Renaissance
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Renaissance
Renaissance
was a period of transition in European history from the dark middle ages to one
of enlightenment and modernity. The names Renaissance and Humanism are often applied to
the same movement. The term renaissance, which was first used in England, only
as late as the nineteenth century, etymologically means “rebirth”. It began in Florence, Italy in the 14th
century. Various theories have been proposed to account for its origins
and characteristics, focusing on a variety of factors including the social and
civic peculiarities of Florence at the time: its political structure, the
patronage of its dominant family, the Medici, and the migration of Greek scholars and their texts to
Italy following the Fall of Constantinople. However, the seeds of
Renaissance reached England through France during the late 15th
century and the movement had some great implications.
Firstly, the renaissance meant the death of the medieval
scholasticism which had for long been keeping human thoughts in bondage. The
schoolmen got themselves entangled in useless controversies and tried to apply
the principles of Aristotelian philosophy to the doctrines of Christianity,
thus giving birth to vast literature.
Secondly, it signaled a revolt against spiritual
authority-the authority of the Pope. The Reformation though not a part of the
revival of learning, was yet a companion movement in England. This defiance, of
spiritual authority went hand and hand with that of intellectual authority,
Renaissance intellectuals distinguished themselves by their flagrant
anti-authoritarianism.
Thirdly, the Renaissance implied a greater perception of
beauty and polish in the Greek and Latin scholars. This beauty and this polish
were sought by Renaissance men of letters to be incorporated in their native
literature. Further, it meant the birth of a kind of imitative tendency implied
in term “classicism”.
Lastly, the renaissance marked a change from the
theocentric to the homocentric conception of the universe. Human values came to
be recognized as permanent values, and they were sought to be enriched and
illuminated by the heritage of antiquity. This brought a new kind of Paganism
and marked the rise of humanism and also by implication, materialism.
Difference
between English and Italian Renaissance
The English
Renaissance is different from the Italian Renaissance in several ways. The
dominant art forms of the English Renaissance were literature and music. Visual arts in the English Renaissance were
much less significant than in the Italian Renaissance. England had a strong
tradition in literature and it got stronger in the Elizabethan and Jacobean
period.
Impact on
Society
Social conditions
In this period England’s population doubled; prices
rocketed, old social loyalties dissolved, and new industrial, agricultural, and
commercial veins were first tapped. Real wages hit an all-time low in the
1620s, and social relations were plunged into a state of fluidity from which
the merchant and the ambitious lesser gentleman profited at the expense of the
aristocrat and the laborer, as satires and comedies current from the 1590s
complain. The position of the crown, politically dominant yet financially insecure,
had always been potentially unstable, and, when Charles I lost
the confidence of his greater subjects in the 1640s, his authority crumbled.
Meanwhile, the huge body of poor fell ever further behind the rich.
Intellectual
and religious revolution
The
barely disguised condition of social unrest was accompanied by an intellectual revolution,
as the medieval elements
collapsed before the new science, new religion, and new humanism. The majority
of people were more immediately affected by the religious revolutions of the
16th century. A person in early adulthood at the accession of Elizabeth in 1558
would, by her death in 1603, have been vouchsafed an unusually disillusioning
insight into the duty owed by private conscience to
the needs of the state. The Tudor church hierarchy was
an instrument of social and political control, yet the mid-century
controversies over the faith had already wrecked any easy confidence in the
authority of doctrines and forms and had taught people to inquire carefully
into the rationale of their own beliefs. The Elizabethan ecclesiastical compromise
was the object of continual criticism,
from radicals both within (who desired progressive reforms, such as the
abolition of bishops) and without (who desired the return of England to the
Roman Catholic fold), but the incipient liberalism
of individuals such as John Milton and
the scholar and churchman William Chillingworth was held in check by the
majority’s unwillingness to tolerate a plurality of religions in a
supposedly unitary state.
The race for
cultural development
The
third complicating factor was the race to catch up with Continental
developments in arts and philosophy. The Tudors needed to create a class of
educated diplomats, statesmen, and officials and to dignify their court by
making it a fount of cultural as well as political patronage. The new learning,
widely disseminated through
the Erasmian (after the humanist Desiderius Erasmus)
educational programs of such men as John Colet and Sir Thomas Elyot,
proposed to use a systematic schooling in Latin authors and some Greek to
encourage in the social elites a flexibility of mind and civilized
serviceableness that would allow enlightened princely
government to walk hand in hand with responsible scholarship. Humanism fostered
an intimate familiarity
with the classics that was a powerful incentive for the creation of an English
literature of answerable dignity. It fostered as well a practical, secular piety
that left its impress everywhere on Elizabethan writing.
Development
of the English language
The
prevailing opinion of the language’s inadequacy, its lack of “terms” and innate
inferiority to the eloquent Classical
languages, was combated in the work of the humanists Thomas Wilson, Roger Ascham,
and Sir John Cheke,
whose treatises on rhetoric,
education, and even archery argued in favor of an unaffected vernacular prose
and a judicious attitude toward linguistic borrowings. A further stimulus was
the religious upheaval that took place in the middle of the century. The desire
of reformers to address as comprehensive an
audience as possible—the bishop and the boy who follows the plough, as William Tyndale put
it—produced the first true classics of English prose.
In verse, Tottel’s much reprinted Miscellany generated
a series of imitations and, by popularizing the lyrics of Sir Thomas Wyatt and
the earl of Surrey, carried into the 1570s the tastes of the early Tudor court.
The modern preference for the ornamental manner of the next generation has
eclipsed these poets, who continued the tradition of plain, weighty verse,
addressing themselves to ethical and didactic themes
and favoring the meditative lyric, satire, and
epigram. But their taste for economy, restraint, and aphoristic density was, in
the verse of Donne and Ben Jonson,
to outlive the cult of elegance.
Renaissance
and literature
(1558-1625)
The Elizabethan and early Stuart periods have been said to
represent the most brilliant century of all English literature. The reign of Elizabeth I began in 1558 and ended with her death in 1603; she
was succeeded by the Stuart king James VI of Scotland, who took the title James I of England as well. English literature of his reign as James
I, from 1603 to 1625, is properly called Jacobean. These years produced a
gallery of authors of genius, some of whom have never been surpassed, and
conferred on scores of lesser talents the enviable ability to write with
fluency, imagination, and verve.
Non-creative
Literature
Naturally
enough, the first impact of the Renaissance in England was registered by the
universities, being the repositories of all learning. Some English scholars,
becoming aware of the revival of learning in Italy, went to that country to
benefit by it and to examine personally the manuscripts brought there by the
fleeing Greek scholars of Constantinople. Prominent among these scholars were
William Grocyn (14467-1519), Thomas Linacre (1460-1524), and John Colet
(14677-1519). After returning from Italy they organised the teaching of Greek
in Oxford. They were such learned and reputed scholars of Greek that Erasmus
came all the way from Holland to learn Greek from them. Apart from scholars,
the impact of the Renaissance is also; in a measure, to be seen on the work of
the educationists of the age. Sir Thomas Elyot (14907-1546) wrote the Governour (1531)
which is a treatise on moral philosophy modelled on Italian works and full of
the spirit of Roman antiquity. Other educationists were Sir John Cheke
(1514-57), Sir Thomas Wilson (1525-81), and Sir Roger Ascham (1515-68). Out of
all the educationists the last named is the most important, on account of
his Scholemaster published two years after his death. Therein
he puts forward his views on the teaching of the classics. His own style is too
obviously based upon the ancient Roman writers. "By turns", remarks
Legouis, "he imitates Cicero's periods and Seneca's nervous
conciseness". In addition to these well-known educationists must be mentioned
the sizable number of now obscure ones—"those many unacknowledged, unknown
guides who, in school and University, were teaching men to admire and imitate
the masterpieces of antiquity" (Legouis).
Prose
The most
important prose writers who exhibit well the influence of the Renaissance on
English prose are Erasmus, Sir Thomas More, Lyly, and Sidney. The first named
was a Dutchman who, as we have already said, came to Oxford to learn Greek. His
chief work was The Praise of Folly which is the English
translation of his most important work-written in England. It is, according to
Tucker Brook, "the best expression in literature of the attack that the
Oxford reformers were making upon the medieval system." Erasmus wrote this
work in 1510 at the house of his friend Sir Thomas More who was executed at the
bidding of Henry VIII for his refusal to give up his allegiance to the ' Pope.
More's famous prose romance Utopia was, in the words of
Legouis, "true prologue to the Renaissance.'" It was the first book
written by an Englishman which achieved European fame; but it was written in
Latin (1516) and only later (1555) was translated into English. Curiously
enough, the next work by an English man again to acquire European fame is
Bacon's Novum Organwn-was also written originally in Latin.
Passing on to
the prose writers of the Elizabethan age-the age of the flowering of the
Renaissance-we find them markedly influenced both in their style and
thought-content by the revival of the antique classical
learning. Sidney in Arcadia, Lyly in Euphues, and
Hooker in The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity write an English
which is away from the language of common speech, and is either too heavily
laden—as in the case of Sidney and Lyly-with bits of classical finery, or
modelled on Latin syntax, as in the case of Hooker. Cicero seemed to
these writers a very obvious and respectable model. Bacon, however, in his
sententiousness and cogency comes near Tacitus and turns away from the
prolixity, diffuseness, and ornamentation associated with Ciceronian prose. Further,
in his own career and his Essays, Bacon stands as a
representative of the materialistic, Machiavellian facet of the Renaissance,
particularly of Renaissance Italy. He combines in himself the dispassionate
pursuit of truth and the keen desire for material advance.
Poetry
Sir Thomas
Wyatt (1503-42) and the Earl of Surrey (15177-47) were pioneers of
the new poetry in England. After Chaucer the spirit of English poetry had
slumbered for almost a century. The change in pronunciation in the fifteenth
century had created a lot of confusion in prosody which in the practice of such
important poets as Lydgate and Skelton had been reduced to a mockery. "The
revival", as Legoius says, "was an uphill task; verse had to be drawn
from the languor to which it had sunk in Stephen Hawes, and from the disorder
in which Skelton had plunged it; all had to be done anew". It was Wyatt
and Surrey who came forward to do it.
As Mair puts
it, it is with "these two courtiers that the modern English poetry
begins." Though they wrote much earlier, it was only in 1557, a year
before Elizabeth's coronation, that their work was published in Tottel's
Miscellany which is, according to G. H. Mair, "one of the
landmarks of English literature." Of the two, Wyatt had travelled
extensively in Italy and France and had come under the spell of Italian
Renaissance. It must be remembered that the work of Wyatt
and Surrey does not reflect the impact of the Rome of
antiquity alone, but also that of modern Italy. So far as versification is
concerned, Wyatt and Surrey imported into England various new Italian metrical
patterns. Moreover, they gave English poetry a new sense of grace, dignity,
delicacy, and harmony which was found by them lacking in the works of Chaucer
and the Chaucerians alike. Further, they Were highly influenced by the love
poetry of Petrarch and they did their best to imitate it. There is much of
idealism, if not downright artificiality, in Petrarch’s kind of love poetry.
It goes to
the credit of Wyatt to have introduced the sonnet into English literature, and
of Surrey to have first written blank verse. Both the sonnet and blank verse
were later to be practiced by a vast number of the best English poets.
According to David Daiches, "Wyatt's sonnets represent one of the most
interesting movements toward metrical discipline to be found in English
literary history." Though in his sonnets he did not employ regular iambic
pentameters yet he created a sense of discipline among the poets of his times.
Surrey's work is characterized by exquisite grace and tenderness which we find
missing from that of Wyatt. Moreover, he is a better craftsman and gives
greater harmony to his poetry. Surrey employed blank verse in his translation
of the fourth book of The Aeneid, the work which was first
translated into English verse by Gavin Douglas a generation earlier, but in
heroic couplets.
Drama
The revival
of ancient classical learning scored its first clear impact on English drama in
the middle of the sixteenth century. Previous to this impact there had been a
pretty vigorous native tradition of drama, particularly comedy. This tradition
had its origin in the liturgical drama and had progressed through the miracle
and the mystery, and later the morality, to the interlude. John Heywood had
written quite a few vigorous interludes, but they were altogether different in
tone, spirit, and purpose from the Greek and Roman drama of antiquity. The
first English regular tragedy Gorboduc (written by Sackville
and Norton, and first acted in 1562) and comedy Ralph Roister
Doister (written about 1550 by Nicholas Udall) were very much
imitations of classical tragedy and comedy. It is interesting to note that
English dramatists came not under the spell of the ancient Greek dramatists
Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, the tragedy writers, and Aristophanes, the
comedy writer but the Roman dramatists Seneca, the tragedy writer, and Plautus
and. Terence! the comedv writers. It was indeed unfortunate as Greek drama is
vastly superior to Roman drama. Gorboduc is a slavish
imitation of Senecan tragedy and has all its features without much of its life.
Ralph Roister Doister is modelled upon Plautus and Terence. It is based on the
stupid endeavors of the hero for winning the love of a married woman.
Later on, the
"University Wits" struck a note of independence in their dramatic
work. They refused to copy Roman drama as slavishly as the writers of Gorboduc and
Ralph Roister Doister. Even so, their plays are not free from
the impact of the Renaissance; rather they show it as amply, though not in the
same way. In their imagination they were all fired by the new literature which
showed them new dimensions of human capability. They were humanists through and
through. All of them—Lyly, Greene, Peele, Nashe, Lodge, Marlowe, and Kyd-show
in their dramatic work not, of course, a slavish tendency to ape the ancients
but a chemical action of Renaissance learning on the native genius fired by the
enthusiasm of discovery and aspiration so typical of the Elizabethan age. In
this respect Marlowe stands in the fore-front of the University Wits. Rightly
has he been called "the true child of the Renaissance".
Above all other
dramatists stands William Shakespeare, a supreme genius whom it
is impossible to characterize briefly. Shakespeare is unequaled as poet and
intellect, but he remains elusive. His capacity for assimilation—what the
poet John Keats called his “negative
capability”—means that his work is comprehensively accommodating; every
attitude or ideology finds its resemblance there yet
also finds itself subject to criticism and interrogation. In part,
Shakespeare achieved this by the total inclusiveness of his aesthetic, by putting clowns in his tragedies and
kings in his comedies, juxtaposing public and private, and mingling
the artful with the spontaneous; his plays imitate the counterchange of values
occurring at large in his society. The sureness and profound popularity of his
taste enabled him to lead the English Renaissance without privileging or prejudicing any one of its divergent aspects,
while he—as actor, dramatist, and shareholder in the Lord Chamberlain’s players—was involved in the
Elizabethan theatre at every level. His career (dated from 1589 to 1613)
corresponded exactly to the period of greatest literary flourishing, and only
in his work are the total possibilities of the Renaissance fully realized.
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