Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T17:26:03.543Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

"Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue": William Cavendish, Ben Jonson, and the Decorative Scheme of Bolsover Castle*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Timothy Raylor*
Affiliation:
Carleton College

Abstract

The iconography of Bolsover Castle is much appreciated but little understood. This is because we have not recognized its dynamic, theatrical character, which centers on — indeed, implies the presence of its seventeenth-century owner, William Cavendish, duke of Newcastle. Read in terms of Cavendish's self-conception as a figure of patriachal authority and Herculean passions, the castle emerges as a witty apologia for its owner — and perhaps even as a site for the pursuit of his amours. This reading sheds new light upon the relationship between Cavendish, Bolsover, and Ben Jonson, who provided the text for a royal visit to Bolsover in 1634.

Type
Studies
Copyright
Copyright © Renaissance Society of America 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

This article was written at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D. C , while I was on sabbatical from Carleton College; I am grateful to both institutions for their support. I am indebted to Dr. Lynn Hulse for conversations about Cavendish and Bolsover Castle and for her suggestions on a draft of this article. Professors Alison Kettering, Eva Posfay, Cathy Yandell, and the anonymous reader for Renaissance Quarterly also offered valuable advice. Thanks to Sarah Chapman of English Heritage for answering some queries about the castle, to the Northfield Renaissance Colloquium for allowing me to try out some of these ideas on them, to Professor Mark Greengrass and his colleagues at the University of Sheffield Centre for Early Modern Studies for inviting me to lecture on the subject, and to Paul Bryan, Head of English Heritage's Photogrammetric Unit, for supplying prints taken during the recent survey of Bolsover.

References

Allen, Michael J. B. “Homo ad Zodiacum: Marsilio Ficino and the Boethian Hercules.” In Forma e Parola: Studi in memoria di Fredi Chiappelli. Ed. Dennis J. Dutschke, Pier Massimo Forni, Fillipo Grazzani, Benjamin R. Lawton, Laura Sanguineti White, 205-51. Rome, 1992.Google Scholar
Anderson, Donald. K. Jr. “The Banquet of Love in English Drama (1595-1642).” Journal of English and Germanic Philology 63 (1964): 422–32.Google Scholar
Bamborough, J. B. The Little World of Man. London and New York, 1952.Google Scholar
Beal, Peter. Index of English Literary Manuscripts: Volume 1, 1450-1625. London and New York, 1980.Google Scholar
Beal, Peter. Index of English Literary Manuscripts: Volume 2, 1625-1700. London and New York, 1987-1993.Google Scholar
Beguin, Sylvie, Jean Guillaume Beguin, and Alain Roy. La Galerie d'Ulysse a Fontainebleau. Paris, 1985.Google Scholar
Brown, Cedric C. “Courtesies of Place and Arts of Diplomacy in Ben Jonson's Last Two Entertainments for Royalty.” The Seventeenth Century 9 (1994): 147–71.Google Scholar
Buffa, Sebastian. |ed. Antonio Tempesta. The Illustrated Bartsch: Italian Masters of the Sixteenth Century, 36. New York, 1983.Google Scholar
Burton, Robert. The Anatomy of Melancholy. 3 vols. Intro. Holbrook Jackson. London and New York, 1932.Google Scholar
Carew, Thomas. Poems with his Masque “Coelum Britannicum. “ Ed. Rhodes Dunlap. Oxford, 1949.Google Scholar
Margaret, [Cavendish], Duchess of New castle. The Life of William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle. Ed. C. H. Firth. 2d ed. London, [1906].Google Scholar
[Cavendish], [William]. “What are aproved remedies to helpe Venus as the Lerned Saye.” Hallward Library, University of Nottingham, Portland MS, PwV1031.Google Scholar
[Cavendish], [William]. Mithode et Invention nouvelle de Dresser les Chevaux. Antwerp, 1658.Google Scholar
[Cavendish], [William]. The Phanseys of William Cavendish Marquis of Newcastle addressed to Margaret Lucas and her Letters in reply. Ed. Douglas Grant. London, 1956.Google Scholar
[Cavendish], [William]. Ideology and Politics on the Eve of the Restoration: Newcastle's Advice to Charles II. Transcribed and introduced by Thomas P. Slaughter. Philadelphia, 1984.Google Scholar
Chew, Samuel C. The Virtues Reconciled: An Iconographical Study. Toronto, 1947.Google Scholar
Clarendon, Edward [Hyde], Earl of. The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England. 6 vols. Ed. W. Dunn Macray. Oxford, 1888.Google Scholar
Croft-Murray, Edward. Decorative Painting in England 1537-1837. 2 vols. London, 1962, 1970.Google Scholar
Cutts, John P. “When were the Senses in such order plac'd?. Comparative Drama 4 (1970): 5262.Google Scholar
de Hoop Scheffer, D., ed. and Christiaan, Schuckman. compiler. Maarten de Vos: Plates, Part II, Vol. 46. Hollstein's Dutch & Flemish Etchings and Woodcuts 1450-1700. Rotterdam, 1995.Google Scholar
Draper, John W. The Humors & Shakespeare's Characters. Durham, NC, 1945.Google Scholar
English Heritage. Guide boards in Bolsover Castle.Google Scholar
Faulkner, P. A. Bolsover Castle. London, 1972.Google Scholar
Ficino, Marsilio. Trans. Omnia Divini Platonis Opera. Basel, 1551.Google Scholar
Ficino, Marsilio. Commentary on Plato's “Symposium “ on Love. Trans. Sears Jayne. Dallas, 1985. **Google Scholar
Fowler, Alastair. The Country House Poem: A Cabinet of Seventeenth-Century Estate Poems and Related Items. Edinburgh, 1994.Google Scholar
Fowler, Alastair. Time's Purpled Masquers: Stars and the Afterlife in Renaissance English Literature. Oxford, 1996.Google Scholar
Galinsky, G. Karl. The Herakles Theme: The Adaptations of the Hero in Literature from Homer to the Twentieth-Century. Oxford, 1972.Google Scholar
Girouard, Mark. Robert Smythson & The Elizabethan Country House. New Haven and London, 1983.Google Scholar
Girouard, Mark. Hardwick Hall. London, 1989.Google Scholar
Gordon, D. J. “Poet and Architect: The Intellectual Setting of the Quarrel between Ben Jonson and Inigo Jones.” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 12 (1949): 152–78.Google Scholar
Goulding, Richard W. Bolsover Castle. 1922.Google Scholar
Hobbes, Thomas. The Elements of Law Natural and Politic: Human Nature, De Corpore Politico. Ed. J. C. A. Gaskin. Oxford and New York, 1994.Google Scholar
Hulse, Lynn. “Apollo's Whirligig: William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle, and his Music Collection.” The Seventeenth Century 9 (1994): 213–46.Google Scholar
Jacob, James R. and Raylor, Timothy. “Opera and Obedience: Thomas Hobbes and A Proposition for Advancement of Moralitie by Sir William Davenant.” The Seventeenth Century 6 (1991): 205–50.Google Scholar
Jacquot, Jean. “Sir Charles Cavendish and his Learned Friends.” Annals of Science (1952): 13-27, 175-91.Google Scholar
Jones, Inigo. Inigo Jones on Palladia. 2 vols. Ed. Bruce Allsopp. Newcastle upon Tyne, 1970.Google Scholar
Jonson, Ben. Benjonson. 11 vols. Ed. C. H. Herford, Percy Simpson and Evelyn Simpson. Oxford, 1925-1952.Google Scholar
Jung, Marc-René. Hercules dans la Littirature Francoise du XVIe Siecle: de THercule Courtois a I'Hercule Baroque. Geneva, 1966.Google Scholar
Kelliher, Hilton. “Donne, Jonson, Richard Andrews and The Newcastle Manuscript.” English Manuscript Studies, 1100-1700 4(1993): 134-73.Google Scholar
Kermode, Frank. “The Banquet of Sense.” In Shakespeare, Spenser, Donne: Renaissance Essays. London, 1971.Google Scholar
Long, Robert. Letter to William Cavendish, Earl of Newcastle. 10 August 1637. British Library, Additional MS 70499, fol. 231.Google Scholar
Marino, Giambattista. Adonis: Selections from L'Adone of Giambattista Marino. Trans. Harold Morton Priest. Ithaca, N.Y., 1967.Google Scholar
Marlowe, Christopher. The Complete Poems and Translations. Ed. Stephen Orgel. Harmondsworth, 1971.Google Scholar
Montaigne, Michel de. Oeuvres Competes. 12 vols. Ed. A. Armaingaud. Paris, 1923-1941.Google Scholar
Mowl, Timothy. Elizabethan & Jacobean Style. London, 1993.Google Scholar
Nordenfalk, Carl. “The Five Senses in Late Medieval and Renaissance Art.” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 48 (1985): 122.Google Scholar
Panofsky, Erwin. Hercules am Scheidewege. Studien der Bibliothek Warburg, 38. Berlin and Leipzig, 1930.Google Scholar
Panofsky, Erwin. Studies in Iconology: Humanistic Themes in the Art of the Renaissance. New York, 1939.Google Scholar
“particular of the Goods at Boielsover Castell, A.” British Library, Additional MS 70500, fols. 110-1 lv.Google Scholar
Pegge, Samuel. Sketch of the History of Bolsover and Peak Castles, in the County of Derby. London, 1785.Google Scholar
Pevsner, Nikolaus. Derbyshire. Revised by Elizabeth Williamson. The Buildings of England. Harmondsworth, 1978.Google Scholar
Riggs, David. Ben Jonson: A Life. Cambridge, MA and London, 1989.Google Scholar
Rowe, Nick. “‘My Best Patron:’ William Cavendish and Jonson's Caroline Drama.” The Seventeenth Century 9 (1994): 197212.Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William. Poems. Ed. F. T. Prince. Cambridge, MA, and London, 1960.Google Scholar
Smith, Hallett. Elizabethan Poetry: A Study in Conventions, Meaning, and Expression. Cambridge, MA, 1952.Google Scholar
Stead, Jennifer. “Bowers of Bliss: the Banquet Setting.” In “Banquetting Stuffe “: The Fare and Social Background of the Tudor and Stuart Banquet, 115-57. Edinburgh, 1991.Google Scholar
Strauss, Walter L. and Tomoko, Shimura. eds. Cornells Cort. The Illustrated Bartsch: Netherlandish Artists, 52. New York, 1986.Google Scholar
Strauss, Walter L., ed. Hendrik Goltzius. The Illustrated Bartsch: Netherlandish Artists, 3. New York, 1988.Google Scholar
Trease, Geoffrey. Portrait of a Cavalier: William Cavendish, First Duke of Newcastle. London and Basingstoke, 1979.Google Scholar
Verheyen, Egon. The Palazzo del Te in Mantua: Images of Love and Politics. Baltimore and London, 1977.Google Scholar
Vinge, Louise. The Five Senses: Studies in a Literary Tradition. Acta Regiae Societatis Humaniorum Litterarum Lundensis, 72. Lund, 1975.Google Scholar
Waith, Eugene M. The Herculean Hero in Marlowe, Chapman, Shakespeare and Dryden. London and New York, 1962.Google Scholar
Welford, P. M. “Bolsover Castle: Venus Fountain Iconography Study, Preliminary Investigation.” Unpublished paper.Google Scholar
Wilson, C. Anne. “Banquetting Stuffe“: The Fare and Social Background of the Tudor and Stuart Banquet. Edinburgh, 1991.Google Scholar
Wilson, C. Anne. “The Evolution of the Banquet Course: Some Medicinal, Culinary and Social Aspects.” In “Banquetting Stuffe“: The Fare and Social Background of the Tudor and Stuart Banquet, 935. Edinburgh, 1991.Google Scholar
Wind, Edgar. Bellini's Feast of the Gods: A Study in Venetian Humanism. Cambridge, MA, 1948.Google Scholar
Xenophon, . Memorabilia and Oeconomicus. Trans, by E. C. Marchant. London and New York, 1923.Google Scholar
Zerner, Henri. The School of Fontainebleau. London, 1969.Google Scholar