Source text:
Swinburne,
Algernon.
The Age of Shakespeare.
The
Complete Works of Algernon
Charles
Swinburne. Ed. Sir
Edmund Gosse, C.B. and Thomas
James Wise. vol. 11 (Prose
Works vol. 1). London: Heinemann, 1926. 267-480.
The Age of Shakespeare
[409]
WILLIAM ROWLEY
Of all the poets and humourists who lit up the London
stage for half a century of unequalled glory, William
Rowley was the most thoroughly loyal Londoner:
the most evidently and proudly mindful that he was
a citizen of no mean city. I have always thought
that this must have been the conscious or unconscious
source of the strong and profound interest which
his very remarkable and original genius had the good
fortune to evoke from the sympathies of Charles
Lamb. That divine cockney, if the word may be
used—and 'why in the name of Glory,' to borrow
the phrase of another immortal fellow-townsman,
should it not be?—as a term of no less honour than
Yorkshireman or Northumbrian, Cornishman or
Welshman, has lavished upon Rowley such cordial
and such manfully sympathetic praise as would
suffice to preserve and to immortalize the name of
a far lesser man and a far feebler workman in tragedy
or comedy, poetry or prose.
If Lamb had known and read the first work published
by Rowley, it is impossible to imagine that it
would not have been honoured by the tribute of some
passing and priceless word. Why it has never been
reissued (except in a private reprint for the Percy
Society) among the many less deserving and less
interesting revivals from the apparently and not really
ephemeral literature of its day would be to me an
insoluble problem, if I were so ignorant as never to
have realised the too obvious fact that chance, pure and
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simple chance, guides or misguides the intelligence,
and suggests or fails to suggest the duty of scholars
and of students who have given time and thought
to such far from unimportant or insignificant matters.
A Search for Money, or a Quest for the Wandering
Knight Monsieur L'Argent, is not comparable with
the best pamphlets of Nash or of Dekker: a competent
reader of those admirable improvisations will
at the first opening feel inclined to regard it as a feeble
and servile imitation of their quaint and obsolescent
manner; but he will soon find an original and a
vigorous vein of native humour in their comrade or
their disciple. The seekers after the wandering knight,
baffled in their search on shore, are compelled to
recognise the sad fact that 'the sea is lunatic, and
mad folks keep no money, he would sink if he were
there.' The description of an usurer is memorable
by its reference to the first great poet of England,
among whose followers Rowley is far from the least
worthy of honour. 'His visage (or vizard) like the
artificial Jew of Malta's nose ' brings before the
reader in vivid realism the likeness of Alleyn or
Burbage as he represented in grotesque and tragic
disguise the magnificent figure of Marlowe's creative
invention or discovery by dint of genius. (I do
not remember the curious verb 'to rand' except in
this little book: 'he randed out these sentences':
I presume it to be the first form of 'rant.') The
account of St. Paul's in 1609 is very curious and
scandalous: 'the very Temple itself (in bare humility)
stood without his cap, and so had stood many years,
many good folks had spoke for him because he could
not speak for himself, and somewhat had been gathered
in his behalf, but not half enough to supply his
necessity.'
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WILLIAM ROWLEY
When we pass from 'the Temple' to Westminster
Hall we come upon a sample of humour which would
be famous if it were the gift of a less ungratefully
forgotten hand.
'Here were two brothers at buffets with angels
in their fists about the thatch that blew off his house
into the other's garden and so spoiled a Hartichoke.'
It should not have been left to a later hand—it
should surely have been the privilege of Lamb's or
Hazlitt's, and perhaps rather Hazlitt's than even
Lamb's—to unearth and to transcribe the quaint and
spirited description of Thames watermen 'howling,
hollowing, and calling for passengers, as if all the
hags in hell had been imprisoned, and begging at the
grate, fiends and furies that (God be thanked) could
vex the soul but not torment it, yet indeed their
most power was over the body, for here an audacious
mouthing-randing-impudent-scullery-wastecoat-and-bodied
rascal would have hail'd a penny from us for
his scullership.'
Could Rabelais himself have described them better,
or with vigour of humorous expression more heartily
and enjoyably characteristic of his own all but incomparable
genius?
The good old times, as remote in Shakespeare's
day as in our own, were never more delightfully
described than by Rowley in this noble and simple
phrase: 'Then was England's whole year but a
St. George's day.'
Webster wished that what he wrote might be read
by the light of Shakespeare: an admirer of Rowley
might hope and must wish that he should be read
by the light of Lamb. His comedies have real as
well as realistic merit: not equal to that of Dekker's
or Middleton's at their best, but usually not far
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THE AGE OF SHAKESPEARE
inferior to Heywood's or to theirs. The first of
them,
A New Wonder: A Woman Never Vext, has
received such immortal honour from the loving
hand of Lamb that perhaps the one right thing to
say of it would be an adaptation of a Catholic formula
—'Agnus locutus est: causa finita est.' The realism
is so thorough as to make the interest something
more than historical: and historically it is so valuable
as well as amusing that a reasonable student may overlook
the offensive 'mingle-mangle' of prose and
verse which cannot but painfully affect the nerves of
all not congenitally insensitive readers, as it surely
must have ground and grated on the ears of an audience
accustomed to enjoy the prose as well as the verse
of Shakespeare and his kind. No graver offence
can be committed or conceived by a writer with any
claim to any but contemptuous remembrance than
this debasement of the currency of verse.
The character of Robert Foster is so noble and
attractive in its selfless and manful simplicity that
it gives us and leaves with us a more cordial sense
of sympathetic regard and respect for his creator
than we could feel if this gallant and homely figure
were withdrawn from the stage of his invention.
The female Polycrates who suffers under the curse
of inevitable and intolerable good fortune is an admirable
creature of broad comedy that never subsides
or overflows or degenerates into farce.
A Match at Midnight is as notable for vivid impression
of reality, but not so likely to leave a good
taste—as Charlotte Bronte might have said—in the
reader's mouth. Ancient Young, the hero; is a fine
fellow; but Messrs. Earlack and Carvegut are hardly
amusing enough to reconcile us to toleration of such
bad company. It is cleverly composed, and the
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WILLIAM ROWLEY
crosses and chances of the night are ingeniously and
effectively invented and arranged: there is real and
good broad humour in the parts of the usurer and his
sons and the attractive but unwidowed Widow Wag.
And I am not only free to admit but desirous to
remark that a juster and more valuable judgment
on such plays as these than any that I could undertake
to deliver may very possibly be expected from
readers whom they may more thoroughly arride—
to use a favourite phrase of the all but impeccable
critic, the all but infallible judge, whose praise has
set the name of Rowley so high in the rank of realistic
painters and historic naturalists for ever.
The copies of two dramatic nondescripts now
happily preserved and duly treasured in the library
of the British Museum bear inscribed in the same
old hand, at the head of the first page and again on
the last page under the last line, the same contemptuous
three words—'silly old story.' And I fear it can
hardly be maintained that either Chapman, when
writing
The Blind Beggar of Alexandria, or Rowley,
when writing
A Shoemaker, a Gentleman, was engaged
in any very rational or felicitous employment of his
wayward and unregulated powers. 'The Printer'
of the play last named assures 'the Reader' of 1638,
whom he assumes to be a member of the gentle
craft, that ' as plays were then, some twenty years
agone, it was in the fashion. 'A singular fashion,
the rare modern reader will probably reflect: especially
when he remembers how far finer and how thoroughly
charming a tribute of dramatic and poetic
celebration had been paid full eighteen years earlier
to the same favoured craft by the sweeter and rarer
genius of Dekker. This quaintly apologetic assurance
of bygone popularity in subject and in style will
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THE AGE OF SHAKESPEARE
remind all probable readers of Heywood's prologue
to
The Royal King and Loyal Subject, and his dedicatory
address prefixed to
The Four Prentices of London.
It happily was not, however, in the printer's power
to aver that such impudently immetrical verse as
Rowley at once breaks ground with was ever in fashion
with any of his famous fellows. Nothing can be
worse than the headlong and slipshod stumble of
Dekker's at its worst; but his were the faults of
hurry and impatience and shamefully scamped work:
Rowley's, if I mistake not, is the far graver error of
a preposterous theory that broken verse, rough and
untunable as the shock of short chopping waves, is
more dramatic and liker the natural speech of men
and women than the rolling and flowing verse of
Marlowe and of Shakespeare: which is as much
liker life as it is nobler and more satisfying in workmanship.
In reading bad verse the reader is constantly
reminded that he is not reading good prose;
and this is not the effect produced by true realism—
the impression left by actual intercourse or faithful
presentation of it.
The hagiology of this eccentric play is more like
Shirley's in
St. Patrick for Ireland than Dekker's and
Massinger's in
The Virgin Martyr. Assuredly there
is here nothing like the one incomparably lovely dialogue
of Dorothea with her attendant angel. But
there is the charm of a curious simplicity and sincerity
in Rowley's straightforward and homely dramatic
handling of the supernatural element: in the miracle
of St. Winifred's well, and the conversion of Albon
into St. Alban by 'that seminary knight,' as the tyrant
Maximinus rather comically calls him, Amphiabel
Prince of Wales. The courtship of the princely Offa,
while disguised as the shoemaker's apprentice Crispinus,
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WILLIAM ROWLEY
by the Roman princess Laodice, daughter of
Maximinus, is very lively and dramatic: the sprightliest
scene, I should say, ever played out on the stage
of Rowley's fancy. On the other hand, the martyrdom
of St. Winifred and St. Hugh is an abject tragic
failure: an abortive attempt at cheap terror and
jingling pity, followed up by doggrel farce of intolerable
grossness.
This play is a perfect repertory of slang and quaint
phrases: as when the master shoemaker, who has
for apprentices two persecuted princes in disguise,
and is a very inferior imitation of Dekker's admirable
Simon Eyre, calls his wife Lady d'Oliva—whatever
that may mean, and when she inquires of one of
the youngsters, 'What's the matter, boy? Why are
so many chancery bills drawn in thy face?' Habent
suafata libelli: it is inexplicable that this most curious
play should never have been republished, when the
volumes of Dodsley's Old Plays in their very latest
reissue are encumbered with heaps of such leaden
dullness and such bestial filth as no decent scavenger
and no rational nightman would have dreamed of
sweeping back into sight and smell of any possible
reader.
But it is or it should be inconceivable and incredible
that the masterpiece of Rowley's strong and
singular genius, a play remarkable for its peculiar
power or fusion of strange powers even in the sovereign
age of Shakespeare, should have waited upwards of
three hundred years and should still be waiting for
the appearance of a second edition. The tragedy
of
All's Lost by Lust, published in the same year
with Shakespeare's great posthumous torso of romantic
tragedy, was evidently a favourite child of its author's:
the terse and elaborate argument subjoined to the
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careful and exhaustive list of characters may suffice
to prove it. Among these characters we may note
that one, 'a simple clownish Gentleman,' was 'personated by the poet':
and having noted it, we cannot
but long, with a fruitless longing, for such confidences
as to the impersonation of the leading characters in
other memorable plays of the period. There is some
really good rough humour in the part of this honest
clown and his fellows; but no duly appreciative
reader will doubt that the author's heart was in the
work devoted to the tragic and poetic scenes of a
play which shows that the natural bent of his powers
was towards tragedy rather than comedy. Alike
as poet and as dramatist, he rises far higher and
enjoys his work far more when the aim of his flight
is towards the effects of imaginative terror and pity
than when it is confined to the effects of humorous
or pathetic realism. In the very first scene we breathe
the air of tragic romance and imminent evil provoked
by coalition rather than collision of the will of man
with the doom of destiny; and the king's defiance
of prophecy and tradition is so admirably rendered
or suggested as a sign of brutal and egoistic rather
than chivalrous or manful daring as to prepare the
way with great dramatic and poetic skill for the
subsequent scenes of attempted seduction and ultimate
violation. With these the underplot, interesting
and original in itself, well conceived and well carried
through, is happily and naturally interwoven. The
noble soliloquy of the invading and defeated Moorish
king is by grace of Lamb familiar to all true lovers
of the higher dramatic poetry of England. Nothing
can be livelier and more natural than the scenes in
which a recent bridegroom's heart is won from his
loving and low-born wife by the offered hand and
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WILLIAM ROWLEY
the sprightly seductions of a light-hearted and highborn
rival. But the crowning scene of the play and
the crowning grace of the poem is the interview of
father and daughter after the consummation of the
crime which gave Spain into the hand of the Moor.
The vivid dramatic life in everv word is even more
admirable than the great style, the high poetic spirit
of the scene. I have always ventured to wonder
that Lamb, whose admiration has made it twice immortal,
did not select as a companion or a counterpart
to it that other great camp scene from Webster's
Appius and Virginia in which another outraged warrior
and father stirs up his friends and fellow-soldiers to
vindication of his honour and revenge for his wrong.
It is surely even finer and more impressive than that
selected in preference to it, which closes with the
immolation of Virginia.
The scenes in which the tragic underplot of Rowley's
tragedy is deftly and effectively wound up are full
of living action and passion; that especially in which
the revenge of a deserted wife is wreaked mistakingly
on the villainous minion to whose instigation she owes
the infidelity of the husband for whom she mistakes
him. The gross physical horrors which deform the
close of a noble poem are relieved if not beautified
by the great style of its age—an age unparalleled in
wealth and variety of genius, a style unmatchable for
its union of inspired and imaginative dignity with
actual and vivid reality of impassioned and lofty life.
No comparison is possible, nor if possible could
it be profitable, between the somewhat rough-hewn
English oak of Rowley's play and the flawless Roman
steel of Landor's great Miltonic tragedy on the same
subject. The fervent praise of Southey was not too
generous to be just in its estimate of that austere
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masterpiece; it is lamentable to remember the injustice
of its illustrious author to the men of Shakespeare's
day. I fear he would certainly not have
excepted the noble work of his precursor from his
general condemnation or impeachment of 'their
bloody bawdries'—a misjudgment gross enough for
Hallam—or Voltaire when declining to the level of
a Hallam. Landor was as headlong as these were
hidebound, as fitful as they were futile; but not even
the dispraise or the disrelish of a finer if not of a
greater dramatic poet could affect the credit or impair
the station of one on whose merits the final sentence
of appreciation has been irrevocably pronounced by
the verdict of Charles Lamb.
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