I. HISTORY OF THE PERIOD
POLITICAL CHANGES. The century
and a half following the death of Chaucer (1400-1550)
is the most volcanic period of English history.
The land is swept by vast changes, inseparable from
the rapid accumulation of national power; but since
power is the most dangerous of gifts until men have
learned to control it, these changes seem at first
to have no specific aim or direction. Henry V whose
erratic yet vigorous life, as depicted by Shakespeare,
was typical of the life of his times first
let Europe feel the might of the new national spirit.
To divert that growing and unruly spirit from rebellion
at home, Henry led his army abroad, in the apparently
impossible attempt to gain for himself three things:
a French wife, a French revenue, and the French crown
itself. The battle of Agincourt was fought in
1415, and five years later, by the Treaty of Troyes,
France acknowledged his right to all his outrageous
demands.
The uselessness of the terrific struggle
on French soil is shown by the rapidity with which
all its results were swept away. When Henry died
in 1422, leaving his son heir to the crowns of France
and England, a magnificent recumbent statue with head
of pure silver was placed in Westminster Abbey to
commemorate his victories. The silver head was
presently stolen, and the loss is typical of all that
he had struggled for. His son, Henry VI, was
but the shadow of a king, a puppet in the hands of
powerful nobles, who seized the power of England and
turned it to self-destruction. Meanwhile all
his foreign possessions were won back by the French
under the magic leadership of Joan of Arc. Cade’s
Rebellion (1450) and the bloody Wars of the Roses
(1455-1485) are names to show how the energy of England
was violently destroying itself, like a great engine
that has lost its balance wheel. The frightful
reign of Richard III followed, which had, however,
this redeeming quality, that it marked the end of civil
wars and the self-destruction of feudalism, and made
possible a new growth of English national sentiment
under the popular Tudors.
In the long reign of Henry VIII the
changes are less violent, but have more purpose and
significance. His age is marked by a steady increase
in the national power at home and abroad, by the entrance
of the Reformation “by a side door,” and
by the final separation of England from all ecclesiastical
bondage in Parliament’s famous Act of Supremacy.
In previous reigns chivalry and the old feudal system
had practically been banished; now monasticism, the
third mediaeval institution with its mixed evil and
good, received its death-blow in the wholesale suppression
of the monasteries and the removal of abbots from
the House of Lords. Notwithstanding the evil
character of the king and the hypocrisy of proclaiming
such a creature the head of any church or the defender
of any faith, we acquiesce silently in Stubb’s
declaration that “the world owes some of
its greatest debts to men from whose memory the world
recoils.”
While England during this period was
in constant political strife, yet rising slowly, like
the spiral flight of an eagle, to heights of national
greatness, intellectually it moved forward with bewildering
rapidity. Printing was brought to England by
Caxton (c 1476), and for the first time in
history it was possible for a book or an idea to reach
the whole nation. Schools and universities were
established in place of the old monasteries; Greek
ideas and Greek culture came to England in the Renaissance,
and man’s spiritual freedom was proclaimed in
the Reformation. The great names of the period
are numerous and significant, but literature is strangely
silent. Probably the very turmoil of the age prevented
any literary development, for literature is one of
the arts of peace; it requires quiet and meditation
rather than activity, and the stirring life of the
Renaissance had first to be lived before it could express
itself in the new literature of the Elizabethan period.
THE REVIVAL OF LEARNING. The
Revival of Learning denotes, in its broadest sense,
that gradual enlightenment of the human mind after
the darkness of the Middle Ages. The names Renaissance
and Humanism, which are often applied to the same
movement, have properly a narrower significance.
The term Renaissance, though used by many writers
“to denote the whole transition from the Middle
Ages to the modern world," is more correctly
applied to the revival of art resulting from the discovery
and imitation of classic models in the fourteenth
and fifteenth centuries. Humanism applies to
the revival of classic literature, and was so called
by its leaders, following the example of Petrarch,
because they held that the study of the classics,
literae humaniores, i.e. the “more
human writings,” rather than the old theology, was
the best means of promoting the largest human interests.
We use the term Revival of Learning to cover the whole
movement, whose essence was, according to Lamartine,
that “man discovered himself and the universe,”
and, according to Taine, that man, so long blinded,
“had suddenly opened his eyes and seen.”
We shall understand this better if
we remember that in the Middle Ages man’s whole
world consisted of the narrow Mediterranean and the
nations that clustered about it; and that this little
world seemed bounded by impassable barriers, as if
God had said to their sailors, “Hitherto shalt
thou come, but no farther.” Man’s
mind also was bounded by the same narrow lines.
His culture as measured by the great deductive system
of Scholasticism consisted not in discovery, but rather
in accepting certain principles and traditions established
by divine and ecclesiastical authority as the basis
of all truth. These were his Pillars of Hercules,
his mental and spiritual bounds that he must not pass,
and within these, like a child playing with lettered
blocks, he proceeded to build his intellectual system.
Only as we remember their limitations can we appreciate
the heroism of these toilers of the Middle Ages, giants
in intellect, yet playing with children’s toys;
ignorant of the laws and forces of the universe, while
debating the essence and locomotion of angels; eager
to learn, yet forbidden to enter fresh fields in the
right of free exploration and the joy of individual
discovery.
The Revival stirred these men as the
voyages of Da Gama and Columbus stirred the mariners
of the Mediterranean. First came the sciences
and inventions of the Arabs, making their way slowly
against the prejudice of the authorities, and opening
men’s eyes to the unexplored realms of nature.
Then came the flood of Greek literature which the new
art of printing carried swiftly to every school in
Europe, revealing a new world of poetry and philosophy.
Scholars flocked to the universities, as adventurers
to the new world of America, and there the old authority
received a deathblow. Truth only was authority;
to search for truth everywhere, as men sought for
new lands and gold and the fountain of youth, that
was the new spirit which awoke in Europe with the
Revival of Learning.
II. LITERATURE OF THE REVIVAL
The hundred and fifty years of the
Revival period are singularly destitute of good literature.
Men’s minds were too much occupied with religious
and political changes and with the rapid enlargement
of the mental horizon to find time for that peace
and leisure which are essential for literary results.
Perhaps, also, the floods of newly discovered classics,
which occupied scholars and the new printing presses
alike, were by their very power and abundance a discouragement
of native talent. Roger Ascham (1515-1568), a
famous classical scholar, who published a book called
Toxophilus (School of Shooting) in 1545, expresses
in his preface, or “apology,” a very widespread
dissatisfaction over the neglect of native literature
when he says, “And as for ye Latin or greke tongue,
every thing is so excellently done in them, that none
can do better: In the Englysh tonge contrary,
every thinge in a maner so meanly, both for the matter
and handelynge, that no man can do worse.”
On the Continent, also, this new interest
in the classics served to check the growth of native
literatures. In Italy especially, for a full century
after the brilliant age of Dante and Petrarch, no great
literature was produced, and the Italian language
itself seemed to go backward. The truth is that
these great writers were, like Chaucer, far in advance
of their age, and that the mediaeval mind was too
narrow, too scantily furnished with ideas to produce
a varied literature. The fifteenth century was
an age of preparation, of learning the beginnings of
science, and of getting acquainted with the great
ideals, the stern law, the profound philosophy,
the suggestive mythology, and the noble poetry of the
Greeks and Romans. So the mind was furnished
with ideas for a new literature.
With the exception of Malory’s
Morte d’Arthur (which is still mediaeval
in spirit) the student will find little of interest
in the literature of this period. We give here
a brief summary of the men and the books most “worthy
of remembrance”; but for the real literature
of the Renaissance one must go forward a century and
a half to the age of Elizabeth.
The two greatest books which appeared
in England during this period are undoubtedly Erasmus’s
Praise of Folly (Encomium Moriae) and
More’s Utopia, the famous “Kingdom
of Nowhere.” Both were written in Latin,
but were speedily translated into all European languages.
The Praise of Folly is like a song of victory
for the New Learning, which had driven away vice,
ignorance, and superstition, the three foes of humanity.
It was published in 1511 after the accession of Henry
VIII. Folly is represented as donning cap and
bells and mounting a pulpit, where the vice and cruelty
of kings, the selfishness and ignorance of the clergy,
and the foolish standards of education are satirized
without mercy.
More’s Utopia, published
in 1516, is a powerful and original study of social
conditions, unlike anything which had ever appeared
in any literature. In our own day we have seen
its influence in Bellamy’s Looking Backward,
an enormously successful book, which recently set
people to thinking of the unnecessary cruelty of modern
social conditions. More learns from a sailor,
one of Amerigo Vespucci’s companions, of a wonderful
Kingdom of Nowhere, in which all questions of labor,
government, society, and religion have been easily
settled by simple justice and common sense. In
this Utopia we find for the first time, as the
foundations of civilized society, the three great
words, Liberty, Fraternity, Equality, which retained
their inspiration through all the violence of the French
Revolution and which are still the unrealized ideal
of every free government. As he hears of this
wonderful country More wonders why, after fifteen
centuries of Christianity, his own land is so little
civilized; and as we read the book to-day we ask ourselves
the same question. The splendid dream is still
far from being realized; yet it seems as if any nation
could become Utopia in a single generation, so simple
and just are the requirements.
Greater than either of these books,
in its influence upon the common people, is Tyndale’s
translation of the New Testament (1525), which fixed
a standard of good English, and at the same time brought
that standard not only to scholars but to the homes
of the common people. Tyndale made his translation
from the original Greek, and later translated parts
of the Old Testament from the Hebrew. Much of
Tyndale’s work was included in Cranmer’s
Bible, known also as the Great Bible, in 1539, and
was read in every parish church in England. It
was the foundation for the Authorized Version, which
appeared nearly a century later and became the standard
for the whole English-speaking race.
WYATT AND SURREY. In 1557 appeared
probably the first printed collection of miscellaneous
English poems, known as Tottel’s Miscellany.
It contained the work of the so-called courtly makers,
or poets, which had hitherto circulated in manuscript
form for the benefit of the court. About half
of these poems were the work of Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503?-1542)
and of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1517?-1547).
Both together wrote amorous sonnets modeled after
the Italians, introducing a new verse form which, although
very difficult, has been a favorite ever since with
our English poets. Surrey is noted, not for any
especial worth or originality of his own poems, but
rather for his translation of two books of Virgil “in
strange meter.” The strange meter was the
blank verse, which had never before appeared in English.
The chief literary work of these two men, therefore,
is to introduce the sonnet and the blank verse, one
the most dainty, the other the most flexible and characteristic
form of English poetry, which in the hands
of Shakespeare and Milton were used to make the world’s
masterpieces.
MALORY’S MORTE D’ARTHUR.
The greatest English work of this period, measured
by its effect on subsequent literature, is undoubtedly
the Morte d’Arthur, a collection of the
Arthurian romances told in simple and vivid prose.
Of Sir Thomas Malory, the author, Caxton in his
introduction says that he was a knight, and completed
his work in 1470, fifteen years before Caxton printed
it. The record adds that “he was the servant
of Jesu both by day and night.” Beyond
that we know little except what may be inferred
from the splendid work itself.
Malory groups the legends about the
central idea of the search for the Holy Grail.
Though many of the stories, like Tristram and Isolde,
are purely pagan, Malory treats them all in such a
way as to preserve the whole spirit of mediaeval Christianity
as it has been preserved in no other work. It
was to Malory rather than to Layamon or to the early
French writers that Shakespeare and his contemporaries
turned for their material; and in our own age he has
supplied Tennyson and Matthew Arnold and Swinburne
and Morris with the inspiration for the “Idylls
of the King” and the “Death of Tristram”
and the other exquisite poems which center about Arthur
and the knights of his Round Table.
In subject-matter the book belongs
to the mediaeval age; but Malory himself, with his
desire to preserve the literary monuments of the past,
belongs to the Renaissance; and he deserves our lasting
gratitude for attempting to preserve the legends and
poetry of Britain at a time when scholars were chiefly
busy with the classics of Greece and Rome. As
the Arthurian legends are one of the great recurring
motives of English literature, Malory’s work
should be better known. His stories may be and
should be told to every child as part of his literary
inheritance. Then Malory may be read for his
style and his English prose and his expression of the
mediaeval spirit. And then the stories may be
read again, in Tennyson’s “Idylls,”
to show how those exquisite old fancies appeal to
the minds of our modern poets.
SUMMARY OF THE REVIVAL OF LEARNING
PERIOD. This transition period is at first one
of decline from the Age of Chaucer, and then of intellectual
preparation for the Age of Elizabeth. For a century
and a half after Chaucer not a single great English
work appeared, and the general standard of literature
was very low. There are three chief causes to
account for this: (1) the long war with France
and the civil Wars of the Roses distracted attention
from books and poetry, and destroyed of ruined many
noble English families who had been friends and patrons
of literature; (2) the Reformation in the latter part
of the period filled men’s minds with religious
questions; (3) the Revival of Learning set scholars
and literary men to an eager study of the classics,
rather than to the creation of native literature.
Historically the age is noticeable for its intellectual
progress, for the introduction of printing, for the
discovery of America, for the beginning of the Reformation,
and for the growth of political power among the common
people.
In our study we have noted: (1)
the Revival of Learning, what it was, and the significance
of the terms Humanism and Renaissance; (2) three influential
literary works, Erasmus’s Praise
of Folly, More’s Utopia, and Tyndale’s
translation of the New Testament; (3) Wyatt and Surrey,
and the so-called courtly makers or poets; (4) Malory’s
Morte d’Arthur, a collection of the Arthurian
legends in English prose. The Miracle and Mystery
Plays were the most popular form of entertainment in
this age; but we have reserved them for special study
in connection with the Rise of the Drama, in the following
chapter.