THE PEOPLE FOR WHOM SHAKESPEARE WROTE
By Charles Dudley Warner
Queen Elizabeth being dead about ten
o’clock in the morning, March 24, 1603, Sir
Robert Cary posted away, unsent, to King James of Scotland
to inform him of the “accident,” and got
made a baron of the realm for his ride. On his
way down to take possession of his new kingdom the
king distributed the honor of knighthood right and
left liberally; at Theobald’s he created eight-and-twenty
knights, of whom Sir Richard Baker, afterwards the
author of “A Chronicle of the Kings of England,”
was one. “God knows how many hundreds he
made the first year,” says the chronicler, “but
it was indeed fit to give vent to the passage of Honour,
which during Queen Elizabeth’s reign had been
so stopped that scarce any county of England had knights
enow to make a jury.”
Sir Richard Baker was born in 1568,
and died in 1645; his “Chronicle” appeared
in 1641. It was brought down to the death of James
in 1625, when, he having written the introduction
to the life of Charles I, the storm of the season
caused him to “break off in amazement,”
for he had thought the race of “Stewards”
likely to continue to the “world’s end”;
and he never resumed his pen. In the reign of
James two things lost their lustre the
exercise of tilting, which Elizabeth made a special
solemnity, and the band of Yeomen of the Guard, choicest
persons both for stature and other good parts, who
graced the court of Elizabeth; James “was so intentive to Realities that he little regarded shows,”
and in his time these came utterly to be neglected.
The virgin queen was the last ruler who seriously
regarded the pomps and splendors of feudalism.
It was characteristic of the age that
the death of James, which occurred in his fifty-ninth
year, should have been by rumor attributed to “poyson”;
but “being dead, and his body opened, there was
no sign at all of poyson, his inward parts being all
sound, but that his Spleen was a little faulty, which
might be cause enough to cast him into an Ague:
the ordinary high-way, especially in old bo’dies,
to a natural death.”
The chronicler records among the men
of note of James’s time Sir Francis Vere, “who
as another Hannibal, with his one eye, could see more
in the Martial Discipline than common men can do with
two”; Sir Edward Coke; Sir Francis Bacon, “who
besides his profounder book, of Novum Organum, hath
written the reign of King Henry the Seventh, in so
sweet a style, that like Manna, it pleaseth the tast
of all palats”; William Camden, whose Description
of Britain “seems to keep Queen Elizabeth alive
after death”; “and to speak it in a word,
the Trojan Horse was not fuller of Heroick Grecians,
than King James his Reign was full of men excellent
in all kindes of Learning.” Among these
was an old university acquaintance of Baker’s,
“Mr. John Dunne, who leaving Oxford, lived at
the Innes of Court, not dissolute, but very neat;
a great Visitor of Ladies, a great frequenter of Playes,
a great writer of conceited Verses; until such times
as King James taking notice of the pregnancy of his
Wit, was a means that he betook him to the study of
Divinity, and thereupon proceeding Doctor, was made
Dean of Pauls; and became so rare a Preacher, that
he was not only commended, but even admired by all
who heard him.”
The times of Elizabeth and James were
visited by some awful casualties and portents.
From December, 1602, to the December following, the
plague destroyed 30,518 persons in London; the same
disease that in the sixth year of Elizabeth killed
20,500, and in the thirty-sixth year 17,890, besides
the lord mayor and three aldermen. In January,
1606, a mighty whale came up the Thames within eight
miles of London, whose body, seen divers times above
water, was judged to be longer than the largest ship
on the river; “but when she tasted the fresh
water and scented the Land, she returned into the
sea.” Not so fortunate was a vast whale
cast upon the Isle of Thanet, in Kent, in 1575, which
was “twenty Ells long, and thirteen foot broad
from the belly to the backbone, and eleven foot between
the eyes. One of his eyes being taken out of his
head was more than a cart with six horses could draw;
the Oyl being boyled out of his head was Parmacittee.”
Nor the monstrous fish cast ashore in Lincolnshire
in 1564, which measured six yards between the eyes
and had a tail fifteen feet broad; “twelve men
stood upright in his mouth to get the Oyl.”
In 1612 a comet appeared, which in the opinion of
Dr. Bainbridge, the great mathematician of Oxford,
was as far above the moon as the moon is above the
earth, and the sequel of it was that infinite slaughters
and devastations followed it both in Germany and other
countries. In 1613, in Standish, in Lancashire,
a maiden child was born having four legs, four arms,
and one head with two faces the one before,
the other behind, like the picture of Janus. (One
thinks of the prodigies that presaged the birth of
Glendower.) Also, the same year, in Hampshire, a carpenter,
lying in bed with his wife and a young child, “was
himself and the childe both burned to death with a
sudden lightning, no fire appearing outwardly upon
him, and yet lay burning for the space of almost three
days till he was quite consumed to ashes.”
This year the Globe playhouse, on the Bankside, was
burned, and the year following the new playhouse, the
Fortune, in Golding Lane, “was by negligence
of a candle, clean burned down to the ground.”
In this year also, 1614, the town of Stratford-on-Avon
was burned. One of the strangest events, however,
happened in the first year of Elizabeth (1558), when
“dyed Sir Thomas Cheney, Lord Warden of the
Cinque Ports, of whom it is reported for a certain,
that his pulse did beat more than three quarters of
an hour after he was dead, as strongly as if he had
been still alive.” In 1580 a strange apparition
happened in Somersetshire three score personages
all clothed in black, a furlong in distance from those
that beheld them; “and after their appearing,
and a little while tarrying, they vanished away, but
immediately another strange company, in like manner,
color, and number appeared in the same place, and
they encountered one another and so vanished away.
And the third time appeared that number again, all
in bright armour, and encountered one another, and
so vanished away. This was examined before Sir
George Norton, and sworn by four honest men that saw
it, to be true.” Equally well substantiated,
probably, was what happened in Herefordshire in 1571:
“A field of three acres, in Blackmore, with
the Trees and Fences, moved from its place and passed
over another field, traveling in the highway that
goeth to Herne, and there stayed.” Herefordshire
was a favorite place for this sort of exercise of nature.
In 1575 the little town of Kinnaston was visited by
an earthquake: “On the seventeenth of February
at six o’clock of the evening, the earth began
to open and a Hill with a Rock under it (making at
first a great bellowing noise, which was heard a great
way off) lifted itself up a great height, and began
to travel, bearing along with it the Trees that grew
upon it, the Sheep-folds, and Flocks of Sheep abiding
there at the same time. In the place from whence
it was first moved, it left a gaping distance forty
foot broad, and fourscore Ells long; the whole Field
was about twenty Acres. Passing along, it overthrew
a Chappell standing in the way, removed an Ewe-Tree
planted in the Churchyard, from the West into the
East; with the like force it thrust before it High-wayes,
Sheep-folds, Hedges, and Trees, made Tilled ground
Pasture, and again turned Pasture into Tillage.
Having walked in this sort from Saturday in the evening,
till Monday noon, it then stood still.”
It seems not improbable that Birnam wood should come
to Dunsinane.
It was for an age of faith, for a
people whose credulity was fed on such prodigies and
whose imagination glowed at such wonderful portents,
that Shakespeare wrote, weaving into the realities
of sense those awful mysteries of the supernatural
which hovered not far away from every Englishman of
his time.
Shakespeare was born in 1564, when
Elizabeth had been six years on the throne, and he
died in 1616, nine years before James I., of the faulty
spleen, was carried to the royal chapel in Westminster,
“with great solemnity, but with greater lamentation.”
Old Baker, who says of himself that he was the unworthiest
of the knights made at Theobald’s, condescends
to mention William Shakespeare at the tail end of the
men of note of Elizabeth’s time. The ocean
is not more boundless, he affirms, than the number
of men of note of her time; and after he has finished
with the statesmen ("an exquisite statesman for his
own ends was Robert Earl of Leicester, and for his
Countries good, Sir William Cecill, Lord Burleigh"),
the seamen, the great commanders, the learned gentlemen
and writers (among them Roger Askam, who had sometime
been schoolmaster to Queen Elizabeth, but, taking
too great delight in gaming and cock-fighting, lived
and died in mean estate), the learned divines and
preachers, he concludes: “After such men,
it might be thought ridiculous to speak of Stage-players;
but seeing excellency in the meanest things deserve
remembring, and Roscius the Comedian is recorded in
History with such commendation, it may be allowed
us to do the like with some of our Nation. Richard
Bourbidge and Edward Allen, two such actors as no age
must ever look to see the like; and to make their Comedies
compleat, Richard Tarleton, who for the Part called
the Clowns Part, never had his match, never will have.
For Writers of Playes, and such as have been players
themselves, William Shakespeare and Benjamin Johnson
have especially left their Names recommended to posterity.”
Richard Bourbidge (or Burbadge) was
the first of the great English tragic actors, and
was the original of the greater number of Shakespeare’s
heroes Hamlet, Othello, Lear, Shylock, Macbeth,
Richard iii., Romeo, Brutus, etc. Dick
Tarleton, one of the privileged scapegraces of social
life, was regarded by his contemporaries as the most
witty of clowns and comedians. The clown was
a permitted character in the old theatres, and intruded
not only between the acts, but even into the play itself,
with his quips and antics. It is probable that
he played the part of clown, grave-digger, etc.,
in Shakespeare’s comedies, and no doubt took
liberties with his parts. It is thought that part
of Hamlet’s advice to the players “and
let those that play your clowns speak no more than
is set down for them,” etc. was
leveled at Tarleton.
The question is often asked, but I
consider it an idle one, whether Shakespeare was appreciated
in his own day as he is now. That the age, was
unable to separate him from itself, and see his great
stature, is probable; that it enjoyed him with a sympathy
to which we are strangers there is no doubt.
To us he is inexhaustible. The more we study him,
the more are we astonished at his multiform genius.
In our complex civilization, there is no development
of passion, or character, or trait of human nature,
no social evolution, that does not find expression
somewhere in those marvelous plays; and yet it is impossible
for us to enter into a full, sympathetic enjoyment
of those plays unless we can in some measure recreate
for ourselves the atmosphere in which they were written.
To superficial observation great geniuses come into
the world at rare intervals in history, in a manner
independent of what we call the progress of the race.
It may be so; but the form the genius shall take is
always determined by the age in which it appears, and
its expression is shaped by the environments.
Acquaintance with the Bedouin desert life of today,
which has changed little for three thousand years,
illumines the book of Job like an electric light.
Modern research into Hellenic and Asiatic life has
given a new meaning to the Iliad and the Odyssey, and
greatly enhanced our enjoyment of them. A fair
comprehension of the Divina Commedia is impossible
without some knowledge of the factions that rent Florence;
of the wars of Guelf and Ghibelline; of the spirit
that banished Dante, and gave him an humble tomb in
Ravenna instead of a sepulchre in the pantheon of
Santa Croce. Shakespeare was a child of his age;
it had long been preparing for him; its expression
culminated in him. It was essentially a dramatic
age. He used the accumulated materials of centuries.
He was playwright as well as poet. His variety
and multiform genius cannot otherwise be accounted
for. He called in the coinage of many generations,
and reissued it purified and unalloyed, stamped in
his own mint. There was a Hamlet probably, there
were certainly Romeos and Juliets, on the stage before
Shakespeare. In him were received the imaginations,
the inventions, the aspirations, the superstitions,
the humors, the supernatural intimations; in him met
the converging rays of the genius of his age, as in
a lens, to be sent onward thenceforth in an ever-broadening
stream of light.
It was his fortune to live not only
in a dramatic age, but in a transition age, when feudalism
was passing away, but while its shows and splendors
could still be seriously comprehended. The dignity
that doth hedge a king was so far abated that royalty
could be put upon the stage as a player’s spectacle;
but the reality of kings and queens and court pageantry
was not so far past that it did not appeal powerfully
to the imaginations of the frequenters of the Globe,
the Rose, and the Fortune. They had no such feeling
as we have in regard to the pasteboard kings and queens
who strut their brief hour before us in anachronic
absurdity. But, besides that he wrote in the
spirit of his age, Shakespeare wrote in the language
and the literary methods of his time. This is
not more evident in the contemporary poets than in
the chroniclers of that day. They all delighted
in ingenuities of phrase, in neat turns and conceits;
it was a compliment then to be called a “conceited”
writer.
Of all the guides to Shakespeare’s
time, there is none more profitable or entertaining
than William Harrison, who wrote for Holinshed’s
chronicle “The Description of England,”
as it fell under his eyes from 1577 to 1587.
Harrison’s England is an unfailing mine of information
for all the historians of the sixteenth century; and
in the edition published by the New Shakespeare Society,
and edited, with a wealth of notes and contemporary
references, by Mr. Frederick J. Furnivall, it is a
new revelation of Shakespeare’s England to the
general reader.
Harrison himself is an interesting
character, and trustworthy above the general race
of chroniclers. He was born in 1534, or, to use
his exactness of statement, “upon the 18th of
April, hora ii, minut 4, Secunde 56, at London, in
Cordwainer streete, otherwise called bowe-lane.”
This year was also remarkable as that in which “King
Henry 8 polleth his head; after whom his household
and nobility, with the rest of his subjects do the
like.” It was the year before Anne Boleyn,
haled away to the Tower, accused, condemned, and executed
in the space of fourteen days, “with sigheing
teares” said to the rough Duke of Norfolk, “Hither
I came once my lord, to fetch a crown imperial; but
now to receive, I hope, a crown immortal.”
In 1544, the boy was at St. Paul’s school; the
litany in the English tongue, by the king’s
command, was that year sung openly in St. Paul’s,
and we have a glimpse of Harrison with the other children,
enforced to buy those books, walking in general procession,
as was appointed, before the king went to Boulogne.
Harrison was a student at both Oxford and Cambridge,
taking the degree of bachelor of divinity at the latter
in 1569, when he had been an Oxford M.A. of seven years’
standing. Before this he was household chaplain
to Sir William Brooke, Lord Cobham, who gave him,
in 1588-89, the rectory of Radwinter, in Essex, which
he held till his death, in 1593. In 1586 he was
installed canon of Windsor. Between 1559 and
1571 he married Marion Isebrande, of whom
he said in his will, referring to the sometime supposed
unlawfulness of priests’ marriages, “by
the laws of God I take and repute in all respects
for my true and lawful wife.” At Radwinter,
the old parson, working in his garden, collected Roman
coins, wrote his chronicles, and expressed his mind
about the rascally lawyers of Essex, to whom flowed
all the wealth of the land. The lawyers in those
days stirred up contentions, and then reaped the profits.
“Of all that ever I knew in Essex,” says
Harrison, “Denis and Mainford excelled, till
John of Ludlow, alias Mason, came in place, unto whom
in comparison these two were but children.”
This last did so harry a client for four years that
the latter, still called upon for new fees, “went
to bed, and within four days made an end of his woeful
life, even with care and pensiveness.” And
after his death the lawyer so handled his son “that
there was never sheep shorn in May, so near clipped
of his fleece present, as he was of many to come.”
The Welsh were the most litigious people. A Welshman
would walk up to London bare-legged, carrying his
hose on his neck, to save wear and because he had
no change, importune his countrymen till he got half
a dozen writs, with which he would return to molest
his neighbors, though no one of his quarrels was worth
the money he paid for a single writ.
The humblest mechanic of England today
has comforts and conveniences which the richest nobles
lacked in Harrison’s day, but it was nevertheless
an age of great luxury and extravagance; of brave apparel,
costly and showy beyond that of any Continental people,
though wanting in refined taste; and of mighty banquets,
with service of massive plate, troops of attendants,
and a surfeit of rich food and strong drink.
In this luxury the clergy of Harrison’s
rank did not share. Harrison was poor on forty
pounds a year. He complains that the clergy were
taxed more than ever, the church having become “an
ass whereon every man is to ride to market and cast
his wallet.” They paid tenths and first-fruits
and subsidies, so that out of twenty pounds of a benefice
the incumbent did not reserve more than L 13 6d.
for himself and his family. They had to pay for
both prince and laity, and both grumbled at and slandered
them. Harrison gives a good account of the higher
clergy; he says the bishops were loved for their painful
diligence in their calling, and that the clergy of
England were reputed on the Continent as learned divines,
skillful in Greek and Hebrew and in the Latin tongue.
There was, however, a scarcity of
preachers and ministers in Elizabeth’s time,
and their character was not generally high. What
could be expected when covetous patrons canceled their
debts to their servants by bestowing advowsons of
bénéfices upon their bakers, butlers, cooks, grooms,
pages, and lackeys when even in the universities
there was cheating at elections for scholarships and
fellowships, and gifts were for sale! The morals
of the clergy were, however, improved by frequent conferences,
at which the good were praised and the bad reproved;
and these conferences were “a notable spur unto
all the ministers, whereby to apply their books, which
otherwise (as in times past) would give themselves
to hawking, hunting, tables, cards, dice, tipling
at the ale house, shooting, and other like vanities.”
The clergy held a social rank with tradespeople; their
sons learned trades, and their daughters might go out
to service. Jewell says many of them were the
“basest sort of people” unlearned, fiddlers,
pipers, and what not. “Not a few,”
says Harrison, “find fault with our threadbare
gowns, as if not our patrons but our wives were the
causes of our woe.” He thinks the ministers
will be better when the patrons are better, and he
defends the right of the clergy to marry and to leave
their goods, if they have any, to their widows and
children instead of to the church, or to some school
or almshouse. What if their wives are fond, after
the decease of their husbands, to bestow themselves
not so advisedly as their calling requireth; do not
duchesses, countesses, and knights’ wives offend
in the like fully so often as they? And Eve,
remarks the old philosopher of Radwinter “Eve
will be Eve, though Adam would say nay.”
The apparel of the clergy, at any
rate, was more comely and decent than it ever was
in the popish church, when the priests “went
either in divers colors like players, or in garments
of light hue, as yellow, red, green, etc.; with
their shoes piked, their hair crisped, their girdles
armed with silver; their shoes, spurs, bridles, etc.,
buckled with like metal; their apparel (for the most
part) of silk, and richly furred; their caps laced
and buttoned with gold; so that to meet a priest, in
those days, was to behold a peacock that spreadeth
his tail when he danceth before the hen.”
Hospitality among the clergy was never
better used, and it was increased by their marriage;
for the meat and drink were prepared more orderly and
frugally, the household was better looked to, and the
poor oftener fed. There was perhaps less feasting
of the rich in bishops’ houses, and “it
is thought much peradventure, that some bishops in
our time do come short of the ancient gluttony and
prodigality of their predecessors;” but this
is owing to the curtailing of their livings, and the
excessive prices whereunto things are grown.
Harrison spoke his mind about dignitaries.
He makes a passing reference to Thomas a Becket as
“the old Cocke of Canturburie,” who did
crow in behalf of the see of Rome, and the “young
cockerels of other sees did imitate his demeanour.”
He is glad that images, shrines, and tabernacles are
removed out of churches. The stories in glass
windows remain only because of the cost of replacing
them with white panes. He would like to stop
the wakes, guilds, paternities, church-ales, and
brides-ales, with all their rioting, and he thinks
they could get on very well without the feasts of
apostles, evangelists, martyrs, the holy-days after
Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide, and those of the
Virgin Mary, with the rest. “It is a world
to see,” he wrote of 1552, “how ready the
Catholicks are to cast the communion tables out of
their churches, which in derision they call Oysterboards,
and to set up altars whereon to say mass.”
And he tells with sinful gravity this tale of a sacrilegious
sow: “Upon the 23rd of August, the high
altar of Christ Church in Oxford was trimly decked
up after the popish manner and about the middest of
evensong, a sow cometh into the quire, and pulled
all to the ground; for which heinous fact, it is said
she was afterwards beheaded; but to that I am not privy.”
Think of the condition of Oxford when pigs went to
mass! Four years after this there was a sickness
in England, of which a third part of the people did
taste, and many clergymen, who had prayed not to live
after the death of Queen Mary, had their desire, the
Lord hearing their prayer, says Harrison, “and
intending thereby to give his church a breathing time.”
There were four classes in England gentlemen,
citizens, yeomen, and artificers or laborers.
Besides the nobles, any one can call himself a gentleman
who can live without work and buy a coat of arms though
some of them “bear a bigger sail than his boat
is able to sustain.” The complaint of sending
abroad youth to be educated is an old one; Harrison
says the sons of gentlemen went into Italy, and brought
nothing home but mere atheism, infidelity, vicious
conversation, and ambitious, proud behavior, and retained
neither religion nor patriotism. Among citizens
were the merchants, of whom Harrison thought there
were too many; for, like the lawyers, they were no
furtherance to the commonwealth, but raised the price
of all commodities. In former, free-trade times,
sugar was sixpence a pound, now it is two shillings
sixpence; raisins were one penny, and now sixpence.
Not content with the old European trade, they have
sought out the East and West Indies, and likewise Cathay
and Tartary, whence they pretend, from their now and
then suspicious voyages, they bring home great commodities.
But Harrison cannot see that prices are one whit abated
by this enormity, and certainly they carry out of
England the best of its wares.
The yeomen are the stable, free men,
who for the most part stay in one place, working the
farms of gentlemen, are diligent, sometimes buy the
land of unthrifty gentlemen, educate their sons to
the schools and the law courts, and leave them money
to live without labor. These are the men that
made France afraid. Below these are the laborers
and men who work at trades, who have no voice in the
commonwealth, and crowds of young serving-men who
become old beggars, highway-robbers, idle fellows,
and spreaders of all vices. There was a complaint
then, as now, that in many trades men scamped their
work, but, on the whole, husbandmen and artificers
had never been so good; only there were too many of
them, too many handicrafts of which the country had
no need. It appears to be a fault all along in
history that there are too many of almost every sort
of people.
In Harrison’s time the greater
part of the building in cities and towns was of timber,
only a few of the houses of the commonalty being of
stone. In an old plate giving a view of the north
side of Cheapside, London, in 1638, we see little
but quaint gable ends and rows of small windows set
close together. The houses are of wood and plaster,
each story overhanging the other, terminating in sharp
pédiments; the roofs projecting on cantilevers,
and the windows occupying the whole front of each
of the lower stories. They presented a lively
and gay appearance on holidays, when the pentices
of the shop fronts were hung with colored draperies,
and the balconies were crowded with spectators, and
every pane of glass showed a face. In the open
country, where timber was scarce, the houses were,
between studs, impaneled with clay-red, white, or blue.
One of the Spaniards who came over in the suite of
Philip remarked the large diet in these homely cottages:
“These English,” quoth he, “have
their houses made of sticks and dirt, but they fare
commonly so well as the king.” “Whereby
it appeareth,” comments Harrison, “that
he liked better of our good fare in such coarse cabins,
than of their own thin diet in their prince-like habitations
and palaces.” The timber houses were covered
with tiles; the other sort with straw or reeds.
The fairest houses were ceiled within with mortar
and covered with plaster, the whiteness and evenness
of which excited Harrison’s admiration.
The walls were hung with tapestry, arras-work, or
painted cloth, whereon were divers histories, or herbs,
or birds, or else ceiled with oak. Stoves had
just begun to be used, and only in some houses of the
gentry, “who build them not to work and feed
in, as in Germany and elsewhere, but now and then
to sweat in, as occasion and need shall require.”
Glass in windows, which was then good and cheap, and
made even in England, had generally taken the place
of the lattices and of the horn, and of the beryl which
noblemen formerly used in windows. Gentlemen were
beginning to build their houses of brick and stone,
in stately and magnificent fashion. The furniture
of the houses had also grown in a manner “passing
delicacy,” and not of the nobility and gentry
only, but of the lowest sort. In noblemen’s
houses there was abundance of arras, rich hangings
of tapestry, and silver vessels, plate often to the
value of one thousand and two thousand pounds.
The knights, gentlemen, and merchants had great provision
of tapestry, Turkie work, pewter, brass, fine linen,
and cupboards of plate worth perhaps a thousand pounds.
Even the inferior artificers and many farmers had
learned also to garnish their cupboards with plate,
their joined beds with silk hangings, and their tables
with fine linen evidences of wealth for
which Harrison thanks God and reproaches no man, though
he cannot see how it is brought about, when all things
are grown to such excessive prices.
Old men of Radwinter noted three things
marvelously altered in England within their remembrance.
The first was the multitude of chimneys lately erected;
whereas in their young days there were not, always
except those in the religious and manor houses, above
two or three chimneys in most upland towns of the
realm; each one made his fire against a reredos in
the hall, where he dined and dressed his meat.
The second was the amendment in lodging. In their
youth they lay upon hard straw pallets covered only
with a sheet, and mayhap a dogswain coverlet over them,
and a good round log for pillow. If in seven
years after marriage a man could buy a mattress and
a sack of chaff to rest his head on, he thought himself
as well lodged as a lord. Pillows were thought
meet only for sick women. As for servants, they
were lucky if they had a sheet over them, for there
was nothing under them to keep the straw from pricking
their hardened hides. The third notable thing
was the exchange of treene (wooden) platters into
pewter, and wooden spoons into silver or tin.
Wooden stuff was plenty, but a good farmer would not
have above four pieces of pewter in his house; with
all his frugality, he was unable to pay his rent of
four pounds without selling a cow or horse. It
was a time of idleness, and if a farmer at an alehouse,
in a bravery to show what he had, slapped down his
purse with six shillings in it, all the rest together
could not match it. But now, says Harrison, though
the rent of four pounds has improved to forty, the
farmer has six or seven years’ rent, lying by
him, to purchase a new term, garnish his cupboard with
pewter, buy three or four feather-beds, coverlets,
carpets of tapestry, a silver salt, a nest of bowls
for wine, and a dozen spoons. All these things
speak of the growing wealth and luxury of the age.
Only a little before this date, in 1568, Lord Buckhurst,
who had been ordered to entertain the Cardinal de
Chatillon in Queen Elizabeth’s palace at Sheen,
complains of the meanness of the furniture of his rooms.
He showed the officers who preceded the cardinal such
furniture and stuff as he had, but it did not please
them. They wanted plate, he had none; such glass
vessels as he had they thought too base. They
wanted damask for long tables, and he had only linen
for a square table, and they refused his square table.
He gave the cardinal his only unoccupied tester and
bedstead, and assigned to the bishop the bedstead upon
which his wife’s waiting-women did lie, and
laid them on the ground. He lent the cardinal
his own basin and ewer, candlesticks from his own table,
drinking-glasses, small cushions, and pots for the
kitchen. My Lord of Leicester sent down two pair
of fine sheets for the cardinal and one pair for the
bishop.
Harrison laments three things in his
day: the enhancing of rents, the daily oppression
of poor tenants by the lords of manors, and the practice
of usury a trade brought in by the Jews,
but now practiced by almost every Christian, so that
he is accounted a fool that doth lend his money for
nothing. He prays the reader to help him, in a
lawful manner, to hang up all those that take cent.
per cent. for money. Another grievance, and most
sorrowful of all, is that many gentlemen, men of good
port and countenance, to the injury of the farmers
and commonalty, actually turn Braziers, butchers,
tanners, sheep-masters, and woodmen. Harrison
also notes the absorption of lands by the rich; the
decay of houses in the country, which comes of the
eating up of the poor by the rich; the increase of
poverty; the difficulty a poor man had to live on an
acre of ground; his forced contentment with bread
made of oats and barley, and the divers places that
formerly had good tenants and now were vacant, hop-yards
and gardens.
Harrison says it is not for him to
describe the palaces of Queen Elizabeth; he dare hardly
peep in at her gates. Her houses are of brick
and stone, neat and well situated, but in good masonry
not to be compared to those of Henry VIII’s
building; they are rather curious to the eye, like
paper-works, than substantial for continuance.
Her court is more magnificent than any other in Europe,
whether you regard the rich and infinite furniture
of the household, the number of officers, or the sumptuous
entertainments. And the honest chronicler is so
struck with admiration of the virtuous beauty of the
maids of honor that he cannot tell whether to award
preeminence to their amiable countenances or to their
costliness of attire, between which there is daily
conflict and contention. The courtiers of both
sexes have the use of sundry languages and an excellent
vein of writing. Would to God the rest of their
lives and conversation corresponded with these gifts!
But the courtiers, the most learned, are the worst
men when they come abroad that any man shall hear
or read of. Many of the gentlewomen have sound
knowledge of Greek and Latin, and are skillful in
Spanish, Italian, and French; and the noblemen even
surpass them. The old ladies of the court avoid
idleness by needlework, spinning of silk, or continual
reading of the Holy Scriptures or of histories, and
writing diverse volumes of their own, or translating
foreign works into English or Latin; and the young
ladies, when they are not waiting on her majesty,
“in the mean time apply their lutes, citherns,
pricksong, and all kinds of music.” The
elders are skillful in surgery and the distillation
of waters, and sundry other artificial practices pertaining
to the ornature and commendation of their bodies;
and when they are at home they go into the kitchen
and supply a number of delicate dishes of their own
devising, mostly after Portuguese receipts; and they
prepare bills of fare (a trick lately taken up) to
give a brief rehearsal of all the dishes of every
course. I do not know whether this was called
the “higher education of women” at the
time.
In every office of the palaces is
a Bible, or book of acts of the church, or chronicle,
for the use of whoever comes in, so that the court
looks more like a university than a palace. Would
to God the houses of the nobles were ruled like the
queen’s! The nobility are followed by great
troops of serving-men in showy liveries; and it is
a goodly sight to see them muster at court, which,
being filled with them, “is made like to the
show of a peacock’s tail in the full beauty,
or of some meadow garnished with infinite kinds and
diversity of pleasant flowers.” Such was
the discipline of Elizabeth’s court that any
man who struck another within it had his right hand
chopped off by the executioner in a most horrible
manner.
The English have always had a passion
for gardens and orchards. In the Roman time grapes
abounded and wine was plenty, but the culture disappeared
after the Conquest. From the time of Henry iv.
to Henry VIII. vegetables were little used, but in
Harrison’s day the use of melons, pompions,
radishes, cucumbers, cabbages, turnips, and the like
was revived. They had beautiful flower-gardens
annexed to the houses, wherein were grown also rare
and medicinal herbs; it was a wonder to see how many
strange herbs, plants, and fruits were daily brought
from the Indies, America and the Canaries. Every
rich man had great store of flowers, and in one garden
might be seen from three hundred to four hundred medicinal
herbs. Men extol the foreign herbs to the neglect
of the native, and especially tobacco, “which
is not found of so great efficacy as they write.”
In the orchards were plums, apples, pears, walnuts,
filberts; and in noblemen’s orchards store of
strange fruit-apricots, almonds, peaches, figs, and
even in some oranges, lemons, and capers. Grafters
also were at work with their artificial mixtures,
“dallying, as it were, with nature and her course,
as if her whole trade were perfectly known unto them:
of hard fruits they will make soft, of sour sweet,
of sweet yet more delicate; bereaving also some of
their kernels, others of their cores, and finally
endowing them with the flavor of musk, amber, or sweet
spices at their pleasure.” Gardeners turn
annual into perpetual herbs, and such pains are they
at that they even used dish-water for plants.
The Gardens of Hesperides are surely not equal to
these. Pliny tells of a rose that had sixty leaves
on one bud, but in 1585 there was a rose in Antwerp
that had one hundred and eighty leaves; and Harrison
might have had a slip of it for ten pounds, but he
thought it a “tickle hazard.” In his
own little garden, of not above three hundred square
feet, he had near three hundred samples, and not one
of them of the common, or usually to be had.
Our kin beyond sea have always been
stout eaters of solid food, and in Elizabeth’s
time their tables were more plentifully laden than
those of any other nation. Harrison scientifically
accounts for their inordinate appetite. “The
situation of our region,” he says, “lying
near unto the north, does cause the heat of our stomachs
to be of somewhat greater force; therefore our bodies
do crave a little more ample nourishment than the
inhabitants of the hotter regions are accustomed withal,
whose digestive force is not altogether so vehement,
because their internal heat is not so strong as ours,
which is kept in by the coldness of the air, that
from time to time (specially in winter) doth environ
our bodies.” The north Britons in old times
were accustomed often to great abstinence, and lived
when in the woods on roots and herbs. They used
sometimes a confection, “whereof so much as a
bean would qualify their hunger above common expectation”;
but when they had nothing to qualify it with, they
crept into the marsh water up to their chins, and there
remained a long time, “only to qualify the heat
of their stomachs by violence.”
In Harrison’s day the abstemious
Welsh had learned to eat like the English, and the
Scotch exceeded the latter in “over much and
distemperate gormandize.” The English eat
all they can buy, there being no restraint of any
meat for religion’s sake or for public order.
The white meats milk, butter, and cheese though
very dear, are reputed as good for inferior people,
but the more wealthy feed upon the flesh of all sorts
of cattle and all kinds of fish. The nobility
("whose cooks are for the most part musical-headed
Frenchmen and strangers “) exceed in number
of dishes and change of meat. Every day at dinner
there is beef, mutton, veal, lamb, kid, pork, conie,
capon, pig, or as many of these as the season yielded,
besides deer and wildfowl, and fish, and sundry delicacies
“wherein the sweet hand of the seafaring Portingale
is not wanting.” The food was brought in
commonly in silver vessels at tables of the degree
of barons, bishops, and upwards, and referred first
to the principal personage, from whom it passed to
the lower end of the table, the guests not eating
of all, but choosing what each liked; and nobody stuffed
himself. The dishes were then sent to the servants,
and the remains of the feast went to the poor, who
lay waiting at the gates in great numbers.
Drink was served in pots, goblets,
jugs, and bowls of silver in noblemen’s houses,
and also in Venice glasses. It was not set upon
the table, but the cup was brought to each one who
thirsted; he called for such a cup of drink as he
wished, and delivered it again to one of the by-standers,
who made it clean by pouring out what remained, and
restored it to the sideboard. This device was
to prevent great drinking, which might ensue if the
full pot stood always at the elbow. But this order
was not used in noblemen’s halls, nor in any
order under the degree of knight or squire of great
revenue. It was a world to see how the nobles
preferred to gold and silver, which abounded, the new
Venice glass, whence a great trade sprang up with
Murano that made many rich. The poorest even
would have glass, but home-made a foolish
expense, for the glass soon went to bits, and the
pieces turned to no profit. Harrison wanted the
philosopher’s stone to mix with this molten glass
and toughen it.
There were multitudes of dependents
fed at the great houses, and everywhere, according
to means, a wide-open hospitality was maintained.
Froude gives a notion of the style of living in earlier
times by citing the details of a feast given when
George Neville, brother of Warwick the king-maker,
was made archbishop of York. There were present,
including servants, thirty-five hundred persons.
These are a few of the things used at the banquet:
three hundred quarters of wheat, three hundred tuns
of ale, one hundred and four tuns of wine, eighty
oxen, three thousand geese, two thousand pigs, four
thousand conies, four thousand heronshaws, four thousand
venison pasties cold and five hundred hot, four thousand
cold tarts, four thousand cold custards, eight seals,
four porpoises, and so on.
The merchants and gentlemen kept much
the same tables as the nobles, especially at feasts,
but when alone were content with a few dishes.
They also desired the dearest food, and would have
no meat from the butcher’s but the most delicate,
while their list of fruits, cakes, Gates, and outlandish
confections is as long as that at any modern banquet.
Wine ran in excess. There were used fifty-six
kinds of light wines, like the French, and thirty
of the strong sorts, like the Italian and Eastern.
The stronger the wine, the better it was liked.
The strongest and best was in old times called theologicum,
because it was had from the clergy and religious men,
to whose houses the laity sent their bottles to be
filled, sure that the religious would neither drink
nor be served with the worst; for the merchant would
have thought his soul should have gone straightway
to the devil if he had sent them any but the best.
The beer served at noblemen’s tables was commonly
a year old, and sometimes two, but this age was not
usual. In households generally it was not under
a month old, for beer was liked stale if it were not
sour, while bread was desired as new as possible so
that it was not hot.
The husbandman and artificer ate such
meat as they could easiest come by and have most quickly
ready; yet the banquets of the trades in London were
not inferior to those of the nobility. The husbandmen,
however, exceed in profusion, and it is incredible
to tell what meat is consumed at bridals, purifications,
and such like odd meetings; but each guest brought
his own provision, so that the master of the house
had only to provide bread, drink, houseroom, and fire.
These lower classes Harrison found very friendly at
their tables merry without malice, plain
without Italian or French subtlety so that
it would do a man good to be in company among them;
but if they happen to stumble upon a piece of venison
or a cup of wine or very strong beer, they do not stick
to compare themselves with the lord-mayor and
there is no public man in any city of Europe that
may compare with him in port and countenance during
the term of his office.
Harrison commends the great silence
used at the tables of the wiser sort, and generally
throughout the realm, and likewise the moderate eating
and drinking. But the poorer countrymen do babble
somewhat at table, and mistake ribaldry and loquacity
for wit and wisdom, and occasionally are cup-shotten;
and what wonder, when they who have hard diet and small
drink at home come to such opportunities at a banquet!
The wealthier sort in the country entertain their
visitors from afar, however long they stay, with as
hearty a welcome the last day as the first; and the
countrymen contrast this hospitality with that of their
London cousins, who joyfully receive them the first
day, tolerate them the second, weary of them the third,
and wish ’em at the devil after four days.
The gentry usually ate wheat bread,
of which there were four kinds, and the poor generally
bread made of rye, barley, and even oats and acorns.
Corn was getting so dear, owing to the forestallers
and middlemen, that, says the historian, “if
the world last a while after this rate, wheat and
rye will be no grain for poor men to feed on; and some
catterpillers [two-legged speculators] there are that
can say so much already.”
The great drink of the realm was,
of course, beer (and it is to be noted that a great
access of drunkenness came into England with the importation
much later of Holland gin) made from barley, hops,
and water, and upon the brewing of it Harrison dwells
lovingly, and devotes many pages to a description
of the process, especially as “once in a month
practiced by my wife and her maid servants.”
They ground eight bushels of malt, added half a bushel
of wheat meal, half a bushel of oat meal, poured in
eighty gallons of water, then eighty gallons more,
and a third eighty gallons, and boiled with a couple
of pounds of hops. This, with a few spices thrown
in, made three hogsheads of good beer, meet for a poor
man who had only forty pounds a year. This two
hundred gallons of beer cost altogether twenty shillings;
but although he says his wife brewed it “once
in a month,” whether it lasted a whole month
the parson does not say. He was particular about
the water used: the Thames is best, the marsh
worst, and clear spring water next worst; “the
fattest standing water is always the best.”
Cider and perry were made in some parts of England,
and a delicate sort of drink in Wales, called metheglin;
but there was a kind of “swish-swash”
made in Essex from honey-combs and water, called mead,
which differed from the metheglin as chalk from cheese.
In Shakespeare’s day much less
time was spent in eating and drinking than formerly,
when, besides breakfast in the forenoon and dinners,
there were “beverages” or “nuntion”
after dinner, and supper before going to bed “a
toie brought in by hardie Canutus,” who
was a gross feeder. Generally there were, except
for the young who could not fast till dinnertime,
only two meals daily, dinner and supper. Yet the
Normans had brought in the habit of sitting long at
the table a custom not yet altogether abated,
since the great people, especially at banquets, sit
till two or three o’clock in the afternoon; so
that it is a hard matter to rise and go to evening
prayers and return in time for supper.
Harrison does not make much account
of the early meal called “breakfast”;
but Froude says that in Elizabeth’s time the
common hour of rising, in the country, was four o’clock,
summer and winter, and that breakfast was at five,
after which the laborers went to work and the gentlemen
to business. The Earl and Countess of Northumberland
breakfasted together and alone at seven. The
meal consisted of a quart of ale, a quart of wine,
and a chine of beef; a loaf of bread is not mentioned,
but we hope (says Froude) it may be presumed.
The gentry dined at eleven and supped at five.
The merchants took dinner at noon, and, in London,
supped at six. The university scholars out of
term ate dinner at ten. The husbandmen dined
at high noon, and took supper at seven or eight.
As for the poorer sort, it is needless to talk of
their order of repast, for they dined and supped when
they could. The English usually began meals with
the grossest food and ended with the most delicate,
taking first the mild wines and ending with the hottest;
but the prudent Scot did otherwise, making his entrance
with the best, so that he might leave the worse to
the menials.
I will close this portion of our sketch
of English manners with an extract from the travels
of Hentzner, who visited England in 1598, and saw
the great queen go in state to chapel at Greenwich,
and afterwards witnessed the laying of the table for
her dinner. It was on Sunday. The queen
was then in her sixty-fifth year, and “very majestic,”
as she walked in the splendid procession of barons,
earls, and knights of the garter: “her
face, oblong, fair, but wrinkled; her eyes small, yet
black and pleasant; her nose a little hooked; her
lips narrow, and her teeth black (a defect the English
seem subject to from their great use of sugar).
She had in her ears two pearls with very rich drops;
she wore false hair, and that red; upon her head she
had a small crown, reported to be made of some of
the gold of the celebrated Lunebourg table. Her
bosom was uncovered, as all the English ladies have
it till they marry; and she had on a necklace of exceeding
fine jewels; her hands were small, her fingers long,
and her stature neither small nor low; her air was
stately, her manner of speaking mild and obliging.
That day she was dressed in white silk, bordered with
pearls of the size of beans, and over it a mantle
of black silk, shot with silver threads; her train
was very long, and the end of it borne by a marchioness;
instead of a chain she had an oblong collar of gold
and jewels.” As she swept on in this magnificence,
she spoke graciously first to one, then to another,
and always in the language of any foreigner she addressed;
whoever spoke to her kneeled, and wherever she turned
her face, as she was going along, everybody fell down
on his knees. When she pulled off her glove to
give her hand to be kissed, it was seen to be sparkling
with rings and jewels. The ladies of the court,
handsome and well shaped, followed, dressed for the
most part in white; and on either side she was guarded
by fifty gentlemen pensioners with gilt battle-axes.
In the ante-chapel, where she graciously received
petitions, there was an acclaim of “Long live
Queen Elizabeth!” to which she answered, “I
thank you, my good people.” The music in
the chapel was excellent, and the whole service was
over in half an hour. This is Hentzner’s
description of the setting out of her table:
“A gentleman entered the room
bearing a rod, and along with him another who had
a table-cloth, which, after they had both kneeled three
times, he spread upon the table; and after kneeling
again they both retired. Then came two others,
one with the rod again, the other with a salt-cellar,
a plate, and bread; and when they had kneeled as the
others had done, and placed what was brought upon
the table, they two retired with the same ceremonies
performed by the first. At last came an unmarried
lady (we were told she was a countess) and along with
her a married one, bearing a tasting-knife; the former
was dressed in white silk, who, when she had prostrated
herself three times, in the most graceful manner approached
the table, and rubbed the plates with bread and salt,
with as much awe as if the Queen had been present.
When they had waited there a little while the Yeomen
of the Guard entered, bare-headed, clothed in scarlet,
with a golden rose upon their backs, bringing in at
each turn a course of twenty-four dishes, served in
plate, most of it gilt; these dishes were received
by a gentleman in the same order they were brought,
and placed upon the table, while the Lady Taster gave
to each of the guard a mouthful to eat, of the particular
dish he had brought, for fear of, any poison.
During the time that this guard, which consists of
the tallest and stoutest men that can be found in
all England, being carefully selected for this service,
were bringing dinner, twelve trumpets and two kettle-drums
made the hall ring for half an hour together.
At the end of all this ceremonial, a number of unmarried
ladies appeared, who with particular solemnity lifted
the meat off the table and conveyed it into the Queen’s
inner and more private chamber, where, after she had
chosen for herself, the rest goes to the Ladies of
the court.”
The queen dined and supped alone,
with very few attendants. II
We now approach perhaps the most important
matter in this world, namely, dress. In nothing
were the increasing wealth and extravagance of the
period more shown than in apparel. And in it we
are able to study the origin of the present English
taste for the juxtaposition of striking and uncomplementary
colors. In Coryat’s “Crudities,”
1611, we have an Englishman’s contrast of the
dress of the Venetians and the English. The Venetians
adhered, without change, to their decent fashion, a
thousand years old, wearing usually black: the
slender doublet made close to the body, without much
quilting; the long hose plain, the jerkin also black but
all of the most costly stuffs Christendom can furnish,
satin and taffetas, garnished with the best lace.
Gravity and good taste characterized their apparel.
“In both these things,” says Coryat, “they
differ much from us Englishmen. For whereas they
have but one color, we use many more than are in the
rainbow, all the most light, garish, and unseemly
colors that are in the world. Also for fashion
we are much inferior to them. For we wear more
fantastical fashions than any nation under the sun
doth, the French only excepted.” On festival
days, in processions, the senators wore crimson damask
gowns, with flaps of crimson velvet cast over their
left shoulders; and the Venetian knights differed
from the other gentlemen, for under their black damask
gowns, with long sleeves, they wore red apparel, red
silk stockings, and red pantofles.
Andrew Boord, in 1547, attempting
to describe the fashions of his countrymen, gave up
the effort in sheer despair over the variety and fickleness
of costume, and drew a naked man with a pair of shears
in one hand and a piece of cloth in the other, to
the end that he should shape his apparel as he himself
liked; and this he called an Englishman. Even
the gentle Harrison, who gives Boord the too harsh
character of a lewd popish hypocrite and ungracious
priest, admits that he was not void of judgment in
this; and he finds it easier to inveigh against the
enormity, the fickleness, and the fantasticality of
the English attire than to describe it. So unstable
is the fashion, he says, that today the Spanish guise
is in favor; tomorrow the French toys are most fine
and delectable; then the high German apparel is the
go; next the Turkish manner is best liked, the Morisco
gowns, the Barbary sleeves, and the short French breeches;
in a word, “except it were a dog in a doublet,
you shall not see any so disguised as are my countrymen
in England.”
This fantastical folly was in all
degrees, from the courtier down to the tarter.
“It is a world to see the costliness and the
curiosity, the excess and the vanity, the pomp and
the bravery, the change and the variety, and finally
the fickleness and the folly that is in all degrees;
insomuch that nothing is more constant in England than
inconstancy of attire. So much cost upon the
body, so little upon souls; how many suits of apparel
hath the one, or how little furniture hath the other!”
“And how men and women worry the poor tailors,
with endless fittings and sending back of garments,
and trying on!” “Then must the long seams
of our hose be set with a plumb line, then we puff,
then we blow, and finally sweat till we drop, that
our clothes may stand well upon us.”
The barbers were as cunning in variety
as the tailors. Sometimes the head was polled;
sometimes the hair was curled, and then suffered to
grow long like a woman’s locks, and many times
cut off, above or under the ears, round as by a wooden
dish. And so with the beards: some shaved
from the chin, like the Turks; some cut short, like
the beard of the Marquis Otto; some made round, like
a rubbing-brush; some peaked, others grown long.
If a man have a lean face, the Marquis Otto’s
cut makes it broad; if it be platterlike, the long,
slender beard makes it seem narrow; “if he be
weasel-beaked, then much hair left on the cheeks will
make the owner look big like a bowdled hen, and so
grim as a goose.” Some courageous gentlemen
wore in their ears rings of gold and stones, to improve
God’s work, which was otherwise set off by monstrous
quilted and stuffed doublets, that puffed out the
figure like a barrel.
There is some consolation, though
I don’t know why, in the knowledge that writers
have always found fault with women’s fashions,
as they do today. Harrison says that the women
do far exceed the lightness of the men; “such
staring attire as in time past was supposed meet for
light housewives only is now become an habit for chaste
and sober matrons.” And he knows not what
to say of their doublets, with pendant pieces on the
breast full of jags and cuts; their “galligascons,”
to make their dresses stand out plumb round; their
farthingales and divers colored stockings. “I
have met,” he says, “with some of these
trulls in London so disguised that it hath passed
my skill to determine whether they were men or women.”
Of all classes the merchants were most to be commended
for rich but sober attire; “but the younger
sort of their wives, both in attire and costly housekeeping,
cannot tell when and how to make an end, as being
women indeed in whom all kind of curiosity is to be
found and seen.” Elizabeth’s time,
like our own, was distinguished by new fashionable
colors, among which are mentioned a queer greenish-yellow,
a pease-porridge-tawny, a popinjay of blue, a lusty
gallant, and the “devil in the hedge.”
These may be favorites still, for aught I know.
Mr. Furnivall quotes a description
of a costume of the period, from the manuscript of
Orazio Busino’s “Anglipotrida.”
Busino was the chaplain of Piero Contarina, the Venetian
ambassador to James I, in 1617. The chaplain
was one day stunned with grief over the death of the
butler of the embassy; and as the Italians sleep away
grief, the French sing, the Germans drink, and the
English go to plays to be rid of it, the Venetians,
by advice, sought consolation at the Fortune Theatre;
and there a trick was played upon old Busino, by placing
him among a bevy of young women, while the concealed
ambassador and the secretary enjoyed the joke.
“These theatres,” says Busino, “are
frequented by a number of respectable and handsome
ladies, who come freely and seat themselves among
the men without the slightest hesitation . . . .
Scarcely was I seated ere a very elegant dame, but
in a mask, came and placed herself beside me . . .
. She asked me for my address both in French and
English; and, on my turning a deaf ear, she determined
to honor me by showing me some fine diamonds on her
fingers, repeatedly taking off no fewer than three
gloves, which were worn one over the other . . . .
This lady’s bodice was of yellow satin, richly
embroidered, her petticoat [It is a trifle
in human progress, perhaps scarcely worth noting, that
the “round gown,” that is, an entire skirt,
not open in front and parting to show the under petticoat,
did not come into fashion till near the close of the
eighteenth century.] of gold tissue with
stripes, her robe of red velvet with a raised pile,
lined with yellow muslin with broad stripes of pure
gold. She wore an apron of point lace of various
patterns; her headtire was highly perfumed, and the
collar of white satin beneath the delicately wrought
ruff struck me as exceedingly pretty.” It
was quite in keeping with the manners of the day for
a lady of rank to have lent herself to this hoax of
the chaplain.
Van Meteren, a Netherlander,
1575, speaks also of the astonishing change or changeableness
in English fashions, but says the women are well dressed
and modest, and they go about the streets without any
covering of mantle, hood, or veil; only the married
women wear a hat in the street and in the house; the
unmarried go without a hat; but ladies of distinction
have lately learned to cover their faces with silken
masks or vizards, and to wear feathers. The English,
he notes, change their fashions every year, and when
they go abroad riding or traveling they don their
best clothes, contrary to the practice of other nations.
Another foreigner, Jacob Rathgeb, 1592, says the English
go dressed in exceeding fine clothes, and some will
even wear velvet in the street, when they have not
at home perhaps a piece of dry bread. “The
lords and pages of the royal court have a stately,
noble air, but dress more after the French fashion,
only they wear short cloaks and sometimes Spanish caps.”
Harrison’s arraignment of the
English fashions of his day may be considered as almost
commendative beside the diatribes of the old Puritan
Philip Stubbes, in “The Anatomie of Abuses,”
1583. The English language is strained for words
hot and rude enough to express his indignation, contempt,
and fearful expectation of speedy judgments. The
men escape his hands with scarcely less damage than
the women. First he wreaks his indignation upon
the divers kinds of hats, stuck full of feathers, of
various colors, “ensigns of vanity,” “fluttering
sails and feathered flags of defiance to virtue”;
then upon the monstrous ruffs that stand out a quarter
of a yard from the neck. “As the devil,
in the fullness of his malice, first invented these
ruffs, so has he found out two stays to bear up this
his great kingdom of ruffs one is a kind
of liquid matter they call starch; the other is a
device made of wires, for an under-propper. Then
there are shirts of cambric, holland, and lawn, wrought
with fine needle-work of silk and curiously stitched,
costing sometimes as much as five pounds. Worse
still are the monstrous doublets, reaching down to
the middle of the thighs, so hard quilted, stuffed,
bombasted, and sewed that the wearer can hardly stoop
down in them. Below these are the gally-hose
of silk, velvet, satin, and damask, reaching below
the knees. So costly are these that now it is
a small matter to bestow twenty nobles, ten pound,
twenty pound, fortie pound, yea a hundred pound of
one pair of Breeches. (God be merciful unto us!) To
these gay hose they add nether-socks, curiously knit
with open seams down the leg, with quirks and clocks
about the ankles, and sometimes interlaced with gold
and silver thread as is wonderful to behold. Time
has been when a man could clothe his whole body for
the price of these nether-socks. Satan was further
let loose in the land by reason of cork shoes and
fine slippers, of all colors, carved, cut, and stitched
with silk, and laced on with gold and silver, which
went flipping and flapping up and down in the dirt.
The jerkins and cloaks are of all colors and fashions;
some short, reaching to the knee; others dragging on
the ground; red, white, black, violet, yellow, guarded,
laced, and faced; hanged with points and tassels of
gold, silver, and silk. The hilts of daggers,
rapiers, and swords are gilt thrice over, and have
scabbards of velvet. And all this while the poor
lie in London streets upon pallets of straw, or else
in the mire and dirt, and die like dogs!”
Stubbes was a stout old Puritan, bent
upon hewing his way to heaven through all the allurements
of this world, and suspecting a devil in every fair
show. I fear that he looked upon woman as only
a vain and trifling image, a delusive toy, away from
whom a man must set his face. Shakespeare, who
was country-bred when he came up to London, and lived
probably on the roystering South Side, near the theatres
and bear-gardens, seems to have been impressed with
the painted faces of the women. It is probable
that only town-bred women painted. Stubbes declares
that the women of England color their faces with oils,
liquors, unguents, and waters made to that end, thinking
to make themselves fairer than God made them a
presumptuous audacity to make God untrue in his word;
and he heaps vehement curses upon the immodest practice.
To this follows the trimming and tricking of their
heads, the laying out their hair to show, which is
curled, crisped, and laid out on wreaths and borders
from ear to ear. Lest it should fall down it
is under-propped with forks, wires, and what not.
On the edges of their bolstered hair (for it standeth
crested round about their frontiers, and hanging over
their faces like pendices with glass windows on every
side) is laid great wreaths of gold and silver curiously
wrought. But this is not the worst nor the tenth
part, for no pen is able to describe the wickedness.
“The women use great ruffs and neckerchers of
holland, lawn, camerick, and such cloth, as the greatest
thread shall not be so big as the least hair that is:
then, lest they should fall down, they are smeared
and starched in the Devil’s liquor, I mean Starch;
after that dried with great diligence, streaked, patted
and rubbed very nicely, and so applied to their goodly
necks, and, withall, under-propped with supportasses,
the stately arches of pride; beyond all this they
have a further fetch, nothing inferior to the rest;
as, namely, three or four degrees of minor ruffs, placed
gradatim, step by step, one beneath another,
and all under the Master devil ruff. The skirts,
then, of these great ruffs are long and side every
way, pleted and crested full curiously, God wot.”
Time will not serve us to follow old
Stubbes into his particular inquisition of every article
of woman’s attire, and his hearty damnation
of them all and several. He cannot even abide
their carrying of nosegays and posies of flowers to
smell at, since the palpable odors and fumes of these
do enter the brain to degenerate the spirit and allure
to vice. They must needs carry looking-glasses
with them; “and good reason,” says Stubbes,
savagely, “for else how could they see the devil
in them? for no doubt they are the devil’s spectacles
[these women] to allure us to pride and consequently
to destruction forever.” And, as if it were
not enough to be women, and the devil’s aids,
they do also have doublets and jerkins, buttoned up
the breast, and made with wings, welts, and pinions
on the shoulder points, as man’s apparel is,
for all the world. We take reluctant leave of
this entertaining woman-hater, and only stay to quote
from him a “fearful judgment of God, shewed upon
a gentlewoman of Antwerp of late, even the 27th of
May, 1582,” which may be as profitable to read
now as it was then: “This gentlewoman being
a very rich Merchant man’s daughter: upon
a time was invited to a bridal, or wedding, which was
solemnized in that Toune, against which day she made
great preparation, for the pluming herself in gorgeous
array, that as her body was most beautiful, fair,
and proper, so her attire in every respect might be
correspondent to the same. For the accomplishment
whereof she curled her hair, she dyed her locks, and
laid them out after the best manner, she colored her
face with waters and Ointments: But in no case
could she get any (so curious and dainty she was)
that could starch, and set her Ruffs and Neckerchers
to her mind wherefore she sent for a couple of Laundresses,
who did the best they could to please her humors, but
in any wise they could not. Then fell she to
swear and tear, to curse and damn, casting the Ruffs
under feet, and wishing that the Devil might take her
when she wear any of those Neckerchers again.
In the meantime (through the sufference of God) the
Devil transforming himself into the form of a young
man, as brave and proper as she in every point of outward
appearance, came in, feigning himself to be a wooer
or suitor unto her. And seeing her thus agonized,
and in such a pelting chase, he demanded of her the
cause thereof, who straightway told him (as women can
conceal nothing that lieth upon their stomachs) how
she was abused in the setting of her Ruffs, which
thing being heard of him, he promised to please her
mind, and thereto took in hand the setting of her Ruffs,
which he performed to her great contentation and liking,
in so much as she looking herself in a glass (as the
Devil bade her) became greatly enamoured of him.
This done, the young man kissed her, in the doing whereof
she writhe her neck in, sunder, so she died miserably,
her body being metamorphosed into black and blue colors,
most ugglesome to behold, and her face (which before
was so amorous) became most deformed, and fearful to
look upon. This being known, preparence was made
for her burial, a rich coffin was provided, and her
fearful body was laid therein, and it covered very
sumptuously. Four men immediately assayed to lift
up the corpse, but could not move it; then six attempted
the like, but could not once stir it from the place
where it stood. Whereat the standers-by marveling,
caused the coffin to be opened to see the cause thereof.
Where they found the body to be taken away, and a
black Cat very lean and deformed sitting in the coffin,
setting of great Ruffs, and frizzling of hair, to the
great fear and wonder of all beholders.”
Better than this pride which forerunneth
destruction, in the opinion of Stubbes, is the habit
of the Brazilian women, who “esteem so little
of apparel” that they rather choose to go naked
than be thought to be proud.
As I read the times of Elizabeth,
there was then greater prosperity and enjoyment of
life among the common people than fifty or a hundred
years later. Into the question of the prices
of labor and of food, which Mr. Froude considers so
fully in the first chapter of his history, I shall
not enter any further than to remark that the hardness
of the laborer’s lot, who got, mayhap, only
twopence a day, is mitigated by the fact that for
a penny he could buy a pound of meat which now costs
a shilling. In two respects England has greatly
changed for the traveler, from the sixteenth to the
eighteenth century in its inns and its roads.
In the beginning of Elizabeth’s
reign travelers had no choice but to ride on horseback
or to walk. Goods were transported on strings
of pack-horses. When Elizabeth rode into the
city from her residence at Greenwich, she placed herself
behind her lord chancellor, on a pillion. The
first improvement made was in the construction of a
rude wagon a cart without springs, the body resting
solidly on the axles. In such a vehicle Elizabeth
rode to the opening of her fifth Parliament. In
1583, on a certain day, Sir Harry Sydney entered Shrewsbury
in his wagon, “with his trompeter blowynge,
verey joyfull to behold and see.” Even such
conveyances fared hard on the execrable roads of the
period. Down to the end of the seventeenth century
most of the country roads were merely broad ditches,
water-worn and strewn with loose stones. In 1640
Queen Henrietta was four weary days dragging over
the road from Dover to London, the best in England.
Not till the close of the sixteenth century was the
wagon used, and then rarely. Fifty years later
stage-wagons ran, with some regularity, between London
and Liverpool; and before the close of the seventeenth
century the stagecoach, a wonderful invention, which
had been used in and about London since 1650, was placed
on three principal roads of the kingdom. It averaged
two to three miles an hour. In the reign of Charles
ii. a Frenchman who landed at Dover was drawn
up to London in a wagon with six horses in a line,
one after the other. Our Venetian, Busino, who
went to Oxford in the coach with the ambassador in
1617, was six days in going one hundred and fifty miles,
as the coach often stuck in the mud, and once broke
down. So bad were the main thoroughfares, even,
that markets were sometimes inaccessible for months
together, and the fruits of the earth rotted in one
place, while there was scarcity not many miles distant.
But this difficulty of travel and
liability to be detained long on the road were cheered
by good inns, such as did not exist in the world elsewhere.
All the literature of the period reflects lovingly
the homelike delights of these comfortable houses
of entertainment. Every little village boasted
an excellent inn, and in the towns on the great thoroughfares
were sumptuous houses that would accommodate from two
to three hundred guests with their horses. The
landlords were not tyrants, as on the Continent, but
servants of their guests; and it was, says Harrison,
a world to see how they did contend for the entertainment
of their guests as about fineness and change
of linen, furniture of bedding, beauty of rooms, service
at the table, costliness of plate, strength of drink,
variety of wines, or well-using of horses. The
gorgeous signs at their doors sometimes cost forty
pounds. The inns were cheap too, and the landlord
let no one depart dissatisfied with his bill.
The worst inns were in London, and the tradition has
been handed down. But the ostlers, Harrison confesses,
did sometimes cheat in the feed, and they with the
tapsters and chamberlains were in league (and the landlord
was not always above suspicion) with highwaymen outside,
to ascertain if the traveler carried any valuables;
so that when he left the hospitable inn he was quite
likely to be stopped on the highway and relieved of
his money. The highwayman was a conspicuous character.
One of the most romantic of these gentry at one time
was a woman named Mary Frith, born in 1585, and known
as Moll Cut-Purse. She dressed in male attire,
was an adroit fencer, a bold rider, and a staunch
royalist; she once took two hundred gold jacobuses
from the Parliamentary General Fairfax on Hounslow
Heath. She is the chief character in Middleton’s
play of the “Roaring Girl”; and after
a varied life as a thief, cutpurse, pickpocket, highwayman,
trainer of animals, and keeper of a thieves’
fence, she died in peace at the age of seventy.
To return to the inns, Fyner Morrison, a traveler
in 1617, sustains all that Harrison says of the inns
as the best and cheapest in the world, where the guest
shall have his own pleasure. No sooner does he
arrive than the servants run to him one
takes his horse, another shows him his chamber and
lights his fire, a third pulls off his boots.
Then come the host and hostess to inquire what meat
he will choose, and he may have their company if he
like. He shall be offered music while he eats,
and if he be solitary the musicians will give him
good-day with music in the morning. In short,
“a man cannot more freely command at home, in
his own house, than he may do in his inn.”
The amusements of the age were often
rough, but certainly more moral than they were later;
and although the theatres were denounced by such reformers
as Stubbes as seminaries of vice, and disapproved by
Harrison; they were better than after the Restoration,
when the plays of Shakespeare were out of fashion.
The Londoners went for amusement to the Bankside,
or South Side of the Thames, where were the famous
Paris Gardens, much used as a rendezvous by gallants;
and there were the places for bear and bull baiting;
and there were the theatres the Paris Gardens,
the Swan, the Rose, the Hope, and the Globe. The
pleasure-seekers went over usually in boats, of which
there were said to be four thousand plying between
banks; for there was only one bridge, and that was
crowded with houses. All distinguished visitors
were taken over to see the gardens and the bears baited
by dogs; the queen herself went, and perhaps on Sunday,
for Sunday was the great day, and Elizabeth is said
to have encouraged Sunday sports, she had been (we
read) so much hunted on account of religion!
These sports are too brutal to think of; but there
are amusing accounts of lion-baiting both by bears
and dogs, in which the beast who figures so nobly
on the escutcheon nearly always proved himself an
arrant coward, and escaped away as soon as he could
into his den, with his tail between his legs.
The spectators were once much disgusted when a lion
and lioness, with the dog that pursued them, all ran
into the den, and, like good friends, stood very peaceably
together looking out at the people.
The famous Globe Theatre, which was
built in 1599, was burned in 1613, and in the fire
it is supposed were consumed Shakespeare’s manuscripts
of his plays. It was of wood (for use in summer
only), octagon shaped, with a thatched roof, open
in the centre. The daily performance here, as
in all theatres, was at three o’clock in the
afternoon, and boys outside held the horses of the
gentlemen who went in to the play. When theatres
were restrained, in 1600, only two were allowed, the
Globe and the Fortune, which was on the north side,
on Golden Lane. The Fortune was fifty feet square
within, and three stories high, with galleries, built
of wood on a brick foundation, and with a roof of tiles.
The stage was forty-three feet wide, and projected
into the middle of the yard (as the pit was called),
where the groundlings stood. To one of the galleries
admission was only twopence. The young gallants
used to go into the yards and spy about the galleries
and boxes for their acquaintances. In these theatres
there was a drop-curtain, but little or no scenery.
Spectators had boxes looking on the stage behind the
curtain, and they often sat upon the stage with the
actors; sometimes the actors all remained upon the
stage during the whole play. There seems to have
been great familiarity between the audience and the
actors. Fruits in season, apples, pears, and
nuts, with wine and beer, were carried about to be
sold, and pipes were smoked. There was neither
any prudery in the plays or the players, and the audiences
in behavior were no better than the plays.
The actors were all men. The
female parts were taken usually by boys, but frequently
by grown men, and when Juliet or Desdemona was announced,
a giant would stride upon the stage. There is
a story that Kynaston, a handsome fellow, famous in
female characters, and petted by ladies of rank, once
kept Charles I. waiting while he was being shaved before
appearing as Evadne in “The Maid’s Tragedy.”
The innovation of women on the stage was first introduced
by a French company in 1629, but the audiences would
not tolerate it, and hissed and pelted the actresses
off the stage. But thirty years later women took
the place they have ever since held; when the populace
had once experienced the charm of a female Juliet
and Ophelia, they would have no other, and the rage
for actresses ran to such excess at one time that
it was a fashion for women to take the male parts
as well. But that was in the abandoned days of
Charles ii. Pepys could not control his
delight at the appearance of Nell Gwynne, especially
“when she comes like a young gallant, and hath
the motions and carriage of a spark the most that
ever I saw any man have. It makes me, I confess,
admire her.” The acting of Shakespeare himself
is only a faint tradition. He played the ghost
in “Hamlet,” and Adam in “As You
Like It.” William Oldys says (Oldys was
an antiquarian who was pottering about in the first
part of the eighteenth century, picking up gossip in
coffee-houses, and making memoranda on scraps of paper
in book-shops) Shakespeare’s brother Charles,
who lived past the middle of the seventeenth century,
was much inquired of by actors about the circumstances
of Shakespeare’s playing. But Charles was
so old and weak in mind that he could recall nothing
except the faint impression that he had once seen
“Will” act a part in one of his own comedies,
wherein, being to personate a decrepit old man, he
wore a long beard, and appeared so weak and drooping
and unable to walk that he was forced to be supported
and carried by another person to a table, at which
he was seated among some company who were eating,
and one of them sang a song. And that was Shakespeare!
The whole Bankside, with its taverns,
play-houses, and worse, its bear pits and gardens,
was the scene of roystering and coarse amusement.
And it is surprising that plays of such sustained
moral greatness as Shakespeare’s should have
been welcome.
The more private amusements of the
great may well be illustrated by an account given
by Busino of a masque (it was Ben Jonson’s “Pleasure
Reconciled to Virtue”) performed at Whitehall
on Twelfthnight, 1617. During the play, twelve
cavaliers in masks, the central figure of whom was
Prince Charles, chose partners, and danced every kind
of dance, until they got tired and began to flag;
whereupon King James, “who is naturally choleric,
got impatient, and shouted aloud, ’Why don’t
they dance? What did you make me come here for?
Devil take you all, dance!’ On hearing this,
the Marquis of Buckingham, his majesty’s most
favored minion, immediately sprang forward, cutting
a score of lofty and very minute capers, with so much
grace and agility that he not only appeased the ire
of his angry sovereign, but moreover rendered himself
the admiration and delight of everybody. The
other masquers, being thus encouraged, continued successively
exhibiting their powers with various ladies, finishing
in like manner with capers, and by lifting their goddesses
from the ground . . . . The prince, however,
excelled them all in bowing, being very exact in making
his obeisance both to the king and his partner; nor
did we ever see him make one single step out of time a
compliment which can scarcely be paid to his companions.
Owing to his youth, he has not much wind as yet, but
he nevertheless cut a few capers very gracefully.”
The prince then went and kissed the hand of his serene
parent, who embraced and kissed him tenderly.
When such capers were cut at Whitehall, we may imagine
what the revelry was in the Bankside taverns.
The punishments of the age were not
more tender than the amusements were refined.
Busino saw a lad of fifteen led to execution for stealing
a bag of currants. At the end of every month,
besides special executions, as many as twenty-five
people at a time rode through London streets in Tyburn
carts, singing ribald songs, and carrying sprigs of
rosemary in their hands. Everywhere in the streets
the machines of justice were visible-pillories for
the neck and hands, stocks for the feet, and chains
to stretch across, in case of need, and stop a mob.
In the suburbs were oak cages for nocturnal offenders.
At the church doors might now and then be seen women
enveloped in sheets, doing penance for their evil deeds.
A bridle, something like a bit for a restive horse,
was in use for the curbing of scolds; but this was
a later invention than the cucking-stool, or ducking-stool.
There is an old print of one of these machines standing
on the Thames’ bank: on a wheeled platform
is an upright post with a swinging beam across the
top, on one end of which the chair is suspended over
the river, while the other is worked up and down by
a rope; in it is seated a light sister of the Bankside,
being dipped into the unsavory flood. But this
was not so hated by the women as a similar discipline being
dragged in the river by a rope after a boat.
Hanging was the common punishment
for felony, but traitors and many other offenders
were drawn, hanged, boweled, and quartered; nobles
who were traitors usually escaped with having their
heads chopped off only. Torture was not practiced;
for, says Harrison, our people despise death, yet
abhor to be tormented, being of frank and open minds.
And “this is one cause why our condemned persons
do go so cheerfully to their deaths, for our nation
is free, stout, hearty, and prodigal of life and blood,
and cannot in any wise digest to be used as villains
and slaves.” Felony covered a wide range
of petty crimes breach of prison, hunting
by night with painted or masked faces, stealing above
forty shillings, stealing hawks’ eggs, conjuring,
prophesying upon arms and badges, stealing deer by
night, cutting purses, counterfeiting coin, etc.
Death was the penalty for all these offenses.
For poisoning her husband a woman was burned alive;
a man poisoning another was boiled to death in water
or oil; heretics were burned alive; some murderers
were hanged in chains; perjurers were branded on the
forehead with the letter P; rogues were burned through
the ears; suicides were buried in a field with a stake
driven through their bodies; witches were burned or
hanged; in Halifax thieves were beheaded by a machine
almost exactly like the modern guillotine; scolds
were ducked; pirates were hanged on the seashore at
low-water mark, and left till three tides overwashed
them; those who let the sea-walls decay were staked
out in the breach of the banks, and left there as
parcel of the foundation of the new wall. Of rogues-that
is, tramps and petty thieves-the gallows devoured
three to four hundred annually, in one place or another;
and Henry VIII. in his time did hang up as many as
seventy-two thousand rogues. Any parish which
let a thief escape was fined. Still the supply
held out.
The legislation against vagabonds,
tramps, and sturdy beggars, and their punishment by
whipping, branding, etc., are too well known to
need comment. But considerable provision was
made for the unfortunate and deserving poor poorhouses
were built for them, and collections taken up.
Only sixty years before Harrison wrote there were few
beggars, but in his day he numbers them at ten thousand;
and most of them were rogues, who counterfeited sores
and wounds, and were mere thieves and caterpillars
on the commonwealth. He names twenty-three different
sorts of vagabonds known by cant names, such as “ruffers,”
“uprightmen,” “priggers,”
“fraters,” “palliards,”
“Abrams,” “dummerers “; and
of women, “demanders for glimmer or fire,”
“mortes,” “walking mortes,”
“doxes,” “kinching coves.”
London was esteemed by its inhabitants
and by many foreigners as the richest and most magnificent
city in Christendom. The cities of London and
Westminster lay along the north bank in what seemed
an endless stretch; on the south side of the Thames
the houses were more scattered. But the town
was mostly of wood, and its rapid growth was a matter
of anxiety. Both Elizabeth and James again and
again attempted to restrict it by forbidding the erection
of any new buildings within the town, or for a mile
outside; and to this attempt was doubtless due the
crowded rookeries in the city. They especially
forbade the use of wood in house-fronts and windows,
both on account of the danger from fire, and because
all the timber in the kingdom, which was needed for
shipping and other purposes, was being used up in
building. They even ordered the pulling down
of new houses in London, Westminster, and for three
miles around. But all efforts to stop the growth
of the city were vain.
London, according to the Venetian
Busino, was extremely dirty. He did not admire
the wooden architecture; the houses were damp and cold,
the staircases spiral and inconvenient, the apartments
“sorry and ill connected.” The wretched
windows, without shutters, he could neither open by
day nor close by night. The streets were little
better than gutters, and were never put in order except
for some great parade. Hentzner, however, thought
the streets handsome and clean. When it rained
it must have been otherwise. There was no provision
for conducting away the water; it poured off the roofs
upon the people below, who had not as yet heard of
the Oriental umbrella; and the countryman, staring
at the sights of the town, knocked about by the carts,
and run over by the horsemen, was often surprised
by a douche from a conduit down his back. And,
besides, people had a habit of throwing water and slops
out of the windows, regardless of passers-by.
The shops were small, open in front,
when the shutters were down, much like those in a
Cairo bazaar, and all the goods were in sight.
The shopkeepers stood in front and cried their wares,
and besought customers. Until 1568 there were
but few silk shops in London, and all those were kept
by women. It was not till about that time that
citizens’ wives ceased to wear white knit woolen
caps, and three-square Minever caps with peaks.
In the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign the apprentices
(a conspicuous class) wore blue cloaks in winter and
blue gowns in summer; unless men were threescore years
old, it was not lawful to wear gowns lower than the
calves of the legs, but the length of cloaks was not
limited. The journeymen and apprentices wore long
daggers in the daytime at their backs or sides.
When the apprentices attended their masters and mistresses
in the night they carried lanterns and candles, and
a great long club on the neck. These apprentices
were apt to lounge with their clubs about the fronts
of shops, ready to take a hand in any excitement to
run down a witch, or raid an objectionable house, or
tear down a tavern of evil repute, or spoil a playhouse.
The high-streets, especially in winter-time, were
annoyed by hourly frays of sword and buckler-men;
but these were suddenly suppressed when the more deadly
fight with rapier and dagger came in. The streets
were entirely unlighted and dangerous at night, and
for this reason the plays at the theatres were given
at three in the afternoon.
About Shakespeare’s time many
new inventions and luxuries came in: masks, muffs,
fans, periwigs, shoe-roses, love-handkerchiefs (tokens
given by maids and gentlewomen to their favorites),
heath-brooms for hair-brushes, scarfs, garters, waistcoats,
flat-caps; also hops, turkeys, apricots, Venice glass,
tobacco. In 1524, and for years after, was used
this rhyme
“Turkeys,
Carpes, Hops: Piccarel, and beers,
Came
into England: all in one year.”
There were no coffee-houses as yet,
for neither tea nor coffee was introduced till about
1661. Tobacco was first made known in England
by Sir John Hawkins in 1565, though not commonly used
by men and women till some years after. It was
urged as a great medicine for many ills. Harrison
says, 1573, “In these days the taking in of the
smoke of the Indian herb called ‘Tabaco,’
by an instrument formed like a little ladle, whereby
it passeth from the mouth into the head and stomach,
is greatly taken up and used in England, against Rewmes
and some other diseases engendered in the lungs and
inward parts, and not without effect.” It’s
use spread rapidly, to the disgust of James I. and
others, who doubted that it was good for cold, aches,
humors, and rheums. In 1614 it was said that
seven thousand houses lived by this trade, and that
L 399,375 a year was spent in smoke. Tobacco
was even taken on the stage. Every base groom
must have his pipe; it was sold in all inns and ale-houses,
and the shops of apothecaries, grocers, and chandlers
were almost never, from morning till night, without
company still taking of tobacco.
There was a saying on the Continent
that “England is a paradise for women, a prison
for servants, and a hell or purgatory for horses.”
The society was very simple compared with the complex
condition of ours, and yet it had more striking contrasts,
and was a singular mixture of downrightness and artificiality;
plainness and rudeness of speech went with the utmost
artificiality of dress and manner. It is curious
to note the insular, not to say provincial, character
of the people even three centuries ago. When
the Londoners saw a foreigner very well made or particularly
handsome, they were accustomed to say, “It is
a pity he is not an Englishman.” It
is pleasant, I say, to trace this “certain condescension”
in the good old times. Jacob Rathgeb (1592) says
the English are magnificently dressed, and extremely
proud and overbearing; the merchants, who seldom go
unto other countries, scoff at foreigners, who are
liable to be ill-used by street boys and apprentices,
who collect in immense crowds and stop the way.
Of course Cassandra Stubbes, whose mind was set upon
a better country, has little good to say of his countrymen.
“As concerning the nature, propertie,
and disposition of the people they be desirous of
new fangles, praising things past, contemning things
present, and coveting after things to come. Ambitious,
proud, light, and unstable, ready to be carried away
with every blast of wind.” The French paid
back with scorn the traditional hatred of the English
for the French. Perlin (1558) finds the people
“proud and seditious, with bad consciences and
unfaithful to their word in war unfortunate, in peace
unfaithful”; and there was a Spanish or Italian
proverb: “England, good land, bad people.”
But even Perlin likes the appearance of the people:
“The men are handsome, rosy, large, and dexterous,
usually fair-skinned; the women are esteemed the most
beautiful in the world, white as alabaster, and give
place neither to Italian, Flemish, nor German; they
are joyous, courteous, and hospitable (de bon
recueil).” He thinks their manners,
however, little civilized: for one thing, they
have an unpleasant habit of éructation at the
table (car iceux routent a la table
sans honte & ignominie); which recalls
Chaucer’s description of the Trumpington miller’s
wife and daughter:
“Men
might her rowtyng hearen a forlong,
The
wenche routeth eek par companye.”
Another inference as to the table
manners of the period is found in Coryat’s “Crudities”
(1611). He saw in Italy generally a curious custom
of using a little fork for meat, and whoever should
take the meat out of the dish with his fingers would
give offense. And he accounts for this peculiarity
quite naturally: “The reason of this their
curiosity is, because the Italian cannot by any means
indure to have his dish touched with fingers,
seeing all men’s fingers are not alike cleane.”
Coryat found the use of the fork nowhere else in Christendom,
and when he returned, and, oftentimes in England,
imitated the Italian fashion, his exploit was regarded
in a humorous light. Busino says that fruits were
seldom served at dessert, but that the whole population
were munching them in the streets all day long, and
in the places of amusement; and it was an amusement
to go out into the orchards and eat fruit on the spot,
in a sort of competition of gormandize between the
city belles and their admirers. And he avers
that one young woman devoured twenty pounds of cherries,
beating her opponent by two pounds and a half.
All foreigners were struck with the
English love of music and drink, of banqueting and
good cheer. Perlin notes a pleasant custom at
table: during the feast you hear more than a
hundred times, “Drink iou” (he loves to
air his English), that is to say, “Je m’en
vois boyre a toy.” You respond, in
their language, “Iplaigiu”; that is to
say, “Je vous plege.” If
you thank them, they say in their language, “God
tanque artelay”; that is, “Je
vous remercie de bon coeur.”
And then, says the artless Frenchman, still improving
on his English, you should respond thus: “Bigod,
sol drink iou agoud oin.” At the great
and princely banquets, when the pledge went round
and the heart’s desire of lasting health, says
the chronicler, “the same was straight wayes
knowne, by sound of Drumme and Trumpet, and the cannon’s
loudest voyce.” It was so in Hamlet’s
day:
“And
as he drains his draughts of Rhenish down,
The
kettle-drum and trumpet thus bray out
The
triumph of his pledge.”
According to Hentzner (1598), the
English are serious, like the Germans, and love show
and to be followed by troops of servants wearing the
arms of their masters; they excel in music and dancing,
for they are lively and active, though thicker of
make than the French; they cut their hair close in
the middle of the head, letting it grow on either side;
“they are good sailors, and better pyrates,
cunning, treacherous, and thievish;” and, he
adds, with a touch of satisfaction, “above three
hundred are said to be hanged annually in London.”
They put a good deal of sugar in their drink; they
are vastly fond of great noises, firing of cannon,
beating of drums, and ringing of bells, and when they
have a glass in their heads they go up into some belfry,
and ring the bells for hours together, for the sake
of exercise. Perlin’s comment is that men
are hung for a trifle in England, and that you will
not find many lords whose parents have not had their
heads chopped off.
It is a pleasure to turn to the simple
and hearty admiration excited in the breasts of all
susceptible foreigners by the English women of the
time. Van Meteren, as we said, calls
the women beautiful, fair, well dressed, and modest.
To be sure, the wives are, their lives only excepted,
entirely in the power of their husbands, yet they have
great liberty; go where they please; are shown the
greatest honor at banquets, where they sit at the
upper end of the table and are first served; are fond
of dress and gossip and of taking it easy; and like
to sit before their doors, decked out in fine clothes,
in order to see and be seen by the passers-by.
Rathgeb also agrees that the women have much more liberty
than in any other place. When old Busino went
to the Masque at Whitehall, his colleagues kept exclaiming,
“Oh, do look at this one oh, do see
that! Whose wife is this? and that
pretty one near her, whose daughter is she?”
There was some chaff mixed in, he allows, some shriveled
skins and devotees of S. Carlo Borromeo, but the beauties
greatly predominated.
In the great street pageants, it was
the beauty and winsomeness of the London ladies, looking
on, that nearly drove the foreigners wild. In
1606, upon the entry of the king of Denmark, the chronicler
celebrates “the unimaginable number of gallant
ladies, beauteous virgins, and other delicate
dames, filling the windows of every house with
kind aspect.” And in 1638, when Cheapside
was all alive with the pageant of the entry of the
queen mother, “this miserable old queen,”
as Lilly calls Marie de’ Medicis (Mr. Furnivall
reproduces an old cut of the scene), M. de la Serre
does not try to restrain his admiration for the pretty
women on view: only the most fecund imagination
can represent the content one has in admiring the
infinite number of beautiful women, each different
from the other, and each distinguished by some sweetness
or grace to ravish the heart and take captive one’s
liberty. No sooner has he determined to yield
to one than a new object of admiration makes him repent
the precipitation of his judgment.
And all the other foreigners were
in the like case of “goneness.” Kiechel,
writing in 1585, says, “Item, the women there
are charming, and by nature so mighty pretty as I
have scarcely ever beheld, for they do not falsify,
paint, or bedaub themselves as in Italy or other places;”
yet he confesses (and here is another tradition preserved)
“they are somewhat awkward in their style of
dress.” His second “item” of
gratitude is a Netherland custom that pleased him whenever
a foreigner or an inhabitant went to a citizen’s
house on business, or as a guest, he was received
by the master, the lady, or the daughter, and “welcomed”
(as it is termed in their language); “he has
a right to take them by the arm and to kiss them,
which is the custom of the country; and if any one
does not do so, it is regarded and imputed as ignorance
and ill-breeding on his part.” Even the
grave Erasmus, when he visited England, fell easily
into this pretty practice, and wrote with untheological
fervor of the “girls with angel faces,”
who were “so kind and obliging.” “Wherever
you come,” he says, “you are received
with a kiss by all; when you take your leave you are
dismissed with kisses; you return, kisses are repeated.
They come to visit you, kisses again; they leave you,
you kiss them all round. Should they meet you
anywhere, kisses in abundance in fine, wherever you
move there is nothing but kisses” a
custom, says this reformer, who has not the fear of
Stubbes before his eyes, “never to be sufficiently
commended.”
We shall find no more convenient opportunity
to end this part of the social study of the age of
Shakespeare than with this naïve picture of the sex
which most adorned it. Some of the details appear
trivial; but grave history which concerns itself only
with the actions of conspicuous persons, with the
manoeuvres of armies, the schemes of politics, the
battles of theologies, fails signally to give us the
real life of the people by which we judge the character
of an age.
III
When we turn from France to England
in, the latter part of the sixteenth and the beginning
of the seventeenth century, we are in another atmosphere;
we encounter a literature that smacks of the soil,
that is as varied, as racy, often as rude, as human
life itself, and which cannot be adequately appreciated
except by a study of the popular mind and the history
of the time which produced it.
“Voltaire,” says M. Guizot,
“was the first person in France who spoke of
Shakespeare’s genius; and although he spoke of
him merely as a barbarian genius, the French public
were of the opinion that he had said too much in his
favor. Indeed, they thought it nothing less than
profanation to apply the words genius and glory to
dramas which they considered as crude as they were
coarse.”
Guizot was one of the first of his
nation to approach Shakespeare in the right spirit that
is, in the spirit in which he could hope for any enlightenment;
and in his admirable essay on “Shakespeare and
His Times,” he pointed out the exact way in
which any piece or period of literature should be
studied, that is worth studying at all. He inquired
into English civilization, into the habits, manners,
and modes of thought of the people for whom Shakespeare
wrote. This method, this inquiry into popular
sources, has been carried much further since Guizot
wrote, and it is now considered the most remunerative
method, whether the object of study is literature
or politics. By it not only is the literature
of a period for the first time understood, but it
is given its just place as an exponent of human life
and a monument of human action.
The student who takes up Shakespeare’s
plays for the purpose of either amusement or cultivation,
I would recommend to throw aside the whole load of
commentary, and speculation, and disquisition, and
devote himself to trying to find out first what was
the London and the England of Shakespeare’s
day, what were the usages of all classes of society,
what were the manners and the character of the people
who crowded to hear his plays, or who denounced them
as the works of the devil and the allies of sin.
I say again to the student that by this means Shakespeare
will become a new thing to him, his mind will be enlarged
to the purpose and scope of the great dramatist, and
more illumination will be cast upon the plays than
is received from the whole race of inquisitors into
his phrases and critics of his genius. In the
light of contemporary life, its visions of empire,
its spirit of adventure, its piracy, exploration, and
warlike turmoil, its credulity and superstitious wonder
at natural phenomena, its implicit belief in the supernatural,
its faith, its virility of daring, coarseness of speech,
bluntness of manner, luxury of apparel, and ostentation
of wealth, the mobility of its shifting society, these
dramas glow with a new meaning, and awaken a profounder
admiration of the poet’s knowledge of human
life.
The experiences of the poet began
with the rude and rural life of England, and when
he passed into the presence of the court and into the
bustle of great London in an age of amazing agitation,
he felt still in his veins the throb of the popular
blood. There were classic affectations in England,
there were masks and mummeries and classic puerilities
at court and in noble houses Elizabeth’s
court would well have liked to be classical, remarks
Guizot but Shakespeare was not fettered
by classic conventionalities, nor did he obey the
unities, nor attempt to separate on the stage the
tragedy and comedy of life “immense
and living stage,” says the writer I like to
quote because he is French, upon which all things
are represented, as it were, in their solid form, and
in the place which they occupied in a stormy and complicated
civilization. In these dramas the comic element
is introduced whenever its character of reality gives
it the right of admission and the advantage of opportune
appearance. Falstaff appears in the train of Henry
V., and Doll Tear-Sheet in the train of Falstaff;
the people surround the kings, and the soldiers crowd
around their generals; all conditions of society, all
the phases of human destiny appear by turns in juxtaposition,
with the nature which properly belongs to them, and
in the position which they naturally occupy. . . .
“Thus we find the entire world,
the whole of human realities, reproduced by Shakespeare
in tragedy, which, in his eyes, was the universal theatre
of life and truth.”
It is possible to make a brutal picture
of the England of Shakespeare’s day by telling
nothing that is not true, and by leaving out much that
is true. M. Taine, who has a theory to sustain,
does it by a graphic catalogue of details and traits
that cannot be denied; only there is a great deal
in English society that he does not include, perhaps
does not apprehend. Nature, he thinks, was never
so completely acted out. These robust men give
rein to all their passions, delight in the strength
of their limbs like Carmen, indulge in coarse language,
undisguised sensuality, enjoy gross jests, brutal
buffooneries. Humanity is as much lacking as
decency. Blood, suffering, does not move them.
The court frequents bull and bear baitings; Elizabeth
beats her maids, spits upon a courtier’s fringed
coat, boxes Essex’s ears; great ladies beat their
children and their servants. “The sixteenth
century,” he says, “is like a den of lions.
Amid passions so strong as these there is not one lacking.
Nature appears here in all its violence, but also in
all its fullness. If nothing has been softened,
nothing has been mutilated. It is the entire
man who is displayed, heart, mind, body, senses, with
his noblest and finest aspirations, as with his most
bestial and savage appetites, without the preponderance
of any dominant passion to cast him altogether in
one direction, to exalt or degrade him. He has
not become rigid as he will under Puritanism.
He is not uncrowned as in the Restoration.”
He has entered like a young man into all the lusty
experiences of life, every allurement is known, the
sweetness and novelty of things are strong with him.
He plunges into all sensations. “Such were
the men of this time, Raleigh, Essex, Elizabeth, Henry
VIII himself, excessive and inconstant, ready for
devotion and for crime, violent in good and evil, heroic
with strange weaknesses, humble with sudden changes
of mood, never vile with premeditation like the roisterers
of the Restoration, never rigid on principle like
the Puritans of the Revolution, capable of weeping
like children, and of dying like men, often base courtiers,
more than once true knights, displaying constantly,
amidst all these contradictions of bearing, only the
overflowing of nature. Thus prepared, they could
take in everything, sanguinary ferocity and refined
generosity, the brutality of shameless debauchery,
and the most divine innocence of love, accept all
the characters, wantons and virgins, princes and mountebanks,
pass quickly from trivial buffoonery to lyrical sublimities,
listen alternately to the quibbles of clowns and the
songs of lovers. The drama even, in order to
satisfy the prolixity of their nature, must take all
tongues, pompous, inflated verse, loaded with imagery,
and side by side with this vulgar prose; more than
this, it must distort its natural style and limits,
put songs, poetical devices in the discourse of courtiers
and the speeches of statesmen; bring on the stage
the fairy world of opera, as Middleton says, gnomes,
nymphs of the land and sea, with their groves and
meadows; compel the gods to descend upon the stage,
and hell itself to furnish its world of marvels.
No other theatre is so complicated, for nowhere else
do we find men so complete.”
M. Taine heightens this picture in
generalizations splashed with innumerable blood-red
details of English life and character. The English
is the most warlike race in Europe, most redoubtable
in battle, most impatient of slavery. “English
savages” is what Cellini calls them; and the
great shins of beef with which they fill themselves
nourish the force and ferocity of their instincts.
To harden them thoroughly, institutions work in the
same groove as nature. The nation is armed.
Every man is a soldier, bound to have arms according
to his condition, to exercise himself on Sundays and
holidays. The State resembles an army; punishments
must inspire terror; the idea of war is ever present.
Such instincts, such a history, raises before them
with tragic severity the idea of life; death is at
hand, wounds, blood, tortures. The fine purple
cloaks, the holiday garments, elsewhere signs of gayety
of mind, are stained with blood and bordered with
black. Throughout a stern discipline, the axe
ready for every suspicion of treason; “great
men, bishops, a chancellor, princes, the king’s
relations, queens, a protector kneeling in the straw,
sprinkled the Tower with their blood; one after the
other they marched past, stretched out their necks;
the Duke of Buckingham, Queen Anne Boleyn, Queen Catherine
Howard, the Earl of Surrey, Admiral Seymour, the Duke
of Somerset, Lady Jane Grey and her husband, the Duke
of Northumberland, the Earl of Essex, all on the throne,
or on the steps of the throne, in the highest ranks
of honor, beauty, youth, genius; of the bright procession
nothing is left but senseless trunks, marred by the
tender mercies of the executioner.”
The gibbet stands by the highways,
heads of traitors and criminals grin on the city gates.
Mournful legends multiply, church-yard ghosts, walking
spirits. In the evening, before bedtime, in the
vast country houses, in the poor cottages, people
talk of the coach which is seen drawn by headless
horses, with headless postilions and coachmen.
All this, with unbounded luxury, unbridled debauchery,
gloom, and revelry hand in hand. “A threatening
and sombre fog veils their mind like their sky, and
joy, like the sun, pierces through it and upon them
strongly and at intervals.” All this riot
of passion and frenzy of vigorous life, this madness
and sorrow, in which life is a phantom and destiny
drives so remorselessly, Taine finds on the stage
and in the literature of the period.
To do him justice, he finds something
else, something that might give him a hint of the
innate soundness of English life in its thousands of
sweet homes, something of that great force of moral
stability, in the midst of all violence and excess
of passion and performance, which makes a nation noble.
“Opposed to this band of tragic figures,”
which M. Taine arrays from the dramas, “with
their contorted features, brazen fronts, combative
attitudes, is a troop (he says) of timid figures, tender
before everything, the most graceful and love-worthy
whom it has been given to man to depict. In Shakespeare
you will meet them in Miranda, Juliet, Desdemona,
Virginia, Ophelia, Cordelia, Imogen; but they abound
also in the others; and it is a characteristic of
the race to have furnished them, as it is of the drama
to have represented them. By a singular coincidence
the women are more of women, the men more of men, here
than elsewhere. The two natures go to its extreme in
the one to boldness, the spirit of enterprise and
resistance, the warlike, imperious, and unpolished
character; in the other to sweetness, devotion, patience,
inextinguishable affection (hence the happiness and
strength of the marriage tie), a thing unknown in
distant lands, and in France especially a woman here
gives herself without drawing back, and places her
glory and duty in obedience, forgiveness, adoration,
wishing, and pretending only to be melted and absorbed
daily deeper and deeper in him whom she has freely
and forever chosen.” This is an old German
instinct. The soul in this race is at once primitive
and serious. Women are disposed to follow the
noble dream called duty. “Thus, supported
by innocence and conscience, they introduce into love
a profound and upright sentiment, abjure coquetry,
vanity, and flirtation; they do not lie, they are not
affected. When they love they are not tasting
a forbidden fruit, but are binding themselves for
their whole life. Thus understood, love becomes
almost a holy thing; the spectator no longer wishes
to be malicious or to jest; women do not think of
their own happiness, but of that of the loved ones;
they aim not at pleasure, but at devotion.”
Thus far M. Taine’s brilliant
antithèses the most fascinating and
most dangerous model for a young writer. But
we are indebted to him for a most suggestive study
of the period. His astonishment, the astonishment
of the Gallic mind, at what he finds, is a measure
of the difference in the literature of the two races
as an expression of their life. It was natural
that he should somewhat exaggerate what he regards
as the source of this expression, leaving out of view,
as he does, certain great forces and currents which
an outside observer cannot feel as the race itself
feels. We look, indeed, for the local color of
this English literature in the manners and habits
of the times, traits of which Taine has so skillfully
made a mosaic from Harrison, Stubbes, Stowe, Holinshed,
and the pages of Reed and Drake; but we look for that
which made it something more than a mirror of contemporary
manners, vices, and virtues, made it representative
of universal men, to other causes and forces-such as
the Reformation, the immense stir, energy, and ambition
of the age (the result of invention and discovery),
newly awakened to the sense that there was a world
to be won and made tributary; that England, and, above
all places on the globe at that moment, London, was
the centre of a display of energy and adventure such
as has been scarcely paralleled in history. And
underneath it all was the play of an uneasy, protesting
democracy, eager to express itself in adventure, by
changing its condition, in the joy of living and overcoming,
and in literature, with small regard for tradition
or the unities.
When Shakespeare came up to London
with his first poems in his pocket, the town was so
great and full of marvels, and luxury, and entertainment,
as to excite the astonishment of continental visitors.
It swarmed with soldiers, adventurers, sailors who
were familiar with all seas and every port, men with
projects, men with marvelous tales. It teemed
with schemes of colonization, plans of amassing wealth
by trade, by commerce, by planting, mining, fishing,
and by the quick eye and the strong hand. Swaggering
in the coffee-houses and ruffling it in the streets
were the men who had sailed with Frobisher and Drake
and Sir Humphrey Gilbert, Hawkins, and Sir Richard
Granville; had perhaps witnessed the heroic death
of Sir Philip Sidney, at Zutphen; had served with Raleigh
in Anjou, Picardy, Languedoc, in the Netherlands,
in the Irish civil war; had taken part in the dispersion
of the Spanish Armada, and in the bombardment of Cadiz;
had filled their cups to the union of Scotland with
England; had suffered shipwreck on the Barbary Coast,
or had, by the fortune of war, felt the grip of the
Spanish Inquisition; who could tell tales of the marvels
seen in new-found America and the Indies, and, perhaps,
like Captain John Smith, could mingle stories of the
naïve simplicity of the natives beyond the Atlantic,
with charming narratives of the wars in Hungary, the
beauties of the seraglio of the Grand Turk, and the
barbaric pomp of the Khan of Tartary. There were
those in the streets who would see Raleigh go to the
block on the scaffold in Old Palace Yard, who would
fight against King Charles on the fields of Newbury
or Naseby, Kineton or Marston Moor, and perchance
see the exit of Charles himself from another scaffold
erected over against the Banqueting House.
Although London at the accession of
James I.(1603) had only about one hundred and fifty
thousand inhabitants the population of England
then numbering about five million it was
so full of life and activity that Frederick, Duke
of Wurtemberg, who saw it a few years before, in 1592,
was impressed with it as a large, excellent, and mighty
city of business, crowded with people buying and selling
merchandise, and trading in almost every corner of
the world, a very populous city, so that one can scarcely
pass along the streets on account of the throng; the
inhabitants, he says, are magnificently appareled,
extremely proud and overbearing, who scoff and laugh
at foreigners, and no one dare oppose them lest the
street boys and apprentices collect together in immense
crowds and strike to right and left unmercifully without
regard to persons.
There prevailed an insatiable curiosity
for seeing strange sights and hearing strange adventures,
with an eager desire for visiting foreign countries,
which Shakespeare and all the play-writers satirize.
Conversation turned upon the wonderful discoveries
of travelers, whose voyages to the New World occupied
much of the public attention. The exaggeration
which from love of importance inflated the narratives,
the poets also take note of. There was also a
universal taste for hazard in money as well as in
travel, for putting it out on risks at exorbitant
interest, and the habit of gaming reached prodigious
excess. The passion for sudden wealth was fired
by the success of the sea-rovers, news of which inflamed
the imagination. Samuel Kiechel, a merchant of
Ulm, who was in London in 1585, records that, “news
arrived of a Spanish ship captured by Drake, in which
it was said there were two millions of uncoined gold
and silver in ingots, fifty thousand crowns in coined
reals, seven thousand hides, four chests of pearls,
each containing two bushels, and some sacks of cochineal the
whole valued at twenty-five barrels of gold; it was
said to be one year and a half’s tribute from
Peru.”
The passion for travel was at such
a height that those who were unable to accomplish
distant journeys, but had only crossed over into France
and Italy, gave themselves great airs on their return.
“Farewell, monsieur traveler,” says Shakespeare;
“look, you lisp, and wear strange suits; disable
all the benefits of your own country; be out of love
with your nativity, and almost chide God for making
you that countenance you are, or I will scarce think
you have swam in a gondola.” The Londoners
dearly loved gossip, and indulged in exaggeration
of speech and high-flown compliment. One gallant
says to another: “O, signior, the star that
governs my life is contentment; give me leave to interre
myself in your arms.” “Not
so, sir, it is too unworthy an enclosure to contain
such preciousness!”
Dancing was the daily occupation rather
than the amusement at court and elsewhere, and the
names of dances exceeded the list of the virtues such
as the French brawl, the pavón, the measure, the
canary, and many under the general titles of corantees,
jigs, galliards, and fancies. At the dinner and
ball given by James I. to Juan Fernandez de Velasco,
Constable of Castile, in 1604, fifty ladies of honor,
very elegantly dressed and extremely beautiful, danced
with the noblemen and gentlemen. Prince Henry
danced a galliard with a lady, “with much sprightliness
and modesty, cutting several capers in the course
of the dance”; the Earl of Southampton led out
the queen, and with three other couples danced a brando,
and so on, the Spanish visitors looking on. When
Elizabeth was old and had a wrinkled face and black
teeth, she was one day discovered practicing the dance
step alone, to the sound of a fiddle, determined to
keep up to the last the limberness and agility necessary
to impress foreign ambassadors with her grace and
youth. There was one custom, however, that may
have made dancing a labor of love: it was considered
ill manners for the gentleman not to kiss his partner.
Indeed, in all households and in all ranks of society
the guest was expected to salute thus all the ladies
a custom which the grave Erasmus, who was in England
in the reign of Henry VIII., found not disagreeable.
Magnificence of display went hand
in hand with a taste for cruel and barbarous amusements.
At this same dinner to the Constable of Castile, the
two buffets of the king and queen in the audience-chamber,
where the banquet was held, were loaded with plate
of exquisite workmanship, rich vessels of gold, agate,
and other precious stones. The constable drank
to the king the health of the queen from the lid of
a cup of agate of extraordinary beauty and richness,
set with diamonds and rubies, praying his majesty
would condescend to drink the toast from the cup, which
he did accordingly, and then the constable directed
that the cup should remain in his majesty’s
buffet. The constable also drank to the queen
the health of the king from a very beautiful dragon-shaped
cup of crystal garnished with gold, drinking from
the cover, and the queen, standing up, gave the pledge
from the cup itself, and then the constable ordered
that the cup should remain in the queen’s buffet.
The banquet lasted three hours, when
the cloth was removed, the table was placed upon the
ground that is, removed from the dais and
their majesties, standing upon it, washed their hands
in basins, as did the others. After the dinner
was the ball, and that ended, they took their places
at the windows of a roam that looked out upon a square,
where a platform was raised and a vast crowd was assembled
to see the king’s bears fight with greyhounds.
This afforded great amusement. Presently a bull,
tied to the end of a rope, was fiercely baited by dogs.
After this tumblers danced upon a rope and performed
feats of agility on horseback. The constable
and his attendants were lighted home by half an hundred
halberdiers with torches, and, after the fatigues of
the day, supped in private. We are not surprised
to read that on Monday, the 30th, the constable awoke
with a slight attack of lumbago.
Like Elizabeth, all her subjects were
fond of the savage pastime of bear and bull baiting.
It cannot be denied that this people had a taste for
blood, took delight in brutal encounters, and drew
the sword and swung the cudgel with great promptitude;
nor were they fastidious in the matter of public executions.
Kiechel says that when the criminal was driven in
the cart under the gallows, and left hanging by the
neck as the cart moved from under him, his friends
and acquaintances pulled at his legs in order that
he might be strangled the sooner.
When Shakespeare was managing his
theatres and writing his plays London was full of
foreigners, settled in the city, who no doubt formed
part of his audience, for they thought that English
players had attained great perfection. In 1621
there were as many as ten thousand strangers in London,
engaged in one hundred and twenty-one different trades.
The poet need not go far from Blackfriars to pick
up scraps of German and folk-lore, for the Hanse
merchants were located in great numbers in the neighborhood
of the steel-yard in Lower Thames Street.
Foreigners as well as contemporary
chronicles and the printed diatribes against luxury
bear witness to the profusion in all ranks of society
and the variety and richness in apparel. There
was a rage for the display of fine clothes. Elizabeth
left hanging in her wardrobe above three thousand
dresses when she was called to take that unseemly voyage
down the stream, on which the clown’s brogan
jostles the queen’s slipper. The plays of
Shakespeare, Jonson, Beaumont and Fletcher, and of
all the dramatists, are a perfect commentary on the
fashions of the day, but a knowledge of the fashions
is necessary to a perfect enjoyment of the plays.
We see the fine lady in a gown of velvet (the foreigners
thought it odd that velvet should be worn in the street),
or cloth of gold and silver tissue, her hair eccentrically
dressed, and perhaps dyed, a great hat with waving
feathers, sometimes a painted face, maybe a mask or
a muffler hiding all the features except the eyes,
with a muff, silk stockings, high-heeled shoes, imitated
from the “chopine” of Venice, perfumed
bracelets, necklaces, and gloves “gloves
sweet as damask roses” a pocket-handkerchief
wrought in gold and silver, a small looking-glass
pendant at the girdle, and a love-lock hanging wantonly
over the shoulder, artificial flowers at the corsage,
and a mincing step. “These fashionable
women, when they are disappointed, dissolve into tears,
weep with one eye, laugh with the other, or, like
children, laugh and cry they can both together, and
as much pity is to be taken of a woman weeping as
of a goose going barefoot,” says old Burton.
The men had even greater fondness
for finery. Paul Hentzner, the Brandenburg jurist,
in 1598, saw, at the Fair at St. Bartholomew, the
lord mayor, attended by twelve gorgeous aldermen, walk
in a neighboring field, dressed in a scarlet gown,
and about his neck a golden chain, to which hung a
Golden Fleece. Men wore the hair long and flowing,
with high hats and plumes of feathers, and carried
muffs like the women; gallants sported gloves on their
hats as tokens of ladies’ favors, jewels and
roses in the ears, a long love-lock under the left
ear, and gems in a ribbon round the neck. This
tall hat was called a “capatain.”
Vincentio, in the “Taming of the Shrew,”
exclaims: “O fine villain! A silken
doublet! A velvet hose! A scarlet cloak!
And a capatain hat!” There was no limit to the
caprice and extravagance. Hose and breeches of
silk, velvet, or other rich stuff, and fringed garters
wrought of gold or silver, worth five pounds apiece,
are some of the items noted. Burton says, “’Tis
ordinary for a gallant to put a thousand oaks and an
hundred oxen into a suit of apparel, to wear a whole
manor on his back.” Even serving-men and
tailors wore jewels in their shoes.
We should note also the magnificence
in the furnishing of houses, the arras, tapestries,
cloth of gold and silver, silk hangings of many colors,
the splendid plate on the tables and sideboards.
Even in the houses of the middle classes the furniture
was rich and comfortable, and there was an air of
amenity in the chambers and parlors strewn with sweet
herbs and daily decked with pretty nosegays and fragrant
flowers. Lights were placed on antique candelabra,
or, wanting these at suppers, there were living candleholders.
“Give me a torch,” says Romeo; “I’ll
be a candle-holder, and look on.” Knowledge
of the details of luxury of an English home of the
sixteenth century will make exceedingly vivid hosts
of allusions in Shakespeare.
Servants were numerous in great households,
a large retinue being a mark of gentility, and hospitality
was unbounded. During the lord mayor’s term
in London he kept open house, and every day any stranger
or foreigner could dine at his table, if he could
find an empty seat. Dinner, served at eleven
in the early years of James, attained a degree of epicureanism
rivaling dinners of the present day, although the guests
ate with their fingers or their knives, forks not
coming in till 1611. There was mighty eating
and swigging at the banquets, and carousing was carried
to an extravagant height, if we may judge by the account
of an orgy at the king’s palace in 1606, for
the delectation of the King and Queen of Denmark,
when the company and even their majesties abandoned
discretion and sobriety, and “the ladies are
seen to roll about in intoxication.”
The manners of the male population
of the period, says Nathan Drake, seem to have been
compounded from the characters of the two sovereigns.
Like Elizabeth, they are brave, magnanimous, and prudent;
and sometimes, like James, they are credulous, curious,
and dissipated. The credulity and superstition
of the age, and its belief in the supernatural, and
the sumptuousness of masques and pageants at the court
and in the city, of which we read so much in the old
chronicles, are abundantly reflected in the pages
of Jonson, Shakespeare, and other writers.
The town was full of public-houses
and pleasure-gardens, but, curiously enough, the favorite
place of public parading was the middle aisle of St.
Paul’s Cathedral “Paul’s
Walk,” as it was called which was
daily frequented by nobles, gentry, perfumed gallants,
and ladies, from ten to twelve and three to six o’clock,
to talk on business, politics, or pleasure. Hither
came, to acquire the fashions, make assignations,
arrange for the night’s gaming, or shun the bailiff,
the gallant, the gamester, the ladies whose dresses
were better than their manners, the stale knight,
the captain out of service. Here Falstaff purchased
Bardolph. “I bought him,” say’s
the knight, “at Paul’s.” The
tailors went there to get the fashions of dress, as
the gallants did to display them, one suit before
dinner and another after. What a study was this
varied, mixed, flaunting life, this dance of pleasure
and license before the very altar of the church, for
the writers of satire, comedy, and tragedy!
But it is not alone town life and
court life and the society of the fine folk that is
reflected in the English drama and literature of the
seventeenth century, and here is another wide difference
between it and the French literature of the same period;
rural England and the popular life of the country
had quite as much to do in giving tone and color to
the writings of the time. It is necessary to know
rural England to enter into the spirit of this literature,
and to appreciate how thoroughly it took hold of life
in every phase. Shakespeare knew it well.
He drew from life the country gentleman, the squire,
the parson, the pedantic schoolmaster who was regarded
as half conjurer, the yeoman or farmer, the dairy
maids, the sweet English girls, the country louts,
shepherds, boors, and fools. How he loved a fool!
He had talked with all these persons, and knew their
speeches and humors. He had taken part in the
country festivals-May Day, Plow Monday, the Sheep Shearing,
the Morris Dances and Maud Marian, the Harvest Home
and Twelfth Night. The rustic merrymakings, the
feasts in great halls, the games on the greensward,
the love of wonders and of marvelous tales, the regard
for portents, the naïve superstitions of the time
pass before us in his pages. Drake, in his “Shakespeare
and his Times,” gives a graphic and indeed charming
picture of the rural life of this century, drawn from
Harrison and other sources.
In his spacious hall, floored with
stones and lighted by large transom windows, hung
with coats of mail and helmets, and all military accoutrements,
long a prey to rust, the country squire, seated at
a raised table at one end, held a baronial state and
dispensed prodigal hospitality. The long table
was divided into upper and lower messes by a huge
salt-cellar; and the consequence of the guests was
marked by their seats above or below the salt.
The distinction extended to the fare, for wine frequently
circulated only above the salt, and below it the food
was of coarser quality. The literature of the
time is full of allusions to this distinction.
But the luxury of the table and good cooking were well
understood in the time of Elizabeth and James.
There was massive eating done in those days, when
the guests dined at eleven, rose from the banquet
to go to evening prayers, and returned to a supper
at five or six, which was often as substantial as
the dinner. Gervase Markham in his “English
Housewife,” after treating of the ordering of
great feasts, gives directions for “a more humble
feast of an ordinary proportion.” This
“humble feast,” he says, should consist
for the first course of “sixteen full dishes,
that is, dishes of meat that are of substance, and
not empty, or for shew as thus, for example:
first, a shield of brawn with mustard; secondly, a
boyl’d capon; thirdly, a boyl’d piece of
beef; fourthly, a chine of beef rosted; fifthly, a
neat’s tongue rosted; sixthly, a pig rosted;
seventhly, chewets bak’d; eighthly, a goose
rosted; ninthly, a swan rosted; tenthly, a turkey rosted;
the eleventh, a haunch of venison rosted; the twelfth,
a pasty of venison; the thirteenth, a kid with a pudding
in the belly; the fourteenth, an olive-pye; the fifteenth,
a couple of capóns; the sixteenth, a custard or
dowsets. Now to these full dishes may be added
sallets, fricases, ‘quelque choses,’
and devised paste; as many dishes more as will make
no less than two and thirty dishes, which is as much
as can conveniently stand on one table, and in one
mess; and after this manner you may proportion both
your second and third course, holding fullness on one
half the dishes, and shew in the other, which will
be both frugal in the splendor, contentment to the
guest, and much pleasure and delight to the beholders.”
After this frugal repast it needed an interval of prayers
before supper.
The country squire was a long-lived
but not always an intellectual animal. He kept
hawks of all kinds, and all sorts of hounds that ran
buck, fox, hare, otter, and badger. His great
hall was commonly strewn with marrow-bones, and full
of hawks’ perches, of hounds, spaniels, and
terriers. His oyster-table stood at one end of
the room, and oysters he ate at dinner and supper.
At the upper end of the room stood a small table with
a double desk, one side of which held a church Bible,
the other Fox’s “Book of Martyrs.”
He drank a glass or two of wine at his meals, put
syrup of gilly-flower in his sack, and always had a
tun-glass of small beer standing by him, which he
often stirred about with rosemary. After dinner,
with a glass of ale by his side he improved his mind
by listening to the reading of a choice passage out
of the “Book of Martyrs.”
This is a portrait of one Henry Hastings,
of Dorsetshire, in Gilpin’s “Forest Scenery.”
He lived to be a hundred, and never lost his sight
nor used spectacles. He got on horseback without
help, and rode to the death of the stag till he was
past fourscore.
The plain country fellow, plowman,
or clown, is several pegs lower, and described by
Bishop Earle as one that manures his ground well, but
lets himself lie fallow and untitled. His hand
guides the plow, and the plow his thoughts. His
mind is not much disturbed by objects, but he can fix
a half-hour’s contemplation on a good fat cow.
His habitation is under a poor thatched roof, distinguished
from his barn only by loop-holes that let out the
smoke. Dinner is serious work, for he sweats at
it as much as at his labor, and he is a terrible fastener
on a piece of beef. His religion is a part of
his copyhold, which he takes from his landlord and
refers it wholly to his discretion, but he is a good
Christian in his way, that is, he comes to church
in his best clothes, where he is capable only of two
prayers for rain and fair weather.
The country clergymen, at least those
of the lower orders, or readers, were distinguished
in Shakespeare’s time by the appellation “Sir,”
as Sir Hugh, in the “Merry Wives,” Sir
Topas, in “Twelfth Night,” Sir Oliver,
in “As You Like It.” The distinction
is marked between priesthood and knighthood when Vista
says, “I am one that would rather go with Sir
Priest than Sir Knight.” The clergy were
not models of conduct in the days of Elizabeth, but
their position excites little wonder when we read
that they were often paid less than the cook and the
minstrel.
There was great fondness in cottage
and hall for merry tales of errant knights, lovers,
lords, ladies, dwarfs, friars, thieves, witches, goblins,
for old stories told by the fireside, with a toast
of ale on the hearth, as in Milton’s allusion
“ –to
the nut-brown ale,
With
stories told of many a feat”
A designation of winter in “Love’s Labour’s
Lost” is
“When roasted crabs hiss
in the bowl.”
To “turne a crab”
is to roast a wild apple in the fire in order to throw
it hissing hot into a bowl of nutbrown ale, into which
had been put a toast with some spice and sugar.
Puck describes one of his wanton pranks:
“And
sometimes I lurk in a gossip’s bowl,
In
very likeness of a roasted crab,
And
when she drinks against her lips I bob:”
I love no roast, says John Still,
in “Gammer Gurton’s Needle,”
“I
love no rost, but a nut-browne torte,
And
a crab layde in the fyre;
A
lytle bread shall do me stead,
Much
bread I not desire.”
In the bibulous days of Shakespeare,
the peg tankard, a species of wassail or wish-health
bowl, was still in use. Introduced to restrain
intemperance, it became a cause of it, as every drinker
was obliged to drink down to the peg. We get
our expression of taking a man “a peg lower,”
or taking him “down a peg,” from this custom.
In these details I am not attempting
any complete picture of the rural life at this time,
but rather indicating by illustrations the sort of
study which illuminates its literature. We find,
indeed, if we go below the surface of manners, sober,
discreet, and sweet domestic life, and an appreciation
of the virtues. Of the English housewife, says
Gervase Markham, was not only expected sanctity and
holiness of life, but “great modesty and temperance,
as well outwardly as inwardly. She must be of
chaste thoughts, stout courage, patient, untired, watchful,
diligent, witty, pleasant, constant in friendship,
full of good neighborhood, wise in discourse, but
not frequent therein, sharp and quick of speech, but
not bitter or talkative, secret in her affairs, comportable
in her counsels, and generally skillful in the worthy
knowledges which do belong to her vocation.”
This was the mistress of the hospitable house of the
country knight, whose chief traits were loyalty to
church and state, a love of festivity, and an ardent
attachment to field sports. His well-educated
daughter is charmingly described in an exquisite poem
by Drayton:
He had, as antique stories tell,
He had,
as antique stories tell,
A daughter
cleaped Dawsabel,
A maiden
fair and free;
And for
she was her father’s heir,
Full well
she ycond the leir
Of mickle
courtesy.
“The
silk well couth she twist and twine,
And make
the fine march-pine,
And with
the needle work:
And she
couth help the priest to say
His matins
on a holy day,
And sing
a psalm in Kirk.
“She
wore a frock of frolic green
Might well
become a maiden queen,
Which seemly
was to see;
A hood to
that so neat and fine,
In color
like the columbine,
Ywrought
full featously.
“Her
features all as fresh above
As is the
grass that grows by Dove,
And lythe
as lass of Kent.
Her skin
as soft as Lemster wool,
As white
as snow on Peakish Hull,
Or swan
that swims in Trent.
“This
maiden in a morn betime
Went forth
when May was in the prime
To get sweet
setywall,
The honey-suckle,
the harlock,
The lily,
and the lady-smock,
To deck
her summer hall.”
How late such a simple and pretty
picture could have been drawn to life is uncertain,
but by the middle of the seventeenth century the luxury
of the town had penetrated the country, even into
Scotland. The dress of a rich farmer’s
wife is thus described by Dunbar. She had “a
robe of fine scarlet, with a white hood, a gay purse
and gingling keys pendant at her side from a silken
belt of silver tissue; on each finger she wore two
rings, and round her waist was bound a sash of grass-green
silk, richly embroidered with silver.”
Shakespeare was the mirror of his
time in things small as well as great. How far
he drew his characters from personal acquaintances
has often been discussed. The clowns, tinkers,
shepherds, tapsters, and such folk, he probably knew
by name. In the Duke of Manchester’s “Court
and Society from Elizabeth to Anne” is a curious
suggestion about Hamlet. Reading some letters
from Robert, Earl of Essex, to Lady Rich, his sister,
the handsome, fascinating, and disreputable Penelope
Devereaux, he notes, in their humorous melancholy
and discontent with mankind, something in tone and
even language which suggests the weak and fantastic
side of Hamlet’s mind, and asks if the poet
may not have conceived his character of Hamlet from
Essex, and of Horatio from Southampton, his friend
and patron. And he goes on to note some singular
coincidences. Essex was supposed by many to have
a good title to the throne. In person he had his
father’s beauty and was all that Shakespeare
has described the Prince of Denmark. His mother
had been tempted from her duty while her noble and
generous husband was alive, and this husband was supposed
to have been poisoned by her and her paramour.
After the father’s murder the seducer had married
the guilty mother. The father had not perished
without expressing suspicion of foul play against
himself, yet sending his forgiveness to his faithless
wife. There are many other agreements in the facts
of the case and the incidents of the play. The
relation of Claudius to Hamlet is the same as that
of Leicester to Essex: under pretense of fatherly
friendship he was suspicious of his motives, jealous
of his actions; kept him much in the country and at
college; let him see little of his mother, and clouded
his prospects in the world by an appearance of benignant
favor. Gertrude’s relations with her son
Hamlet were much like those of Lettice with Robert
Devereaux. Again, it is suggested, in his moodiness,
in his college learning, in his love for the theatre
and the players, in his desire for the fiery action
for which his nature was most unfit, there are many
kinds of hints calling up an image of the Danish Prince.
This suggestion is interesting in
the view that we find in the characters of the Elizabethan
drama not types and qualities, but individuals strongly
projected, with all their idiosyncrasies and contradictions.
These dramas touch our sympathies at all points, and
are representative of human life today, because they
reflected the human life of their time. This
is supremely true of Shakespeare, and almost equally
true of Jonson and many of the other stars of that
marvelous epoch. In England as well as in France,
as we have said, it was the period of the classic revival;
but in England the energetic reality of the time was
strong enough to break the classic fetters, and to
use classic learning for modern purposes. The
English dramatists, like the French, used classic histories
and characters. But two things are to be noted
in their use of them. First, that the characters
and the play of mind and passion in them are thoroughly
English and of the modern time. And second, and
this seems at first a paradox, they are truer to the
classic spirit than the characters in the contemporary
French drama. This results from the fact that
they are truer to the substance of things, to universal
human nature, while the French seem to be in great
part an imitation, having root neither in the soil
of France nor Attica. M. Guizot confesses that
France, in order to adopt the ancient models, was
compelled to limit its field in some sort to one corner
of human existence. He goes on to say that the
present “demands of the drama pleasures and
emotions that can no longer be supplied by the inanimate
representation of a world that has ceased to exist.
The classic system had its origin in the life of the
time; that time has passed away; its image subsists
in brilliant colors in its works, but can no more
be reproduced.” Our own literary monuments
must rest on other ground. “This ground
is not the ground of Corneille or Racine, nor is it
that of Shakespeare; it is our own; but Shakespeare’s
system, as it appears to me, may furnish the plans
according to which genius ought now to work.
This system alone includes all those social conditions
and those general and diverse feelings, the simultaneous
conjuncture and activity of which constitute for us
at the present day the spectacle of human things.”
That is certainly all that any one
can claim for Shakespeare and his fellow-dramatists.
They cannot be models in form any more than Sophocles
and Euripides; but they are to be followed in making
the drama, or any literature, expressive of its own
time, while it is faithful to the emotions and feeling
of universal human nature. And herein, it seems
to me, lies the broad distinction between most of
the English and French literature of the latter part
of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth
centuries. Perhaps I may be indulged in another
observation on this topic, touching a later time.
Notwithstanding the prevalent notion that the French
poets are the sympathetic heirs of classic culture,
it appears to me that they are not so imbued with the
true classic spirit, art, and mythology as some of
our English poets, notably Keats and Shelley.
Ben Jonson was a man of extensive
and exact classical erudition; he was a solid scholar
in the Greek and Roman literatures, in the works of
the philosophers, poets, and historians. He was
also a man of uncommon attainments in all the literary
knowledge of his time. In some of his tragedies
his classic learning was thought to be ostentatiously
displayed, but this was not true of his comedy, and
on the whole he was too strong to be swamped in pseudo-classicism.
For his experience of men and of life was deep and
varied. Before he became a public actor and dramatist,
and served the court and fashionable society with his
entertaining, if pedantic, masques, he had been student,
tradesman, and soldier; he had traveled in Flanders
and seen Paris, and wandered on foot through the length
of England. London he knew as well as a man knows
his own house and club, the comforts of its taverns,
the revels of lords and ladies, the sports of Bartholomew
Fair, and the humors of suburban villages; all the
phases, language, crafts, professions of high and low
city life were familiar to him. And in his comedies,
as Mr. A. W. Ward pertinently says, his marvelously
vivid reproduction of manners is unsurpassed by any
of his contemporaries. “The age lives in
his men and women, his country gulls and town gulls,
his imposters and skeldering captains, his court ladies
and would-be court ladies, his puling poetasters and
whining Puritans, and, above all, in the whole ragamuffin
rout of his Bartholomew Fair. Its pastimes, fashionable
and unfashionable, its games and vapors and jeering,
its high-polite courtships and its pulpit-shows, its
degrading superstitions and confounding hallucinations,
its clubs of naughty ladies and its offices of lying
news, its taverns and its tobacco shops, its giddy
heights and its meanest depths all are
brought before us by our author.”
No, he was not swamped by classicism,
but he was affected by it, and just here, and in that
self-consciousness which Shakespeare was free from,
and which may have been more or less the result of
his classic erudition, he fails of being one of the
universal poets of mankind. The genius of Shakespeare
lay in his power to so use the real and individual
facts of life as to raise in the minds of his readers
a broader and nobler conception of human life than
they had conceived before. This is creative genius;
this is the idealist dealing faithfully with realistic
material; this is, as we should say in our day, the
work of the artist as distinguished from the work
of the photographer. It may be an admirable but
it is not the highest work of the sculptor, the painter,
or the writer, that does not reveal to the mind that
comes into relation with it something before out of
his experience and beyond the facts either brought
before him or with which he is acquainted.
What influence Shakespeare had upon
the culture and taste of his own time and upon his
immediate audience would be a most interesting inquiry.
We know what his audiences were. He wrote for
the people, and the theatre in his day was a popular
amusement for the multitude, probably more than it
was a recreation for those who enjoyed the culture
of letters. A taste for letters was prevalent
among the upper class, and indeed was fashionable
among both ladies and gentlemen of rank. In this
the court of Elizabeth set the fashion. The daughter
of the duchess was taught not only to distill strong
waters, but to construe Greek. When the queen
was translating Socrates or Seneca, the maids of honor
found it convenient to affect at least a taste for
the classics. For the nobleman and the courtier
an intimacy with Greek, Latin, and Italian was essential
to “good form.” But the taste for
erudition was mainly confined to the metropolis or
the families who frequented it, and to persons of rank,
and did not pervade the country or the middle classes.
A few of the country gentry had some pretension to
learning, but the majority cared little except for
hawks and hounds, gaming and drinking; and if they
read it was some old chronicle, or story of knightly
adventure, “Amadis de Gaul,” or a stray
playbook, or something like the “History of Long
Meg of Westminster,” or perhaps a sheet of news.
To read and write were still rare accomplishments
in the country, and Dogberry expressed a common notion
when he said reading and writing come by nature.
Sheets of news had become common in the town in James’s
time, the first newspaper being the English Mercury,
which appeared in April, 1588, and furnished food
for Jonson’s satire in his “Staple of News.”
His accusation has a familiar sound when he says that
people had a “hunger and thirst after published
pamphlets of news, set out every Saturday, but made
all at home, and no syllable of truth in them.”
Though Elizabeth and James were warm
patrons of the theatre, the court had no such influence
over the plays and players as had the court in Paris
at the same period. The theatres were built for
the people, and the audiences included all classes.
There was a distinction between what were called public
and private theatres, but the public frequented both.
The Shakespeare theatres, at which his plays were
exclusively performed, were the Globe, called public,
on the Bankside, and the Blackfriars, called private,
on the City side, the one for summer, the other for
winter performances. The Blackfriars was smaller
than the Globe, was roofed over, and needed to be
lighted with candles, and was frequented more by the
better class than the more popular Globe. There
is no evidence that Elizabeth ever attended the public
theatres, but the companies were often summoned to
play before her in Whitehall, where the appointments
and scenery were much better than in the popular houses.
The price of general admission to
the Globe and Blackfriars was sixpence, at the Fashion
Theatre twopence, and at some of the inferior theatres
one penny. The boxes at the Globe were a shilling,
at the Blackfriars one-and-six. The usual net
receipts of a performance were from nine to ten pounds,
and this was about the sum that Elizabeth paid to companies
for a performance at Whitehall, which was always in
the evening and did not interfere with regular hours.
The theatres opened as early as one o’clock
and not later than three in the afternoon. The
crowds that filled the pit and galleries early, to
secure places, amused themselves variously before
the performance began: they drank ale, smoked,
fought for apples, cracked nuts, chaffed the boxes,
and a few read the cheap publications of the day that
were hawked in the theatre. It was a rough and
unsavory audience in pit and gallery, but it was a
responsive one, and it enjoyed the acting with little
help to illusion in the way of scenery. In fact,
scenery did not exist, as we understand it. A
board inscribed with the name of the country or city
indicated the scene of action. Occasionally movable
painted scenes were introduced. The interior
roof of the stage was painted sky-blue, or hung with
drapery of that tint, to represent the heavens.
But when the idea of a dark, starless night was to
be imposed, or tragedy was to be acted, these heavens
were hung with black stuffs, a custom illustrated
in many allusions in Shakespeare, like that in the
line,
“Hung be the heavens in black,
yield day to night”
To hang the stage with black was to
prepare it for tragedy. The costumes of the players
were sometimes less niggardly than the furnishing of
the stage, for it was an age of rich and picturesque
apparel, and it was not difficult to procure the cast-off
clothes of fine gentlemen for stage use. But
there was no lavishing of expense. I am recalling
these details to show that the amusement was popular
and cheap. The ordinary actors, including the
boys and men who took women’s parts (for women
did not appear on the stage till after the Restoration)
received only about five or six shillings a week (for
Sundays and all), and the first-class actor, who had
a share in the net receipts, would not make more than
ninety pounds a year. The ordinary price paid
for a new play was less than seven pounds; Oldys,
on what authority is not known, says that Shakespeare
received only five pounds for “Hamlet.”
The influence of the theatre upon
politics, contemporary questions that interested the
public, and morals, was early recognized in the restraints
put upon representations by the censorship, and in
the floods of attacks upon its licentious and demoralizing
character. The plays of Shakespeare did not escape
the most bitter animadversions of the moral
reformers. We have seen how Shakespeare mirrored
his age, but we have less means of ascertaining what
effect he produced upon the life of his time.
Until after his death his influence was mainly direct,
upon the play-goers, and confined to his auditors.
He had been dead seven years before his plays were
collected. However the people of his day regarded
him, it is safe to say that they could not have had
any conception of the importance of the work he was
doing. They were doubtless satisfied with him.
It was a great age for romances and story-telling,
and he told stories, old in new dresses, but he was
also careful to use contemporary life, which his hearers
understood.
It is not to his own age, but to those
following, and especially to our own time, that we
are to look for the shaping and enormous influence
upon human life of the genius of this poet. And
it is measured not by the libraries of comments that
his works have called forth, but by the prevalence
of the language and thought of his poetry in all subsequent
literature, and by its entrance into the current of
common thought and speech. It may be safely said
that the English-speaking world and almost every individual
of it are different from what they would have been
if Shakespeare had never lived. Of all the forces
that have survived out of his creative time, he is
one of the chief.