wanted to be more classical, more colloquial (these often go together), more "tough-minded," more worldly.
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Jonson wrote three poems either to or about Donne. In the two addressing him Jonson praises Donne's poems as especially challenging"longer a-knowing than most wits do live"and praises Donne as an especially discriminating judge of poetry. In the third poem Jonson praises his addressee for desiring to see Donne's satires; her taste in literature attests to her human value: "Rare poems ask rare friends." Jonson was, not surprisingly, especially fond of Donne's earliest poetry, and he claimed to know "The Bracelet" by heart. Donne, for his part, contributed to the first edition of Volpone a Latin poem praising Jonson as equal, through both labor and genius, to the ancients. It is worth pondering, for our literary history, that one poem we have, a rather vigorous elegy, "The Expostulation," was ascribed to both Donne and Jonson in the seventeenth century. It may be by neither, but the significant point is the common attribution.
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Unlike Donne, Jonson was a professional writer. He operated within both the patronage and the market systems of Elizabethan and Jacobean England. As a playwright, he wrote for the public theaters; as a masque writer, he wrote for the court; as a lyric poet, he wrote both for specific individuals and for the general reading public. In 1616 Jonson took the extraordinary step of arranging and overseeing the publication of The Works of Benjamin Jonson . This seems normal enough to us, but it was a surprising cultural event at the time. A contemporary poet was claiming that his writings in the vernacular were "works," including his plays ("What others call a play, you call a worke," as one contemporary wit put it). "Works" were the product of labor and art, were meant to last, and most of all, were what classical authors produced.
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Jonson, in other words, was claiming that his writings were classics. They deserved the dignity (not stigma) of print and the careful editing that the classics received.Jonson's productions were Literature and he was an Authorcategories that he was helping to invent. We can see some of the force of this if we compare Jonson's relation to his poems with Donne's (who published only his poems directly funded by a patron), and Jonson's relation to his plays with that of Shakespeare, who made no effort to publish his plays and clearly saw them as scripts for his production company. But Jonson wrote Literature. The Works is a magnificent folio.
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