Tuesday 11 October 2016

THE ELIZABETHAN PERIOD.


HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE
THE ELIZABETHAN PERIOD.

PROSE FICTION.
The period saw the beginning, among other things, of English prose fiction of something like the later modern type. First appeared a series of collections of short tales chiefly translated from Italian authors, to which tales the Italian name ’novella’ (novel) was applied. Most of the separate tales are crude or amateurish and have only historical interest, though as a class they furnished the plots for many Elizabethan dramas, including several of Shakspere’s. The most important collection was Painter’s ’Palace of Pleasure,’ in 1566. The earliest original, or partly original, English prose fictions to appear were handbooks of morals and manners in story form, and here the beginning was made by John Lyly, who is also of some importance in the history of the Elizabethan drama. In 1578 Lyly, at the age of twenty—five, came from Oxford to London, full of the enthusiasm of Renaissance learning, and evidently determined to fix himself as a new and dazzling star in the literary sky. In this ambition he achieved a remarkable and immediate success, by the publication of a little book entitled ’Euphues and His Anatomie of Wit.’ ’Euphues’ means ’the well—bred man,’ and though there is a slight action, the work is mainly a series of moralizing disquisitions (mostly rearranged from Sir Thomas North’s translation of ’The Dial of Princes’ of the Spaniard Guevara) on love, religion, and conduct. Most influential, however, for the time—being, was Lyly’s style, which is the most conspicuous English example of the later Renaissance craze, then rampant throughout Western Europe, for refining and beautifying the art of prose expression in a mincingly affected fashion.

Witty, clever, and sparkling at all costs, Lyly takes especial pains to balance his sentences and clauses antithetically, phrase against phrase and often word against word, sometimes emphasizing the balance also by an exaggerated use of alliteration and assonance. A representative sentence is this: ’Although there be none so ignorant that doth not know, neither any so impudent that will not confesse, friendship to be the jewell of humaine joye; yet whosoever shall see this amitie grounded upon a little affection, will soone conjecture that it shall be dissolved upon a light occasion.’ Others of Lyly’s affectations are rhetorical questions, hosts of allusions to classical history, and literature, and an unfailing succession of similes from all the recondite knowledge that he can command, especially from the fantastic collection of fables which, coming down through the Middle Ages from the Roman writer Pliny, went at that time by the name of natural history and which we have already encountered in the medieval Bestiaries. Preposterous by any reasonable standard, Lyly’s style, ’Euphuism,’ precisely hit the Court taste of his age and became for a decade its most approved conversational dialect.
In literature the imitations of ’Euphues’ which flourished for a while gave way to a series of romances inaugurated by the ’Arcadia’ of Sir Philip Sidney. Sidney’s brilliant position for a few years as the noblest representative of chivalrous ideals in the intriguing Court of Elizabeth is a matter of common fame, as is his death in 1586 at the age of thirty—two during the siege of Zutphen in Holland. He wrote ’Arcadia’ for the amusement of his sister, the Countess of Pembroke, during a period of enforced retirement beginning in 1580, but the book was not published until ten years later. It is a pastoral romance, in the general style of Italian and Spanish romances of the earlier part of the century. The pastoral is the most artificial literary form in modern fiction. It may be said to have begun in the third century B. C. with the perfectly sincere poems of the Greek Theocritus, who gives genuine expression to the life of actual Sicilian shepherds. But with successive Latin, Medieval, and Renaissance writers in verse and prose the country characters and setting had become mere disguises, sometimes allegorical, for the expression of the very far from simple sentiments of the upper classes, and sometimes for their partly genuine longing, the outgrowth of sophisticated weariness and ennui, for rural naturalness. Sidney’s very complicated tale of adventures in love and war, much longer than any of its successors, is by no means free from artificiality, but it finely mirrors his own knightly spirit and remains a permanent English classic. Among his followers were some of the better hack—writers of the time, who were also among the minor dramatists and poets, especially Robert Greene and Thomas Lodge. Lodge’s ’Rosalynde,’ also much influenced by Lyly, is in itself a pretty story and is noteworthy as the original of Shakspere’s ’As You Like It.’
Lastly, in the concluding decade of the sixteenth century, came a series of realistic stories depicting chiefly, in more or less farcical spirit, the life of the poorer classes. They belonged mostly to that class of realistic fiction which is called picaresque, from the Spanish word ’picaro,’ a rogue, because it began in Spain with the ’Lazarillo de Tormes’ of Diego de Mendoza, in 1553, and because its heroes are knavish serving—boys or similar characters whose unprincipled tricks and exploits formed the substance of the stories. In Elizabethan England it produced nothing of individual note.

***Will be continued***

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