Poesy or of Dramatic Poesie
Introduction
Criticism flourished in England during the restoration of
Stuarts. An Essay of Dramatic Poesy deals with the views of major
critics and the tastes of men and women of the time of Dryden. The work is in
the form of semi-drama thus making abstract theories interesting. In the
late 17th century, Shakespeare was severely criticised for his careless
attitude towards the mixing of genres. It was Dryden who elevated Shakespeare
to height for his natural genius.
The narrative of An Essay of Dramatic
Poesy has four debaters among whom, Neander is the one who holds the
views of Dryden. Unlike other characters, Neander does not diminish the
arguments that are on contrary to his views. Though he himself favours modern
drama, he does not blame others.
Summary of An Essay of Dramatic Poesy
The beginning of the narrative An Essay
of Dramatic Poesy or Of Dramatic Poesie is as follows. A battle is
going on between England and Netherlands. Four gentlemen namely Crites,
Eugenius, Lisideius and Neander are travelling by boat to see the battle and
start a discussion on modern literature.
Crites opens the discussion by saying that none of his
contemporaries (i.e. moderns) can equal the standards and the rules set by
ancient Greeks and Romans. Eugenius restrains him from wasting time on finding
demerits. He asks him to find relative merit in Greeks and Moderns.
- Views
of Crites
Crites favours classical drama i.e. the drama of Aristotle
who believed that drama is “imitation of life”. Crites holds
that drama of such ancients is successful because it depicts life. He says that
both classical and neoclassical favour rules and unities (time, place and
action).
According to Crites, modern dramatists are shadows of
Aeschylus, Sophocles, Seneca and Terence. E.g. Elizabethan dramatist Ben Jonson
borrowed from Classics and felt proud to call himself modern
Horace. The classical is more skilful in language than their
successors. At this, he ends up his conversation.
- Views
of Eugenius
Eugenius favours modern dramatists. However, instead of
telling about the virtues of moderns, he criticises the faults of Classical
playwrights. According to him, the Classical drama is not divided into acts and
also lacks originality. Their tragedies are based on worn-out myths that
are already known to the audience and their comedies are based o overused
curiosity of stolen heiresses and miraculous restorations.
There disregard poetic justice. Instead of punishing the
vice and rewarding the virtue, they have often shown prosperous wickedness and
an unhappy devotion. The classical drama also lacks affection. The
Heroes of Homer were lovers of appetite, food etc, while the modern characters
of French drama gave up everything (sleep, water and food) for the sake
of love.
- Views
of Lisideius
Lisideius favours French drama of earlier 17th century.
French drama led by Pierre Corneille strictly followed unities of time, pace
and action. The French dramatists never mix tragedy and comedy. They
strictly adhere to the poetic justice i.e. reward the virtue and punishment
the vice. For this, they even alter the original situation.
The French dramatists interweave truth with fiction to make
it interesting bringing elements that lead to fate and borrow from history to
reward the virtuous which he was earlier deprived of. They prefer
emotions over plots. Violent actions take place off stage and are told by
messengers rather than showing them in real.
- Views
of Neander
Neander contradicts Lisideius’ arguments favouring
superiority of French drama. He talks about the greatness of Elizabethans. For
him, Elizabethans fulfil the drama’s requirement i.e. imitation of life. French
drama raises perfection but has no soul or emotions as it primarily focuses on
plot. For Neander, tragicomedy is the best form of drama. Both
sadness as well as joy are heightened and are set side by side. Hence it is
closest to life.
He believes that subplots enrich the drama. This French
drama having single plot lacks this vividness. Further Samuel
Johnson (who defended Shakespeare’s disregard of unities), he believes
that adherence to unities prevents depth. According to him, deviation from set
rules and unities gives diverse themes to drama. Neander rejects the
argument that change of place and time diminishes dramatic credibility in
drama.
For him, human actions will seem more natural if they get
enough time to develop. He also argues that Shakespeare is “the
man who of all the modern and perhaps ancient poets, and largest and most
comprehensive soul”. Francis Beaumont and John Fletchers’ dramas
are rich in wit and have smoothness and polish in their language.
Neander says, “I am apt to believe the English
language in them arrived at its highest perfection”. If Ben Jonson is a
genius for correctness, Shakespeare excels him in wit. His arguments
end with the familiar comparison, “Shakespeare was the Homer, or
father of our dramatic poets; Jonson was the Virgil, the pattern of elaborate
writing; I admire him, but I love Shakespeare.” Thus for
him, Elizabethans are superior because they have a variety of themes, emotions,
deviations, wit. They do not adhere to rules as well. Thus their drama is
really an imitation of life.
- Views
on Rhyme in Drama
At the end of the discussion, there is an argument between
Crites and Neander over rhyme in plays. Crites believes that Blank Verse as
the poetic form nearest to prose is most suitable for drama. On the
other hand, Neander defends rhyme as it briefly and clearly explains
everything. The boat on which they all were riding reaches its
destination, the stairs at Somerset House and the discussion ends without any
conclusion being made.
It is all useful
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