in
Shakespeare's 'Hamlet,' in which the 'children's' companies had some active but
now uncertain part. Before it was over most of the dramatists had taken sides
against Jonson, whose arrogant and violent self-assertiveness put him at odds,
sooner or later, with nearly every one with whom he had much to do. In 1603 he
made peace, only to become involved in other, still more, serious difficulties.
Shortly after the accession of King James, Jonson, Chapman, and Marston brought
out a comedy, 'Eastward Hoe,' in which they offended the king by satirical
flings at the needy Scotsmen to whom James was freely awarding Court positions.
They were imprisoned and for a while, according to the barbarous procedure of
the time, were in danger of losing their ears and noses. At a banquet
celebrating their release, Jonson reports, his 'old mother' produced a paper of
poison which, if necessary, she had intended to administer to him to save him
from this disgrace, and of which, she said, to show that she was 'no churl,'
she would herself first have drunk.
Just
before this incident, in 1603, Jonson had turned to tragedy and written
'Sejanus,' which marks the beginning of his most important decade. He followed
up 'Sejanus' after several years with the less excellent 'Catiline,' but his
most significant dramatic works, on the whole, are his four great satirical
comedies. 'Volpone, or the Fox,' assails gross vice; 'Epicoene, the Silent
Woman,' ridicules various sorts of absurd persons; 'The Alchemist' castigates
quackery and its foolish encouragers; and 'Bartholomew Fair' is a coarse but
overwhelming broadside at Puritan hypocrisy. Strange as it seems in the author
of these masterpieces of frank realism, Jonson at the same time was showing
himself the most gifted writer of the Court masks, which now, arrived at the
last period of their evolution, were reaching the extreme of spectacular
elaborateness. Early in James' reign, therefore, Jonson was made Court Poet,
and during the next thirty years he produced about forty masks, devoting to
them much attention and care, and quarreling violently with Inigo Jones, the
Court architect, who contrived the stage settings. During this period Jonson
was under the patronage of various nobles, and he also reigned as dictator at
the club of literary men which Sir Walter Raleigh had founded at the Mermaid
Tavern (so called, like other inns, from its sign). A well-known poetical
letter of the dramatist Francis Beaumont to Jonson celebrates the club
meetings; and equally well known is a description given in the next generation
from hearsay and inference by the antiquary Thomas Fuller: 'Many were the
wit-combats betwixt Shakespeare and Ben Jonson, which two I behold like a Spanish
great galleon and an English man-of-war: Master Jonson, like the former, was
built far higher in learning; solid, but slow in his performances; Shakespere,
with the English man-of-war, lesser in bulk, but lighter in sailing, could turn
with all tides, tack about and take advantage of all winds, by the quickness of
his wit and invention.'
The
last dozen years of Jonson's life were unhappy. Though he had a pension from
the Court, he was sometimes in financial straits; and for a time he lost his
position as Court Poet. He resumed the writing of regular plays, but his style
no longer pleased the public; and he often suffered much from sickness.
Nevertheless at the Devil Tavern he collected about him a circle of younger
admirers, some of them among the oncoming poets, who were proud to be known as
'Sons of Ben,' and who largely accepted as authoritative his opinions on
literary matters. Thus his life, which ended in 1637, did not altogether go out
in gloom. On the plain stone which alone, for a long time, marked his grave in
Westminster Abbey an unknown admirer inscribed the famous epitaph, 'O rare Ben
Jonson.'
As
a man Jonson, pugnacious, capricious, ill-mannered, sometimes surly,
intemperate in drink and in other respects, is an object for only very qualified
admiration; and as a writer he cannot properly be said to possess that
indefinable thing, genius, which is essential to the truest greatness. But both
as man and as writer he manifested great force; and in both drama and poetry he
stands for several distinct literary principles and attainments highly
important both in themselves and for their subsequent influence.
1.
Most conspicuous in his dramas is his realism, often, as we have said,
extremely coarse, and a direct reflection of his intellect, which was as
strongly masculine as his body and altogether lacking, where the regular drama
was concerned, in fineness of sentiment or poetic feeling. He early assumed an
attitude of pronounced opposition to the Elizabethan romantic plays, which
seemed to him not only lawless in artistic structure but unreal and trifling in
atmosphere and substance. (That he was not, however, as has sometimes been
said, personally hostile to Shakespeare is clear, among other things, from his
poetic tributes in the folio edition of Shakespeare and from his direct
statement elsewhere that he loved Shakespeare almost to idolatry.) Jonson's
purpose was to present life as he believed it to be; he was thoroughly
acquainted with its worser side; and he refused to conceal anything that appeared
to him significant. His plays, therefore, have very much that is flatly
offensive to the taste which seeks in literature, prevailingly, for idealism
and beauty; but they are, nevertheless, generally speaking, powerful portrayals
of actual life.
2.
Jonson's purpose, however, was never unworthy; rather, it was distinctly to
uphold morality. His frankest plays, as we have indicated, are attacks on vice
and folly, and sometimes, it is said, had important reformatory influence on
contemporary manners. He held, indeed, that in the drama, even in comedy, the
function of teaching was as important as that of giving pleasure. His attitude
toward his audiences was that of a learned schoolmaster, whose ideas they
should accept with deferential respect; and when they did not approve his plays
he was outspoken in indignant contempt.
3.
Jonson's self-satisfaction and his critical sense of intellectual superiority
to the generality of mankind produce also a marked and disagreeable lack of
sympathy in his portrayal of both life and character. The world of his dramas
is mostly made up of knaves, scoundrels, hypocrites, fools, and dupes; and it
includes among its really important characters very few excellent men and not a
single really good woman. Jonson viewed his fellow-men, in the mass, with
complete scorn, which it was one of his moral and artistic principles not to
disguise. His characteristic comedies all belong, further, to the particular
type which he himself originated, namely, the 'Comedy of Humors.'
[Footnote:
The meaning of this, term can be understood only by some explanation of the
history of the word 'Humor.' In the first place this was the Latin name for
'liquid.' According to medieval physiology there were four chief liquids in the
human body, namely blood, phlegm, bile, and black bile, and an excess of any of
them produced an undue predominance of the corresponding quality; thus, an
excess of phlegm made a person phlegmatic, or dull; or an excess of black bile,
melancholy. In the Elizabethan idiom, therefore, 'humor' came to mean a mood,
and then any exaggerated quality or marked peculiarity in a person.]
Aiming
in these plays to flail the follies of his time, he makes his chief characters,
in spite of his realistic purpose, extreme and distorted
'humors,'
each, in spite of individual traits, the embodiment of some one abstract
vice--cowardice, sensualism, hypocrisy, or what not. Too often, also, the
unreality is increased because Jonson takes the characters from the stock
figures of Latin comedy rather than from genuine English life.
4.
In opposition to the free Elizabethan romantic structure, Jonson stood for and
deliberately intended to revive the classical style; though with characteristic
good sense he declared that not all the classical practices were applicable to
English plays. He generally observed unity not only of action but also of time
(a single day) and place, sometimes with serious resultant loss of probability.
In his tragedies, 'Sejanus' and 'Catiline,' he excluded comic material; for the
most part he kept scenes of death and violence off the stage; and he very
carefully and slowly constructed plays which have nothing, indeed, of the
poetic greatness of Sophocles or Euripides (rather a Jonsonese broad solidity)
but which move steadily to their climaxes and then on to the catastrophes in
the compact classical manner. He carried his scholarship, however, to the point
of pedantry, not only in the illustrative extracts from Latin authors with
which in the printed edition he filled the lower half of his pages, but in the
plays themselves in the scrupulous exactitude of his rendering of the details
of Roman life. The plays reconstruct the ancient world with much more minute
accuracy than do Shakespeare's; the student should consider for himself whether
they succeed better in reproducing its human reality, making it a living part
of the reader's mental and spiritual possessions.
5.
Jonson's style in his plays, especially the blank verse of his tragedies,
exhibits the same general characteristics. It is strong, compact, and sometimes
powerful, but it entirely lacks imaginative poetic beauty--it is really only
rhythmical prose, though sometimes suffused with passion.
6.
The surprising skill which Jonson, author of such plays, showed in devising the
court masks, daintily unsubstantial creations of moral allegory, classical
myth, and Teutonic folklore, is rendered less surprising, perhaps, by the lack
in the masks of any very great lyric quality. There is no lyric quality at all
in the greater part of his non-dramatic verse, though there is an occasional
delightful exception, as in the famous 'Drink to me only with thine eyes.' But
of his non-dramatic verse we shall speak in the next chapter.
7.
Last, and not least: Jonson's revolt from romanticism to classicism initiated,
chiefly in non-dramatic verse, the movement for restraint and regularity,
which, making slow headway during the next half century, was to issue in the
triumphant pseudo-classicism of the generations of Dryden and Pope. Thus,
notable in himself, he was significant also as one of the moving forces of a
great literary revolution.
THE OTHER DRAMATISTS.
From
the many other dramatists of this highly dramatic period, some of whom in their
own day enjoyed a reputation fully equal to that of Shakespeare and Jonson, we
may merely select a few for brief mention. For not only does their light now
pale hopelessly in the presence of Shakespeare, but in many cases their
violations of taste and moral restraint pass the limits of present-day tolerance.
Most of them, like Shakespeare, produced both comedies and tragedies,
prevailingly romantic but with elements of realism; most of them wrote more
often in collaboration than did Shakespeare; they all shared the Elizabethan
vigorously creative interest in life; but none of them attained either
Shakespeare's wisdom, his power, or his mastery of poetic beauty. One of the
most learned of the group was George Chapman, whose verse has a Jonsonian
solidity not unaccompanied with Jonsonian ponderousness. He won fame also in
non-dramatic poetry, especially by vigorous but rather clumsy verse
translations of the 'Iliad' and 'Odyssey,' Another highly individual figure is
that of Thomas Dekker, who seems to have been one of the completest embodiments
of irrepressible Elizabethan cheerfulness, though this was joined in him with
an irresponsibility which kept him commonly floundering in debt or confined in
debtor's prison. His 'Shoemaker's Holiday' (1600), still occasionally chosen by
amateur companies for reproduction, gives a rough-and-ready but (apart from its
coarseness) charming romanticized picture of the life of London apprentices and whole-hearted
citizens. Thomas Heywood, a sort of journalist before the days of newspapers,
produced an enormous amount of work in various literary forms; in the drama he
claimed to have had 'an entire hand, or at least a maine finger' in no less than two hundred
and twenty plays. Inevitably, therefore, he is careless and slipshod, but some
of his portrayals of sturdy English men and women and of romantic adventure (as
in 'The Fair Maid of the West') are of refreshing naturalness and breeziness.
Thomas Middleton, also a very prolific writer, often deals, like Jonson and
Heywood, with sordid material. John Marston, as well, has too little delicacy
or reserve; he also wrote catch-as-catch-can non-dramatic satires.
The
sanity of Shakespeare's plays, continuing and indeed increasing toward the end
of his career, disguises for modern students the tendency to decline in the
drama which set in at about the time of King James' accession. Not later than
the end of the first decade of the century the dramatists as a class exhibit
not only a decrease of originality in plot and characterization, but also a
lowering of moral tone, which results largely from the closer identification of
the drama with the Court party. There is a lack of seriousness of purpose, an
increasing tendency to return, in more morbid spirit, to the sensationalism of
the 1580's, and an anxious straining to attract and please the audiences by
almost any means. These tendencies appear in the plays of Francis Beaumont and
John Fletcher, whose reputations are indissolubly linked together in one of the
most famous literary partnerships of all time. Beaumont, however, was short-lived, and much
the greater part of the fifty and more plays ultimately published under their
joint names really belong to Fletcher alone or to Fletcher and other
collaborators. The scholarship of our day agrees with the opinion of their
contemporaries in assigning to Beaumont
the greater share of judgment and intellectual power and to Fletcher the
greater share of spontaneity and fancy. Fletcher's style is very individual. It
is peculiarly sweet; but its unmistakable mark is his constant tendency to
break down the blank verse line by the use of extra syllables, both within the
line and at the end. The lyrics which he scatters through his plays are
beautifully smooth and musical. The plays of Beaumont and Fletcher, as a group,
are sentimentally romantic, often in an extravagant degree, though their charm
often conceals the extravagance as well as the lack of true characterization.
They are notable often for their portrayal of the loyal devotion of both men
and women to king, lover, or friend. One of the best of them is 'Philaster, or
Love Lies Bleeding,' while Fletcher's 'Faithful Shepherdess' is the most
pleasing example in English of the artificial pastoral drama in the Italian and
Spanish style.
The
Elizabethan tendency to sensational horror finds its greatest artistic
expression in two plays of John Webster, 'The White Devil, or Vittoria
Corombona,' and 'The Duchess of Malfi.' Here the corrupt and brutal life of the
Italian nobility of the Renaissance is presented with terrible frankness, but
with an overwhelming sense for passion, tragedy, and pathos. The most moving
pathos permeates some of the plays of John Ford (of the time of Charles I), for
example, 'The Broken Heart'; but they are abnormal and unhealthy. Philip
Massinger, a pupil and collaborator of Fletcher, was of thoughtful spirit, and
apparently a sincere moralist at heart, in spite of much concession in his
plays to the contrary demands of the time. His famous comedy, 'A New Way to Pay
Old Debts,' a satire on greed and cruelty, is one of the few plays of the
period, aside from Shakespeare's, which are still occasionally acted. The last
dramatist of the whole great line was James Shirley, who survived the
Commonwealth and the Restoration and died of exposure at the Fire of London in
1666. In his romantic comedies and comedies of manners Shirley vividly reflects
the thoughtless life of the Court of Charles I and of the well-to-do
contemporary London citizens and shows how surprisingly far that life had
progressed toward the reckless frivolity and abandonment which after the
interval of Puritan rule were to run riot in the Restoration period.
The
great Elizabethan dramatic impulse had thus become deeply degenerate, and
nothing could be more fitting than that it should be brought to a definite end.
When the war broke out in 1642 one of the first acts of Parliament, now at last
free to work its will on the enemies of Puritanism, was to decree that 'whereas
public sports do not well agree with public calamities, nor public stage-plays
with the seasons of humiliation,' all dramatic performances should cease. This
law, fatal, of course, to the writing as well as the acting of plays, was
enforced with only slightly relaxing rigor until very shortly before the
Restoration of Charles II in 1660. Doubtless to the Puritans it seemed that
their long fight against the theater had ended in permanent triumph; but this
was only one of many respects in which the Puritans were to learn that human
nature cannot be forced into permanent conformity with any rigidly over-severe
standard, on however high ideals it may be based.
SUMMARY.
The chief dramatists of the whole sixty years of
the great period may be conveniently grouped as follows: I. Shakespeare's early
contemporaries, about 1580 to about 1593: Lyly, Peele, Greene, Kyd, Marlowe.
II. Shakespeare. III. Shakespeare's later contemporaries, under Elizabeth and
James I: Jonson, Chapman, Dekker, Heywood, Middleton, Marston, Beaumont and
Fletcher, Webster. IV. The last group, under James I and Charles I, to 1642:
Ford, Massinger, and Shirley.
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