The Columbia History of British Poetry (37 page)

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Page 155
Griffiths, Eric.
The Printed Voice of Victorian Poetry
. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989.
Hagen, June Steffensen.
Tennyson and His Publishers
. London: Macmillan, 1979.
Lennard, John.
But I Digress: The Exploitation of Parentheses in English Printed Verse
. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991.
Love, Harold.
Scribal Publication in Seventeenth-Century England
. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993.
McGann, Jerome J.
The Beauty of Inflections: Literary Investigations in Historical Method and Theory
. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985.
McKenzie, D. F.
Bibliography and the Sociology of Texts
. London: The British Library, 1986.
Simpson, Percy.
Proof-reading in the Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1935.
 
Page 156
Varieties of Sixteenth-Century Narrative Poetry
Elizabeth Story Donno
Appearing the year following Queen Elizabeth's accession, the
Mirror for Magistrates
a biographical compendium of English historical figures beginning with the reign of Richard II and extending to that of Henry VIIIwas arguably the most influential publication of the sixteenth century, in large part because of its many literary derivatives. Designed to continue Boccaccio's
De casibus virorum illustrium
(translated by John Lydgate at the end of the fifteenth century as the
Fall of Princes
), the narratives were to exemplify the inconstancy of Fortune in human affairs. Thus nearly half of the "tragedies" included in the second edition (1563) were laid at the door of capricious Lady Fortuna; others were blamed on the evil nature of the individuals under review; and still others were attributed to the influence of the stars, or of the four humors, or of Providence and the ill will of man. Their import was largely admonitorycontemporaries might see in them, as in a looking glass, the appropriate punishment for evil deeds.
The scheme adopted for these versified narratives required the appearance of a ghost before an interlocutor to whom he related his story with its generally tragic conclusion. The various accounts were based on the contemporary chronicles of Robert Fabyan and Edward Hall and were linked by the prose exchanges among the several interlocutors; the major consequence of their publication in the
Mirror
was that history was now established as a suitable subject for poets to turn to.
Because the recitations of these historical ghosts were ex post facto, there was no dramatic tension in the accounts, but the narratives them-
 
Page 157
selves nevertheless provided subject matter for writers in a number of other genrescomplaints, tragic legends (''mirror" poems), chronicle history plays, and versified histories. Although the handling of verse in the
Mirror
much of it in the seven-line rime-royal stanza of Chaucer's
Troilus and Criseyde
was often less than effective, the metrical form established the general pattern for later writers of complaints.
Acknowledged as novel at the time, the "Induction" to Thomas Sackville's complaint of Henry, duke of Buckingham (written in 1561 and included in the 1563 edition of the
Mirror
) is of a different literary order from the other accounts. Sackville, too, uses rime royal, butinfluenced by Virgil and Dantehe presents a dramatic setting with a descent into hell, where the poet encounters a range of figures, some of them abstractions, like Revenge, others worthies of history, like Alexander and Caesar, who once had been at the summit of Fortune's wheel. The figures are as sharply delineated as in a woodcut, and the verse is smoothly sustained. Also in 1561, Sackville (with Thomas Norton, later known as the "Rackmaster General" for his persecution of religious dissenters) applied the moral lessons of the
Mirror
in writing the first regular English tragedy,
Gorbuduc
; the two works signaled the end of his literary career at the age of twenty-five.
Another instance of a literary work stemming from the 1560s more notable for its literary influence than for its reputation is the long poem on Romeo and Juliet by the young Arthur Brooke, who drowned in 1563, the year of its publication. Brooke's narrative was derived from a French version, based in turn on an Italian source, but his own handling of matter, character, and language proved so suggestive that, it is generally acknowledged, Shakespeare recalled the work almost verbatim, or worked on his tragedy with a copy of the text at hand. Written in a popular verse form of the time, poulter's measurerhymed couplets of alternating twelve-and fourteen-syllable lines broken by caesurasBrooke's poem was also popular. A third edition appeared in 1587, the same year Christopher Marlowe was to mock the "jigging veins of riming mother wits" and introduce his mighty line with Part I of
Tamburlaine
.
In accord with a thematic emphasis drawn from the
Mirror
tradition, Brooke places his narrative in the context of Fortune's roleconstant in nothing save inconstancyalluding to her intervention some forty times. He also elaborates his characters, most memorably Juliet's nurse, and despite the heavy moralizing address to the reader, treats the lovers'
 
Page 158
situation with sympathy as well as with a modicum of lubricity. Of Romeo, about to ascend the balcony, the narrator comments:
The seas are now appeased, and thou by happy star
Art come in sight of quiet haven, and now the wrackful bar
Is hid with swelling tide, boldly thou mayst resort
Unto thy wedded lady's bed, thy long desired port.
God grant no folly's mist so dim thy inward sight
That thou do miss the channel that doth lead to thy delight.
In the early editions of the
Mirror
only two of the thirty-three figures treated were females, and of these only one was to have literary significance. This was the soldier-poet Thomas Churchyard's Jane Shore, the wife of a London merchant who was said to have been the merriest of King Edward IV's concubines. When the complaint form, particularly instances relating to fallen women, became popular in the 1590s, the aged Churchyard re-dressed his earlier contribution to accord with the new luxuriant style by adding stanzas on the fleeting nature of love and beauty.
The initial impulse for such narratives came from the publication in 1592 of Samuel Daniel's
Complainant of Rosamond
together with his
Delia
, a collection of sonnets, the conjunction of the two genres illustrating a new concern with the erotic. In these compositions the format of the
Mirror
was retained if somewhat modified, but it was Ovid's narratives of deserted women, the
Heroides
, that provided their rhetorical mode. The slender narratives are now laced with apostrophes to Time and Fortune, with digressions relating to other historical or mythological accounts, and with their moralizing emphasis often concentrated into aphorisms.
Daniel links the account of Rosamondseduced by Henry II and poisoned by his queento his sonnets, since her ghost can only reach Elysium through the sighs of lovers like Delia. Enlisted to "register her wrong," the poet thus gains a double benison: relief for Rosamond and escape from his own grief. Brought from the safety of country life to the dangers of the court (an anti-court motif that also appears in the developing genre of satire), Rosamond attracts the aged king by her youth and beauty. At the urging of a "seeming matron," she is lodged in a solitary grange. There the king plies her with costly giftsthe ''orators of love"among them a casket engraved with figures from classical myth whose unhappy fate presages her own, and there he takes his "short

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