1560 put an end to stage plays in Scotland at the very time when a dramatic literature seemed all set to emerge, so that there is nothing in Scotland comparable to the poetic drama of Tudor and Stuart England. Lindsay's is a long, undisciplined, self-indulgent play, but its brilliance in depicting vices and follies through the language and behavior of its characters, its vivid precision in locating contemporary problems in the actions of allegorical and symbolic figures are remarkable. Revivals of the play in recent years at the Edinburgh Festival have proved enormously successful. The story of King Humanitie led astray by Wantonness, Solace, Dame Sensualitie, Flatterie, Falset, and others, until reformed by Gude Counsall and others, and of the punishment of the Vices by Divine Correctioun and others may sound in summary like abstract allegory, but the figures have enormous vitality and humor. In addition to the personified virtues and vices there are real characters, such as the Soutar (shoemaker) and his wife, the Taylor with his wife and daughter, the Poor Man, the fraudulent Pardoner, who is a great comic character as well as a villain, and the eloquently moving figure of John the Common-weill. There is moral gravity, knockabout farce, and stirring eloquence in this great ramshackle play. In its attitude to religious abuses Lindsay comes close to the views of the Reformers, but it is behavior not doctrine that he is concerned with, and he never makes any statement that would be doctrinally suspect in Catholic eyes. Nevertheless, the play together with his satirical poems helped to place Sir David in the popular imagination as a great precursor of the Reformation in Scotland. As Allan Ramsay was to put it, Lindsay's satires helped "give the scarlet dame a box" sharper than "all the pelts of Knox."
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A tradition of poetry of popular revelry, distinctively Scottish, begins with two poems Peeblis to the Play and Christis Kirk on the Grene (both doubtfully attributed to James V and also, even more doubtfully, to James I), written probably in the fifteenth century. These poems in ten-line stanza with a "bob and wheel" ending are genre portraits full of color and action. They remained popular until well into the eighteenth century and were imitated by both Fergusson and Burns. What they represented, however, was in stark contrast to the mood evoked when the Parliament of 1560 set its face against what an Edinburgh Town Council proclamation of 1587 called "all menstrallis, pyperis, fidleris, common sangsters, and specially of baldrie and filthy sangs. . . ." The reformed Church of Scotland, presbyterian in government and Calvinist in theology, looked to the Bible as the ultimate authority, and
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