Tuesday, 7 November 2017

Paper no 1 sem 1 assignment

Name: Kajal Keraliya
Topic: The Elizabethan Age: Drama and Poetry
Roll no.: 19
Paper no 1: Renaissance Literature
M.A: Sem-1
Enrolment no.:2069108420180030
Year: 2017-19
E-mail: Www.kajalk1@gmail.com
Submitted to:
Smt. S.B. Gardi Department Of English
Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji
Bhavnagar University
 
 

Elizabethan Age:-
 
The Elizabethan Age is the time period associated with the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558–1603) and is often considered to be a golden age in English history. It was an age considered to be the height of the English Renaissance, and saw the full flowering of English literature and English poetry. In Elizabethan theater, William Shakespeare, among others, composed and staged plays in a variety of settings that broke away from England's past style of plays. It was an age of expansion and exploration abroad, while at home the Protestant Reformation was established and successfully defended against the Catholic powers of the Continent.
The Elizabethan Age is viewed so highly because of the contrasts with the periods before and after. It was a brief period of largely internal peace between the English Reformation, with battles between Protestants and Catholics, and the battles between parliament and the monarchy that would engulf the seventeenth century. The Protestant Catholic divide was settled, for a time, by the Elizabethan Religious Settlement and parliament was still not strong enough to challenge royal absolutism.
 
Elizabethan Poetry:
 
Elizabethan age was a great age of English literature. During this time the writing of poetry was the part of education among the educated people. That is why many books of poetry by different writers appeared during this age.
 
The proper Elizabethan literary age began in 1579, but before that year, Sir Thomas Wyatt and Earl of Surrey made their poetic contributions. Sir Wyatt brought the sonnet form Italy and made it popular in England. He followed the tradition of the Petrarchan sonnet with octave and sestet. There was later changed into English sonnet style by Shakespeare, who divided the sonnet into three quatrains summed up by a couplet. The Earl of Surrey wrote the first blank verse in English. The Elizabethan age produced many beautiful lyrics. One of the finest lyricists was Sir Philip Sidney.
 
William Shakespeare as Poet
The greatest dramatist Shakespeare was also a great poet of this age who wrote around 130 sonnets and they are very famous in English literature. He developed a new form of sonnet called the English sonnet or the Shakespearean sonnet, which rhyme abab cdcd efef gg. It is different from Petrarchan sonnet. Many of his sonnets refer to a girl, a rival poet and a dark-eyed beauty.
 
Edmund spencer
Edmund Spencer was a famous poet who introduced the Elizabethan age properly. In 1579, he wrote The Shepherd’s Calendar, a poem in twelve books, one for each month of the year. His greatest work was The Faerie Queen. Though it was planned to be written in twelve books, he could complete six of them. It is an allegorical work with three themes: a political theme, a moral theme, and a fairy tale. More than the story, this work is known for its magic feeling, wonderful music in verse, and the beauty of the sound. It is written in Spenserian stanza of nine lines, with the rhyme scheme ababbcbcc.
 
Lyrics of the Elizabethan Age
The Elizabethan age produced many beautiful lyrics. One of the finest lyricists was Sir Philip Sidney, who was a courtier, statesman, soldier and a poet. His books of sonnets Astrophel and Stella was printed in 1591, after his death. Another great poet was Sir Walter Raleigh, who was also a soldier, sailor, explorer, courtier and a writer. Some examples of best Elizabethan lyrics can be found in the plays of Shakespeare. His longer poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece are rather cold and without feelings. But the occasional lyrics found in his dramas are full of feelings and passion. The famous dramatist Marlowe has also written some fine lyrics.
 
The Metaphysical Poets
When the songs and sonnets of the great Elizabethan age passed away slowly, the lyrical power began to lose its force. The following age, the Jacobean Age, was more interested in the mind than in heart or eye. A group of poets, known as the Metaphysical poets, began to write poems which were less beautiful and less musical, but contained tricks of style and strange images. These poets tried to say what they hoped had never been said before. They had their own thoughts and they found their won manner of expressing them. They searched all fields of knowledge, science, as well as, nature, for comparisons. This mad their poetry difficult to understand.
The metaphysical style was started by John Donne, early in the 17th Century. Donne was a lawyer and a priest, and he also wrote religious poetry. He wrote many good things but no perfect poetry. His songs and sonnets are his finest works. He had made good use of direct speech to give a colloquial touch to his poems. He also used dramatic realism in his poetry. He said effective things in a few words.
The Metaphysical element was first seen in the love poems. If followed the example of the Italian writers whom Donne had taken as his masters. Donne’s influence was seen in the religious poets that followed him. One of them was George Herbert. He wrote poetry that was simpler than Donne’s because his experience was narrower. But his imagery appealed to the mind rather than the senses. Henry Vaughan considered both Donne and Herbert as his masters. He was more lyrical and gave sensitive descriptions of nature. Richard Crashaw showed the influence of Donne in the use of conceits. But he gave importance to the emotional and sentimental sides of conceits. Andrew Marvell combined Donne’s wit with lyrical beauty
 
Elizabethan Drama:
Drama was the chief literary glory of the Elizabethan age. In the beginning, these dramas were not so well- written, though the comedies were better than the tragedies. Ralph Roister Doister is taken as the first regular English comedy. It was a kind of farce in rough verse written by Nicholas Udall. Another comedy was Gammer Gurton’s Needle acted at Cambridge University in 1566. Lyly improved the comedy in his prose comedy Compaspe and Edimion.
 
Gorboduc, written by Thomas Norton and Thomas Sackville, was the first regular tragedy. It was very dull and written in poor blank verse. Thomas Kyd improved the tragedy by writing The Spanish Tragedy. It is a tragedy of blood and revenge.
 
Christopher Marlowe
The first great dramatist of the time was Christopher Marlowe. Though he lived a short life, he wrote some powerful tragedies, which are counted among the great works of English stage. He showed originality both in choice of subject matter and the use of blank verse. His powerful blank verse strengthens the drama and the development of character heightens the sense of tragedy. His first tragedy Tamburlaine the Great is written in blank verse with colorful images of power and violence.
The play brought a new kind of life to the English theatre. Tamburlaine is the shepherd and a robber. The play presents his mad ambition for political power and his rise to it. The kings who are defeated by his armies are ill treated. The ruler of the Turkey is taken from place to place in a cage like a wild animal. Other Kings have to pull Tamburlaine’s carriage. When they get tired they are hanged. Though the play is filled with terrible cruelty and violent language and action, Marlowe’s blank verse lines are usually powerful and effective so the play was well received.
In the next play The Jew of Malta a rich Jew refuses to pay taxes to the governor of Malta so his property is taken from him and in revenge he begins a life of violence. He helps the Turks when they attack Malta, and so they make him governor. But he decides to kill all Turkish officers. Unluckily an enemy makes his secret known and he himself is killed. The language of the play is not always violent. He helps the Turks when they attack Malta, and so they make him governor. But he decides to kill all the Turkish officers. Unluckily an enemy makes his secret known and he himself is killed. The language of the play is not always violent and forceful. The sound and rhythm are sometimes very fine.
Marlowe’s Dr. Faustus is based on the well-known story of a man (Faustus) who sold his soul to the devil in order to power and riches in the life. Faustus is mad for intellectual power. He agrees to give his soul to the devil, Mephistopheles in return for twenty-four years of splendid life. During these years the devil must serve him and give him what he wants. Finally, when Faustus has to face death, he is filled with fear and the end of the play is very tragic.
Edward the Second is probably Marlowe’s best play. It is comparable to Shakespeare’s best historical plays. It deals with English history and the story is about a young king who is destroyed by his own weakness. Certainly, Marlowe’s writing sets an example for other dramatists in the great Elizabethan age.
 
William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare is taken as the finest dramatist of all times. He began his career as a play actor and then moved to play writing. He had great dramatic as well as poetic gift. His plays look like a living world of people. His characters have both individual and universal qualities.
At the beginning Shakespeare wrote historical plays by improving the works of other writings. He then gradually discovered his powers and mastered his art. Some of his historical plays are Richard the Third and Richard the Second, King Henry the Fourth, Henry the Fifth and Henry the Sixth. In Richard the Third smooth blank verse has been used where the sense usually ends with the line. In Richard the Second, there is rather more freedom because the sense pushes through from one line to the next. King Henry the Fourth introduces a funny fat knight, Sir John Falstaff. Henry the Fifth is filled with the love of country and the spirit of war.
Shakespeare also wrote a good number of comedies. They are generally better than his historical plays. The intrigues of gentlemen and the love affair of young people are mainly the subject matter of his comedies. We often do not find a great disaster and very sad events in them. Shakespeare wrote comedies, which were mainly suitable for the Globe theatre. Among his famous comedies are: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, Twelfth Night, and As you Like it.
With his growing power and matured skill, Shakespeare wrote his tragedies. Romeo and Juliet is his first tragedy which presents a tragic love affair. He wrote three Roman tragedies, namely, Julies Caesar, Coriolanus and Antony and Cleopatra. His other four great tragedies are Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth and Othello. The central characters in these tragedies are always great men like King, Queen, Prince and so on. The course of events is designed in such a way that it leads the main characters to ruin because of their
own error in judgment (tragic flaw). This tragic flaw or the fatal weakness of character is clearly noticeable in all his tragedies. For example, Antony is ruined because of his love of comfort and love. Coriolanus is ruined by his terrible pride. The hamlet’s tragic flaw is hesitation, inability to act when action is needed. King Lear’s weakness is his openness to flattery. Shakespeare’s tragedies are great and world famous because they have universal qualities that pass into the heart of the human soul.
Shakespeare immense power and full maturity are reflected in his last group of plays, which are called the romances. They are Cymbeline, The Winter’s Tale and The Tempest. These romances are neither fully tragedies nor comedies. Some tragic situations are also found in them, but they end happily. The wrong doers are forgiven. All these works are colored with the idea of forgiveness and reconciliation. We also find beautiful islands and girls in them.
 
Benjamin Jonson
One of the great dramatists of Elizabethan age is Ben Jonson. His plays are based on the theory of the four humors or elements (fire, water, air and soil) and they are less beautiful and less attractive than Shakespeare’s. The ancient writers influenced much of the Jonson’s idea. He believed in three unities that are the unities of place, time and action.
Every Man in his Humour is his famous play. Jonson’s main failure as a dramatist lies in the fact that a humour for him was a special foolishness or the chief strong feeling in a man like anxiety and jealousy. Therefore his characters are walking humorous and not really human. Jonson wrote about twenty plays alone and others with other playwrights. Of his comedies Volpone the Fox, Every man out of his Humour, The Alchemist, Bartholomew Fair and The Silent Woman are famous. His tragedy Sejanus was played at the Globe Theatre. He was also one of the best producers of masques at this or any other time. These masques are dramatic entertainments with dancing and music, which are more important than the story and characters.
 
References:
http://www.bachelorandmaster.com
http://literarism.blogspot.in

2 comments:

  1. Good one, -Is this true that Metaphysical poetry are part of Elizabethan poetries?

    ReplyDelete
  2. very nice explain The Elizabeth age drama and poetry

    ReplyDelete

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