Nashe's account led Drayton, like other of his contemporariesand, it may be said, later readersto accept the romance as true.
|
Drayton's interest in historical sources, attested by his Piers Gaveston, prompted him in 1596 to publish the Mortimeriados a long narrative poem on the civil wars of Edward II. The poem incorporates a number of genre trends, among them the epic, including such devices as the invocation to the muses, battle scenes, and catalogues of the main contenders. Although the conventional intrusion of Fortune is acknowledged, Drayton emphasizes the heroic, even hubristic, nature of his titular figure: "To Mortimer all countries are his own." He is seen as a "mighty malcontent"a character type, reflecting social tensions of the time, that became increasingly prominent in the literature of the 1590s. But Mortimer is also presented as the queen's lover, whose opposition to the king and daring escape from the Tower are shown in both a political and a romantic context. In 1603 Drayton revised the poem as The Barons' Wars , making it more historical and lessening the romantic aspects, with a consequent diminution of its most winning qualities.
|
Witness to his revisionist urge is Drayton's altering the verse from rime royal to ottava rimaa stanza form ( a b a b a b c c ) that he considered well proportioned, with the couplet providing a proper closure. This endorsement of the ottava form shows the impact perhaps of Daniel's Civil Wars but certainly of the two most popular Italian epics, Ariosto's Orlando Furioso and Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered , translated, respectively, by John Harington in 1591 and by Edward Fairfax in 1600.
|
Whether the epyllion seemed too focused on aesthetic and therefore pleasurable concerns, or whether it seemed altogether too frivolous for serious readers, by the mid-1590s discordantor at least differentelements begin to intrude. This can be seen, for example, in Drayton's Endymion and Phoebe , where the poet makes a tentative approach to something mystical at the conclusion and then leaves off because of his wearied muse. That same year George Chapman, in his uniquely bizarre fashion, attempted to add intellectual depth to his epyllion Ovid's Banquet of Sense , selecting for his narrative not a mythological subject but the purported relationship of the Emperor Augustus's daughter, Julia (here called Corynna), with the most wanton of poets.
|
The slight narrative simply records Ovid's secret spying of Corynna as she is bathing, playing upon her lute, and singing; this permits him to register the responses of his senses, presented in no accepted hierar-
|
|