Book contents
- Frontmatter
- THE DAILY LIFE
- 1 London and the Court
- 2 Provincial Life
- 3 Sailors and the Sea
- 4 Elizabethans and Foreigners
- 5 Education and Apprenticeship
- 6 The Law and the Lawyers
- 7 London’s Prisons
- PHILOSOPHY AND FANCY
- 8 The Commonwealth
- 9 Dissent and Satire
- 10 Scientific Thought
- 11 Medicine and Public Health
- 12 The Folds of Folklore
- 13 Symbols and Significances
- ART AND ENTERTAINMENT
- 14 Actors and Theatres
- 15 The Printing of Books
- 16 Music and Ballads
- 17 The Foundations of Elizabethan Language
- Notes
- Index
- Plate section
9 - Dissent and Satire
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- THE DAILY LIFE
- 1 London and the Court
- 2 Provincial Life
- 3 Sailors and the Sea
- 4 Elizabethans and Foreigners
- 5 Education and Apprenticeship
- 6 The Law and the Lawyers
- 7 London’s Prisons
- PHILOSOPHY AND FANCY
- 8 The Commonwealth
- 9 Dissent and Satire
- 10 Scientific Thought
- 11 Medicine and Public Health
- 12 The Folds of Folklore
- 13 Symbols and Significances
- ART AND ENTERTAINMENT
- 14 Actors and Theatres
- 15 The Printing of Books
- 16 Music and Ballads
- 17 The Foundations of Elizabethan Language
- Notes
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
'The malice of this age'
Half a century ago, in the opening chapter of Shakespeare's England, Sir Walter Raleigh boldly declared that
Our most intimate knowledge of Elizabethan England is given us by writers who found in the life and changes of the time matter for complaint and protest. Town or country makes no difference, all were agreed that the world was hastening to decay.
Such statements, clearly contentious, will receive no more approval than any other generalizations about the familiar subjects of Elizabethan and Jacobean pessimism, cynicism and discontent. Yet the changes in the life of the age were so momentous, religious, social and literary, and the divisions so extreme, that for Englishmen of roughly Shakespeare's generation the sheer contrariety of experience presented an exceptional intensity, at once the condition of their everyday lives, a pattern for thought, and a stimulus to art. For many the condition was intolerable, the pattern fragmented, and the stimulus a goad, provoking controversy and ridicule. Such were the religious martyrs, social malcontents and literary satirists, opponents of the establishment in the English Church, of the Court factions, or of the social and literary hierarchy of established values and reputations.
Their voices tell us directly of an England about which Shakespeare speaks only obliquely, but they are necessary for the fullest understanding of his time. For it is a paradox worthy of a literature that so constantly asserted contradiction that its greatest writer came to maturity as an age declined and its ideals came under severe scrutiny.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 120 - 137Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1964