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Ben Jonson
PRIVATE THE reputation of Jonson has been of the most deadly kind that
can be compelled upon the memory of a great poet. To be universally
accepted; to be damned by the praise that quenches all desire to read
the book; to be afflicted by the imputation of the virtues which excite
the least pleasure; and to be read only by historians and
antiquariesâ€â€this is the most perfect conspiracy of approval. For some
generations the reputation of Jonson has been carried rather as a
liability than as an asset in the balance-sheet of English literature.
No critic has succeeded in making him appear pleasurable or even
interesting. Swinburne s book on Jonson satisfies no curiosity and
stimulates no thought. For the critical study in the "Men of Letters
Series" by Mr. Gregory Smith there is a place; it satisfies curiosity,
it supplies many just observations, it provides valuable matter on the
neglected masques; it only fails to remodel the image of Jonson which is
settled in our minds. Probably the fault lies with several generations
of our poets. It is not that the value of poetry is only its value to
living poets for their own work; but appreciation is akin to creation,
and true enjoyment of poetry is related to the stirring of suggestion,
the stimulus that a poet feels in his enjoyment of other poetry. Jonson
has provided no creative stimulus for a very long time; consequently we
must look back as far as Drydenâ€â€precisely, a poetic practitioner who
learned from Jonsonâ€â€before we find a living criticism of Jonson s
work. 1
Yet there are possibilities for Jonson even now. We have no difficulty
in seeing what brought him to this pass; how, in contrast, not with
Shakespeare, but with Marlowe, Webster, Donne, Beaumont, and Fletcher,
he has been paid out with reputation instead of enjoyment. He is no less
a poet than these men, but his poetry is of the surface. Poetry of the
surface cannot be understood without study; for to deal with the surface
of life, as Jonson dealt with it, is to deal so deliberately that we too
must be deliberate, in order to understand. Shakespeare, and smaller men
also, are in the end more difficult, but they offer something at the
start to encourage the student or to satisfy those who want nothing
more; they are suggestive, evocative, a phrase, a voice; they offer
poetry in detail as well as in design. So does Dante offer something, a
phrase everywhere (tu se ombra ed ombra vedi) even to readers who have
no Italian; and Dante and Shakespeare have poetry of design as well as
of detail. But the polished veneer of Jonson reflects only the lazy
reader s fatuity; unconscious does not respond to unconscious; no swarms
of inarticulate feelings are aroused. The immediate appeal of Jonson is
to the mind; his emotional tone is not in the single verse, but in the
design of the whole. But not many people are capable of discovering for
themselves the beauty which is only found after labour; and Jonson s
industrious readers have been those whose interest was historical and
curious, and those who have thought that in discovering the historical
and curious interest they had discovered the artistic value as well.
When we say that Jonson requires study, we do not mean study of his
classical scholarship or of seventeenth-century manners. We mean
intelligent saturation in his work as a whole; we mean that in order to
enjoy him at all, we must get to the centre of his work and his
temperament, and that we must see him unbiased by time, as a
contemporary. And to see him as a contemporary does not so much require
the power of putting ourselves into seventeenth-century London as it
requires the power of setting Jonson in our London: a more difficult
triumph of divination. 2
It is generally conceded that Jonson failed as a tragic dramatist; and
it is usually agreed that he failed because his genius was for satiric
comedy and because of the weight of pedantic learning with which he
burdened his two tragic failures. The second point marks an obvious
error of detail; the first is too crude a statement to be accepted; to
say that he failed because his genius was unsuited to tragedy is to tell
us nothing at all. Jonson did not write a good tragedy, but we can see
no reason why he should not have written one. If two plays so different
as The Tempest and The Silent Woman are both comedies, surely the
category of tragedy could be made wide enough to include something
possible for Jonson to have done. But the classification of tragedy and
comedy, while it may be sufficient to mark the distinction in a dramatic
literature of more rigid form and treatmentâ€â€it may distinguish
Aristophanes from Euripidesâ€â€is not adequate to a drama of such
variations as the Elizabethans. Tragedy is a crude classification for
plays so different in their tone as Macbeth, The Jew of Malta, and The
Witch of Edmonton; and it does not help us much to say that The Merchant
of Venice and The Alchemist are comedies. Jonson had his own scale, his
own instrument. The merit which Catiline possesses is the same merit
that is exhibited more triumphantly in Volpone; Catiline fails, not
because it is too laboured and conscious, but because it is not
conscious enough; because Jonson in this play was not alert to his own
idiom, not clear in his mind as to what his temperament wanted him to
do. In Catiline Jonson conforms, or attempts to conform, to conventions;
not to the conventions of antiquity, which he had exquisitely under
control, but to the conventions of tragico-historical drama of his time.
It is not the Latin erudition that sinks Catiline, but the application
of that erudition to a form which was not the proper vehicle for the
mind which had amassed the erudition. 3
If you look at Catilineâ€â€that dreary Pyrrhic victory of tragedyâ€â€you
find two passages to be successful: Act ii. scene I, the dialogue of the
political ladies, and the Prologue of Sylla s ghost. These two passages
are genial. The soliloquy of the ghost is a characteristic Jonson
success in content and in versificationâ€â€
Dost thou not feel me, Rome? not yet! is night
So heavy on thee, and my weight so light?
Can Sylla s ghost arise within thy walls,
Less threatening than an earthquake, the quick falls
Of thee and thine? Shake not the frighted heads
Of thy steep towers, or shrink to their first beds?
Or as their ruin the large Tyber fills,
Make that swell up, and drown thy seven proud hills?...
This is the learned, but also the creative, Jonson. Without concerning
himself with the character of Sulla, and in lines of invective, Jonson
makes Sylla s ghost, while the words are spoken, a living and terrible
force. The words fall with as determined beat as if they were the will
of the morose Dictator himself. You may say: merely invective; but mere
invective, even if as superior to the clumsy fisticuffs of Marston and
Hall as Jonson s verse is superior to theirs, would not create a living
figure as Jonson has done in this long tirade. And you may say;
rhetoric; but if we are to call it "rhetoric" we must subject that term
to a closer dissection than any to which it is accustomed. What Jonson
has done here is not merely a fine speech. It is the careful, precise
filling in of a strong and simple outline, and at no point does it
overflow the outline; it is far more careful and precise in its
obedience to this outline than are many of the speeches in Tamburlaine.
The outline is not Sulla, for Sulla has nothing to do with it, but
"Sylla s ghost." The words may not be suitable to an historical Sulla,
or to anybody in history, but they are a perfect expression for "Sylla s
ghost." You cannot say they are rhetorical "because people do not talk
like that," you cannot call them "verbiage"; they do not exhibit
prolixity or redundancy or the other vices in the rhetoric books; there
is a definite artistic emotion which demands expression at that length.
The words themselves are mostly simple words, the syntax is natural, the
language austere rather than adorned. Turning then to the induction of
The Poetaster, we find another success of the same kindâ€â€
Light, I salute thee, but with wounded nerves...
Men may not talk in that way, but the spirit of envy does, and in the
words of Jonson envy is a real and living person. It is not human life
that informs envy and Sylla s ghost, but it is energy of which human
life is only another variety. 4
Returning to Catiline, we find that the best scene in the body of the
play is one which cannot be squeezed into a tragic frame, and which
appears to belong to satiric comedy. The scene between Fulvia and Galla
and Sempronia is a living scene in a wilderness of oratory. And as it
recalls other scenesâ€â€there is a suggestion of the college of ladies in
The Silent Womanâ€â€it looks like a comedy scene. And it appears to be
satire.
They shall all give and pay well, that come here,
If they will have it; and that, jewels, pearl,
Plate, or round sums to buy these. I m not taken
With a cob-swan or a high-mounting bull,
As foolish Leda and Europa were;
But the bright gold, with Danaë. For such price
I would endure a rough, harsh Jupiter,
Or ten such thundering gamesters, and refrain
To laugh at em, till they are gone, with my much suffering.
This scene is no more comedy than it is tragedy, and the "satire" is
merely a medium for the essential emotion. Jonson s drama is only
incidentally satire, because it is only incidentally a criticism upon
the actual world. It is not satire in the way in which the work of Swift
or the work of Molière may be called satire: that is, it does not find
its source in any precise emotional attitude or precise intellectual
criticism of the actual world. It is satire perhaps as the work of
Rabelais is satire; certainly not more so. The important thing is that
if fiction can be divided into creative fiction and critical fiction,
Jonson s is creative. That he was a great critic, our first great
critic, does not affect this assertion. Every creator is also a critic;
Jonson was a conscious critic, but he was also conscious in his
creations. Certainly, one sense in which the term "critical" may be
applied to fiction is a sense in which the term might be used of a
method antithetical to Jonson s. It is the method of Education
Sentimentale. The characters of Jonson, of Shakespeare, perhaps of all
the greatest drama, are drawn in positive and simple outlines. They may
be filled in, and by Shakespeare they are filled in, by much detail or
many shifting aspects; but a clear and sharp and simple form remains
through theseâ€â€though it would be hard to say in what the clarity and
sharpness and simplicity of Hamlet consists. But Frédéric Moreau is
not made in that way. He is constructed partly by negative definition,
built up by a great number of observations. We cannot isolate him from
the environment in which we find him; it may be an environment which is
or can be much universalized; nevertheless it, and the figure in it,
consist of very many observed particular facts, the actual world.
Without this world the figure dissolves. The ruling faculty is a
critical perception, a commentary upon experienced feeling and
sensation. If this is true of Flaubert, it is true in a higher degree of
Molière than of Jonson. The broad farcical lines of Molière may seem
to be the same drawing as Jonson s. But Molièreâ€â€say in Alceste or
Monsieur Jourdainâ€â€is criticizing the actual; the reference to the
actual world is more direct. And having a more tenuous reference, the
work of Jonson is much less directly satirical. 5
This leads us to the question of Humours. Largely on the evidence of the
two Humour plays, it is sometimes assumed that Jonson is occupied with
types; typical exaggerations, or exaggerations of type. The Humour
definition, the expressed intention of Jonson, may be satisfactory for
these two plays. Every Man in his Humour is the first mature work of
Jonson, and the student of Jonson must study it; but it is not the play
in which Jonson found his genius: it is the last of his plays to read
first. If one reads Volpone, and after that re-reads the Jew of Malta;
then returns to Jonson and reads Bartholomew Fair, The Alchemist,
Epicoene and The Devil is an Ass, and finally Catiline, it is possible
to arrive at a fair opinion of the poet and the dramatist. 6
The Humour, even at the beginning, is not a type, as in Marston s
satire, but a simplified and somewhat distorted individual with a
typical mania. In the later work, the Humour definition quite fails to
account for the total effect produced. The characters of Shakespeare are
such as might exist in different circumstances than those in which
Shakespeare sets them. The latter appear to be those which extract from
the characters the most intense and interesting realization; but that
realization has not exhausted their possibilities. Volpone s life, on
the other hand, is bounded by the scene in which it is played; in fact,
the life is the life of the scene and is derivatively the life of
Volpone; the life of the character is inseparable from the life of the
drama. This is not dependence upon a background, or upon a substratum of
fact. The emotional effect is single and simple. Whereas in Shakespeare
the effect is due to the way in which the characters act upon one
another, in Jonson it is given by the way in which the characters fit in
with each other. The artistic result of Volpone is not due to any effect
that Volpone, Mosca, Corvino, Corbaccio, Voltore have upon each other,
but simply to their combination into a whole. And these figures are not
personifications of passions; separately, they have not even that
reality, they are constituents. It is a similar indication of Jonson s
method that you can hardly pick out a line of Jonson s and say
confidently that it is great poetry; but there are many extended
passages to which you cannot deny that honour.
I will have all my beds blown up, not stuft;
Down is too hard; and then, mine oval room
Fill d with such pictures as Tiberius took
From Elephantis, and dull Aretine
But coldly imitated. Then, my glasses
Cut in more subtle angles, to disperse
And multiply the figures, as I walk.... 7
Jonson is the legitimate heir of Marlowe. The man who wrote, in Volpone:
for thy love,
In varying figures, I would have contended
With the blue Proteus, or the hornèd flood....
and
See, a carbuncle
May put out both the eyes of our Saint Mark;
A diamond would have bought Lollia Paulina,
When she came in like star-light, hid with jewels....
is related to Marlowe as a poet; and if Marlowe is a poet, Jonson is
also. And, if Jonson s comedy is a comedy of humours, then Marlowe s
tragedy, a large part of it, is a tragedy of humours. But Jonson has too
exclusively been considered as the typical representative of a point of
view toward comedy. He has suffered from his great reputation as a
critic and theorist, from the effects of his intelligence. We have been
taught to think of him as the man, the dictator (confusedly in our minds
with his later namesake), as the literary politician impressing his
views upon a generation; we are offended by the constant reminder of his
scholarship. We forget the comedy in the humours, and the serious artist
in the scholar. Jonson has suffered in public opinion, as anyone must
suffer who is forced to talk about his art. 8
If you examine the first hundred lines or more of Volpone the verse
appears to be in the manner of Marlowe, more deliberate, more mature,
but without Marlowe s inspiration. It looks like mere "rhetoric,"
certainly not "deeds and language such as men do use"! It appears to us,
in fact, forced and flagitious bombast. That it is not "rhetoric," or at
least not vicious rhetoric, we do not know until we are able to review
the whole play. For the consistent maintenance of this manner conveys in
the end an effect not of verbosity, but of bold, even shocking and
terrifying directness. We have difficulty in saying exactly what
produces this simple and single effect. It is not in any ordinary way
due to management of intrigue. Jonson employs immense dramatic
constructive skill: it is not so much skill in plot as skill in doing
without a plot. He never manipulates as complicated a plot as that of
The Merchant of Venice; he has in his best plays nothing like the
intrigue of Restoration comedy. In Bartholomew Fair it is hardly a plot
at all; the marvel of the play is the bewildering rapid chaotic action
of the fair; it is the fair itself, not anything that happens to take
place in the fair. In Volpone, or The Alchemist, or The Silent Woman,
the plot is enough to keep the players in motion; it is rather an
"action" than a plot. The plot does not hold the play together; what
holds the play together is a unity of inspiration that radiates into
plot and personages alike. 9
We have attempted to make more precise the sense in which it was said
that Jonson s work is "of the surface"; carefully avoiding the word
"superficial." For there is work contemporary with Jonson s which is
superficial in a pejorative sense in which the word cannot be applied to
Jonsonâ€â€the work of Beaumont and Fletcher. If we look at the work of
Jonson s great contemporaries, Shakespeare, and also Donne and Webster
and Tourneur (and sometimes Middleton), have a depth, a third dimension,
as Mr. Gregory Smith rightly calls it, which Jonson s work has not.
Their words have often a network of tentacular roots reaching down to
the deepest terrors and desires. Jonson s most certainly have not; but
in Beaumont and Fletcher we may think that at times we find it. Looking
closer, we discover that the blossoms of Beaumont and Fletcher s
imagination draw no sustenance from the soil, but are cut and slightly
withered flowers stuck into sand.
Wilt thou, hereafter, when they talk of me,
As thou shalt hear nothing but infamy,
Remember some of these things?...
I pray thee, do; for thou shalt never see me so again.
Hair woven in many a curious warp,
Able in endless error to enfold
The wandering soul;...
Detached from its context, this looks like the verse of the greater
poets; just as lines of Jonson, detached from their context, look like
inflated or empty fustian. But the evocative quality of the verse of
Beaumont and Fletcher depends upon a clever appeal to emotions and
associations which they have not themselves grasped; it is hollow. It is
superficial with a vacuum behind it; the superficies of Jonson is solid.
It is what it is; it does not pretend to be another thing. But it is so
very conscious and deliberate that we must look with eyes alert to the
whole before we apprehend the significance of any part. We cannot call a
man s work superficial when it is the creation of a world; a man cannot
be accused of dealing superficially with the world which he himself has
created; the superficies is the world. Jonson s characters conform to
the logic of the emotions of their world. It is a world like
Lobatchevsky s; the worlds created by artists like Jonson are like
systems of non-Euclidean geometry. They are not fancy, because they have
a logic of their own; and this logic illuminates the actual world,
because it gives us a new point of view from which to inspect it. 10
A writer of power and intelligence, Jonson endeavoured to promulgate, as
a formula and programme of reform, what he chose to do himself; and he
not unnaturally laid down in abstract theory what is in reality a
personal point of view. And it is in the end of no value to discuss
Jonson s theory and practice unless we recognize and seize this point of
view, which escapes the formulæ, and which is what makes his plays
worth reading. Jonson behaved as the great creative mind that he was: he
created his own world, a world from which his followers, as well as the
dramatists who were trying to do something wholly different, are
excluded. Remembering this, we turn to Mr. Gregory Smith s
objectionâ€â€that Jonson s characters lack the third dimension, have no
life out of the theatrical existence in which they appearâ€â€and demand
an inquest. The objection implies that the characters are purely the
work of intellect, or the result of superficial observation of a world
which is faded or mildewed. It implies that the characters are lifeless.
But if we dig beneath the theory, beneath the observation, beneath the
deliberate drawing and the theatrical and dramatic elaboration, there is
discovered a kind of power, animating Volpone, Busy, Fitzdottrel, the
literary ladies of Epicoene, even Bobadil, which comes from below the
intellect, and for which no theory of humours will account. And it is
the same kind of power which vivifies Trimalchio, and Panurge, and some
but not all of the "comic" characters of Dickens. The fictive life of
this kind is not to be circumscribed by a reference to "comedy" or to
"farce"; it is not exactly the kind of life which informs the characters
of Molière or that which informs those of Marivauxâ€â€two writers who
were, besides, doing something quite different the one from the other.
But it is something which distinguishes Barabas from Shylock, Epicure
Mammon from Falstaff, Faustus fromâ€â€if you willâ€â€Macbeth; Marlowe and
Jonson from Shakespeare and the Shakespearians, Webster, and Tourneur.
It is not merely Humours: for neither Volpone nor Mosca is a humour. No
theory of humours could account for Jonson s best plays or the best
characters in them. We want to know at what point the comedy of humours
passes into a work of art, and why Jonson is not Brome. 11
The creation of a work of art, we will say the creation of a character
in a drama, consists in the process of transfusion of the personality,
or, in a deeper sense, the life, of the author into the character. This
is a very different matter from the orthodox creation in one s own
image. The ways in which the passions and desires of the creator may be
satisfied in the work of art are complex and devious. In a painter they
may take the form of a predilection for certain colours, tones, or
lightings; in a writer the original impulse may be even more strangely
transmuted. Now, we may say with Mr. Gregory Smith that Falstaff or a
score of Shakespeare s characters have a "third dimension" that Jonson s
have not. This will mean, not that Shakespeare s spring from the
feelings or imagination and Jonson s from the intellect or invention;
they have equally an emotional source; but that Shakespeare s represent
a more complex tissue of feelings and desires, as well as a more supple,
a more susceptible temperament. Falstaff is not only the roast
Malmesbury ox with the pudding in his belly; he also "grows old," and,
finally, his nose is as sharp as a pen. He was perhaps the satisfaction
of more, and of more complicated feelings; and perhaps he was, as the
great tragic characters must have been, the offspring of deeper, less
apprehensible feelings: deeper, but not necessarily stronger or more
intense, than those of Jonson. It is obvious that the spring of the
difference is not the difference between feeling and thought, or
superior insight, superior perception, on the part of Shakespeare, but
his susceptibility to a greater range of emotion, and emotion deeper and
more obscure. But his characters are no more "alive" than are the
characters of Jonson. 12
The world they live in is a larger one. But small worldsâ€â€the worlds
which artists createâ€â€do not differ only in magnitude; if they are
complete worlds, drawn to scale in every part, they differ in kind also.
And Jonson s world has this scale. His type of personality found its
relief in something falling under the category of burlesque or
farceâ€â€though when you are dealing with a unique world, like his, these
terms fail to appease the desire for definition. It is not, at all
events, the farce of Molière: the latter is more analytic, more an
intellectual redistribution. It is not defined by the word "satire."
Jonson poses as a satirist. But satire like Jonson s is great in the end
not by hitting off its object, but by creating it; the satire is merely
the means which leads to the æsthetic result, the impulse which
projects a new world into a new orbit. In Every Man in his Humour there
is a neat, a very neat, comedy of humours. In discovering and
proclaiming in this play the new genre Jonson was simply recognizing,
unconsciously, the route which opened out in the proper direction for
his instincts. His characters are and remain, like Marlowe s, simplified
characters; but the simplification does not consist in the dominance of
a particular humour or monomania. That is a very superficial account of
it. The simplification consists largely in reduction of detail, in the
seizing of aspects relevant to the relief of an emotional impulse which
remains the same for that character, in making the character conform to
a particular setting. This stripping is essential to the art, to which
is also essential a flat distortion in the drawing; it is an art of
caricature, of great caricature, like Marlowe s. It is a great
caricature, which is beautiful; and a great humour, which is serious.
The "world" of Jonson is sufficiently large; it is a world of poetic
imagination; it is sombre. He did not get the third dimension, but he
was not trying to get it. 13
If we approach Jonson with less frozen awe of his learning, with a
clearer understanding of his "rhetoric" and its applications, if we
grasp the fact that the knowledge required of the reader is not
archæology but knowledge of Jonson, we can derive not only instruction
in non-Euclidean humanityâ€â€but enjoyment. We can even apply him, be
aware of him as a part of our literary inheritance craving further
expression. Of all the dramatists of his time, Jonson is probably the
one whom the present age would find the most sympathetic, if it knew
him. There is a brutality, a lack of sentiment, a polished surface, a
handling of large bold designs in brilliant colours, which ought to
attract about three thousand people in London and elsewhere. At least,
if we had a contemporary Shakespeare and a contemporary Jonson, it would
be the Jonson who would arouse the enthusiasm of the intelligentsia!
Though he is saturated in literature, he never sacrifices the theatrical
qualitiesâ€â€theatrical in the most favourable senseâ€â€to literature or
to the study of character. His work is a titanic show. But Jonson s
masques, an important part of his work, are neglected; our flaccid
culture lets shows and literature fade, but prefers faded literature to
faded shows. There are hundreds of people who have read Comus to ten who
have read the Masque of Blackness. Comus contains fine poetry, and
poetry exemplifying some merits to which Jonson s masque poetry cannot
pretend. Nevertheless, Comus is the death of the masque; it is the
transition of a form of artâ€â€even of a form which existed for but a
short generationâ€â€into "literature," literature cast in a form which
has lost its application. Even though Comus was a masque at Ludlow
Castle, Jonson had, what Milton came perhaps too late to have, a sense
for living art; his art was applied. The masques can still be read, and
with pleasure, by anyone who will take the troubleâ€â€a trouble which in
this part of Jonson is, indeed, a study of antiquitiesâ€â€to imagine them
in action, displayed with the music, costumes, dances, and the scenery
of Inigo Jones. They are additional evidence that Jonson had a fine
sense of form, of the purpose for which a particular form is intended;
evidence that he was a literary artist even more than he was a man of
letters. 14
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