Jacobean Drama: Inevitable", Says Long "That Drama Should Decline After Shakespeare, For The Simple
Jacobean Drama: Inevitable", Says Long "That Drama Should Decline After Shakespeare, For The Simple
Jacobean Drama: Inevitable", Says Long "That Drama Should Decline After Shakespeare, For The Simple
Introduction:
Jacobean drama (that is, the drama of the age of James 1-1603-1625) was a
decadent form of the drama of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. The Elizabethan
age was the golden age of English drama. But with the turn of the century the drama in
England also took a turn. It does not mean that there were no dramatists left. There
certainly was a large number of them, but none of them could come anywhere near
Shakespeare.
Just as after Chaucer poetry in England suffered a decline, similarly after Shakespeare
had given his best (that is, after the sixteenth century) drama also suffered a decline.
With the passage of time it grew more and more decadent, till with Shirley in the age of
Charles I the old kind of drama expired and even theatres were closed (in 1642). "It was
inevitable", says Long "that drama should decline after Shakespeare, for the simple
reason that there was no other great enough to fill his place."
The dramatists of the Jacobean age can be divided into two classes as follows:
(i)
The dramatists of the old school-Dekker, Heywood, Webster, Beaumont, and Fletcher.
(ii)
Elizabethan dramatists, including Shakespeare, did not show any skill at architectonics.
Moreover, they were generally too lazy to invent plots for themselves and were content
to borrow them rather too frequently. It does not mean, however, that they were
plagiarists pure and simple. Shakespeare borrowed the plots of most of his plays, but by
virtue of his imagination, dramatic skill, poetic gift, and psychological insight
transformed them into altogether new entities. But the fact remains that he was a
borrower. "The Jacobean dramatists", observes Hardin Craig, "seem for the first time to
have begun to invent plots to suit their own tastes and ends." This is particularly true of
the comic dramatists like Marston and Ben Jonson. Secondly, Jacobean dramatists
show a greater skill in the construction and development of their plots. In many of them
the various threads of the action are carefully interwoven into a wonderful harmony of
texture seldom to be met with in Elizabethan plays. Jonson, Middleton, and Fletcher
were particularly endowed with the gift of plot-construction. Ben Jonson's Alchemist is,
according to Coleridge, one of the three literary works of the world (the two others being
Sophocles. Oedipus the King and Fielding's novel Tom Jones') which have perfectly
constructed plots. But what applies to the above-named dramatists does not apply to all
Jacobean dramatists. Many of them, such as Dekker, are agregious offenders in this
respect. As Jenet Spens points out in Elizabethan Drama, "the lack of connexion
between plot and sub-plot was one of the most marked vices of the post-Shakespearean
dramatists, and Dekker happens to offer the most absurd instance of it. There is unity in
Dekker's better plays, but it is the unity of the novel rather than that of the drama."
New Experiments:
In addition to their overall better plot-construction Jacobean dramatists may be
credited with setting up some new patterns of drama. It was they who gave us the
following kinds of drama, till then unattempted, or indifferently attempted, in England:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
Drama showing the life and manners of the people of London: such as many of Ben
Jonson's comedies.
(iv)
Drama dealing with social problems, mostly prostitution: such as Dekker's The Honest
Whore. This kind of drama later came to be practised by no less a distinguished
dramatist than George Bernard Shaw.
Moral Laxity:
A-fter giving Jacobean drama its due, let us discuss some elements of decadence
which appear in it. One of these elements is its moral laxity. As we have already said,
Jacobean drama was patronised mostly by the courtly classes which were known for
their lack of moral discipline. James I himself was, to use the words of Hardin Craig, "a
moralist without character." The same is true of most of the dramatists of his age. Some
of them made fairly sincere attempts to preach morality, and none of them commended,
or even condoned, sin or vice. But that does not absolve them of the charge of-showing
an almost morbid interest in sexual immorality even though for the purpose of
condemning it. Play after play was written on the theme of immoral love. The White
Devil, A Woman Killed with Kindness, and The Duchess ofMalfi are all tragedies of
illicit love. A King and No King is a tragedy of incestuous love. Later, in the Caroline
age, Ford produced his very shocking play 'Tis Pity She Is a Whore in which he openly
dealt with the incestuous passion of a brother and sister which ends in disaster for both.
Prostitutes appeared as heroines in many a play, such as Dekker's The Honest Whore
and Marston's The Dutch Courtesan. Abject debauchees figured prominently in
numerous plays. It was only Heywood and Webster who abstained from licentious
themes. Heywood looked to the past and, in the words of Irvin Ribner in his Jacobean
Tragedy, "doggedly continued to assert the moral values of an earlier age in a new world
in which they no longer had great meaning." As regards Webster, the same critic
observes that his plays "are an agonised search for moral order in the uncertain and
chaotic world of Jacobean scepticism."
Gloom and Pessimism:
This scepticism led the Jacobean age to spiritual vacuity and despair. The
courtiers, in particular, became voluptuous .cynics. But this voluptuousness was not
without the agonising sense of melancholy arising chiefly from the prospect of human
mortality without any Christian consolation regarding the future. Themes of death,
time, and mutability engaged the attention of most writers and the tragedies of the
Jacobean period, too, are exhibitive of what Ribner calls a "spirit of negation and
disillusion, depair and spiritual no-confidence." Shakespearean tragedy does give rise to
the feelings of pity and fear, and even awe, but it does not create any pessimistic feeling.
There are death and destruction no doubt, but the human spirit rises phoenix-like from
the pyre with a new, resplendent glory. But this kind of reassuring feeling is absent from
Jacobean tragedy. All that happens in it is quite earthly, lacking the spiritual dimension
of Hamlet, and still less, the much vaster, cosmic dimension of Lear. The scepticism,
gloom, despair, and pessimism of the age are thus reflected by its tragedy also.
Melodramatic Sensationalism:
The English have always had, in spite of the long line of critics from Sidney to
Dryden to Addison to Dr. Johnson, a taste for crude and melodramatic sensationalism
generally of the kind of physical violence and bloodshed. Even Elizabethan dramatists
including Shakespeare could not do without catering to the popular taste by introducing
into their tragedies a large number of murders and scenes of violence. They might have
been partly influenced by the tradition of Senecan revenge tragedy, but the popular taste
for "blood and thunder" was also a dictating factor. Considered from the point of view of
story alone, such plays as Marlowe's Tamburlaine and The Jew of Malta, Shakespeare's
Hamlet, and Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy are all melodramas. But their melodramatic
nature does not force itself on the eye or the ear, thanks to the rare poetic power which
sustains them in a higher region. But the same is not true of the Jacobean mel'odramatic
tragedies. With the departure or decay of the poetic power they have not much left to
recommend themselves to us. Most of the tragedies of the age only succeed in covering
the stage in the last act with a virtual rivulet of blood so revolting to the refined eye.
Sentimentalism:
On the other side of the scale to this artless and unthinking bloodshed was the
Jacobean tendency towards sentimentalism. To quote Allardyce Nicoll, "there is
apparent in the audience of the seventeenth century an increasing love of pathos and of
as Dekker, Heywood, and Tourneur handled blank verse quite loosely, nor could they
breathe into it that pulsating life and poetic beauty which constitute an overwhelming
proportion of the pleasure we derive from Elizabethan drama.