Ben Jonson
Ben Jonson
Ben Jonson
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Herford and Simpson reckon the first of the lyrics to have been written in 1623
(a literal reading of 'fifty years'), and the remaining pieces 'after 1612, when
Jonson made up his lyrics for The Forest, and before 1616, when The Devil is an
Ass, containing II.iv. 11-30, was acted at the Blackfriars': Ben Jonson, ed. C.
H. Herford and P. and E. Simpson, 11 vols. (Oxford, 1925-52), XI. 49. Why
lyrics ii-x had to be completed before the performance of The Devil is an Ass the
editors do not explain. The seventh lyric was amongst 'the most commonplace
of his repetition' when Jonson visited Drummond in 1618-19: see Conversations
with Drummond, 66-75 (Oxford Authors edn). The reference to Queen Anne
of Denmark's dancing in vi.28 indicates a date before her death in March 1619.
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Sir John Suckling, Non-Dramatic Works, ed. Thomas Clayton (Oxford, 1971),
pp. 29-30, James Shirley, Poems, &c. (London, 1646), p. 9 (once incorrectly
ascribed to Thomas Carew: see his Poems, ed. Rhodes Dunlop (Oxford, 1949),
p. 197); Davick Garrick, Plays, ed. H. W. Pedicord and F. L. Bergmann
(Carbondale and Edwardsville, 1981), III. 294; 'Tales and Tempests':
Bartholomew Fair, Induction, 130 (Herford and Simpson edn).
The Complete Works ofWilliam Hazlitt, ed. P. P. Howe, after the edition of A.
R. Waller and Arnold Glover (London, 1931), VI. 239-40.
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9
6
Ibid., p. 241. 'Nest of spicery' is from Richard III, IV.iv. 424 (Richard speaking
to Queen Elizabeth, about her daughter's womb).
Charles Cowden Clarke, 'On the Comic Writers of England: II - Ben Jonson',
The Gentleman's Magazine, May 1871, p. 635.
The seventh lyric was admired by 'Barry Cornwall' (B. W. Procter) in his
Memoir ofthe Life and Writing ofBen Jonson (London, 1838), p. xxxix, and by
Nathan Drake, Shakspeare and his Times (Paris, 1843), p. 306. On nineteenthcentury anthologies and their part in the formation of J?nson's poetic
reputation, see Ian Donaldson, 'Jonson's Ode to Sir Lucius Cary and Sir H.
Morison', Studies in the Literary Imagination, VI (1973), 139-52.
'Her Triumph' was thus anthologized (to give just a few examples) in English
Lyrics (London, 1883), The Oxford Book of English Verse 1250-1918, ed. Sir
Arthur Quiller-Couch (Oxford, 1900), Lyrics from the Dramatists of the
Elizabethan Age, ed. A. H. Bullen (London, 1901), The Pageant of English
Poetry (London etc., 1916), English Verse, ed. W. Peacock, 5 vols. (London,
1929), vol. II, Seventeenth-Century Poetry, ed. John Hayward (London, 1948),
Elizabethan Lyrics, ed. Norman Ault (New York, 1949), The Penguin Book of
English Verse, ed. John Hayward (Harmondsworth, 1956), English
Masterpieces, ed. Leonard Dean, III: Renaissance Poetry (Englewood Cliffs,
1961), Poets ofthe Early Seventeenth Century, ed. Bernard and Elizabeth Davis
(London, 1967), The New Oxford Book of English Verse, ed. Helen Gardner
(Oxford, 1972), Everyman's Book of English Verse, ed. John Wain (London
etc., 1981).
Herford and Simpson, XI. 49.
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their theses a little hard, and of missing what is perhaps the most
attractive feature of the sequence: its extraordinary flexibility and
variety. Throughout the Charis poems, Jonson shifts deftly and
rapidly through a range of poetic forms, voices, and moods,
modulating with wonderful suppleness from satire to celebration,
from pathos to playfulness, switching emotional registers and
angles of vision in order to create a complex total picture of the
developing and dwindling relationship between Charis and her
adoring lover.
These contrasts and variations go well beyond what is suggested
by any notion of a 'love debate': debating is scarcely what the
characters get up to, nor do the lyrics themselves address and
answer each other in anything resembling a dialectical manner. The
lyrics are variously spoken and variously directed: The first, second,
and third of the lyrics are in the voice of the poet, who is at once the
presenter and principal actor in this little drama. The story he tells
is of events which have already occurred; it appears to be leading to
a conclusion that is already known to him. In the closing lines of the
third lyric, however, the narration moves suddenly into the present
tense ('Loser-like, now, all my wreak / Is that I have leave to speak',
etc.), and the fourth lyric, 'Her Triumph', dramatically describes an
occurrence that is happening now, even as we watch and listen: 'See
the chariot at hand here of Love, / Wherein my lady rideth!' The
fifth, sixth, and seventh lyrics seem to ignore us, the by-standers and
witnesses of this story, being addressed instead to Cupid and to
Charis. The most intimate of these, the seventh ('Begging another,
on colour of mending the former'), bases its plea indeed on the
assumption that the lovers are now alone: 'Here's none to spy, or
see'. The eighth lyric briefly remembers our presence, returning for
a dozen lines to the original narrative mode before turning once
again to Charis and addressing her directly. Other listeners are now
present: the lover's tone is accordingly less intimate and more
peremptory than in the preceding song. The ninth lyric is addressed
by Charis to the poet, once more in the presence of others; it is a
public answer to a public challenge, studiously casual in manner,
teasingly non-committal in its declarations. The tenth lyric is
spoken by another lady 'present at the hearing' in a witty aside
directed presumably to Charis or members of her retinue. This
courtly circle grouped around Charis has seemingly replaced the
original audience to which 'Ben' addresses his early lyrics.
This is not exactly the conclusion that we might have anticipated
at the outset of the sequence. Something surprising has happened to
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the story along the way. The poet who began with would-be dignity
to tell a (past-tense) narrative about himself that he vowed would
move us to sorrow and gladness has now been silenced by the
emergence of a (present-tense) drama that is more likely to move us
to a smile. The last word is delivered not by the infatuated narrator
but by a skittish lady of the court. 'Ben' has seemingly been
marginalized not only as a lover but also as a poet; to have lost not
merely Charis, but control of the story about Charis which he was
attempting to relate.
To follow the changing narrative shape of the Charis sequence in
this way is to realize that the poems are not simply concerned with
charting the progress of a love affair, as older scholars believed;
they also chart the progress of a story about an amorous affair.
Jonson is writing not only about the adventures of a lover, but also
about the adventures of a poet; about the power of love and the
power of poetry; and about the humorous, sublime, and
troublesome ways in which those two great forces may tangle and
intersect.
II
Here the naked stupidity of the rhyme itself humorously denies the
overt proposition of the lines. In a similar way, the very appeal not
to lc:tugh at the outset of the first lyric paradoxically alerts the reader
to the possibility of comicalities to come; a possibility that is
nevertheless held in check through a steadying modulation of the
lines:
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The last three lines, with their anaphoric repetitions and skilful
deployment of vowels ('With the ardour and the passion'),
themselves demand to be read with a certain deliberation or
'weight': a word which, as Anne Ferry has shown, has a precise,
stylistic, sense in Jonson's critical vocabulary, yet also possibly
reminds us at subliminal level of the poet himself, whose 'weight is
twenty stone, within two pound' (The Underwood, 56.11).15
'Fashion' has a similarly humorous double life, for the term could be
used either in the lightly modish sense which Charis intends when
she later expresses her preference for a lover 'French to boot, at
least in fashion' (ix.7), or with the deeper sense of poetic artistry
and endeavour that is to be found in Jonson's lines to the memory
of Shakespeare:
For though the poet's matter nature be,
His art doth give the fashion. And that he
Who casts to write a living line must sweat
(Such as thine are) and strike the second heat
Upon the muses' anvil: turn the same
(And himself with it) that he thinks to frame ...
(Ungathered Verse, 26. 57-62)i6
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She will miraculously halt the progress and incursions of time, just
as poetry itself is alleged to do, both for its practitioners and the
subjects whom they immortalize.!? The lyric invites us
simultaneously to smile at the naive trustfulness of the narrator, and
to respect his noble praise. 'Of whose beauty it was sung': the
allusion, if it is one, has not been traced. But the hyperbolic tribute
to the powers of Charis in these lines is curiously like the hyperbolic
tribute to the powers of the poet in the Epistle Dedicatory
addressed to the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge which
Jonson prefixed to the 1607 quarto edition of Va/pone (an epistle
which functions in one sense like the opening lyric of the Charis
sequence, making a similar bid to raise our admiration and control
our responses to the narrative that follows):
He that is said to be able to inform young men to all good disciplines, inflame
grown men to all great virtues, keep old men in their best and supreme state,
or, as thev decline to childhood, recover them to their first strength; that
comes forth the interpreter and arbiter of nature, a teacher of things divine no
less than human, a master in manners; and can alone (or with a few) effect the
business of mankind: this, I take him, is no subject for pride and ignorance to
exercise their railing rhetoric upon. (II. 20-7)
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These ways ?f seeing, like the truths they seemingly reveal, are
relentlessly smgular. The women 'discoursing with their glass' can
be seen only as 'monsters', having no life beyond the immediate
rhetorical purposes of the satire. It is impossible to move outside the
intense but limited field of vision which the poet creates.
The modes of perception and presentation in 'A Celebration of
Charis' are strikingly unlike those just described. Through
successive lyrics, Jonson offers a complex set of variable,
subjective, and competing views of a situation which shifts and
alters even as it is being observed. Though the lover in the first lyric
speaks proudly of 'the truth' (i. 10) which he, as poet, presents and
represents, we quickly realize that the truth about Charis may be
larger and more various than his story at first admits. 19 The
sequence itself becomes a humorous meditation upon ways of
seeing, and the elusive subjectivity of narrative 'truth'. The title of
the second lyric, 'How He Saw Her' , hints not simply at a time when
and place where the poet first beheld Charis, but at his whole
manner of seeing (and not seeing) her: of perceiving, assessing,
adoring, approaching, pursuing, lamenting, wooing, scolding,
exalting, writing verses to and about. Seeing Charis, the poet at
once calls upon the blinded Cupid to see her too, and unties the
cloth around Cupid's eyes. His sight restored, Cupid prudently and
instantly flees. The poet looks at Charis again, hoping to strike her
with love; instead she throws a look that immobilizes and strikes
him blind. It is this blinded poet who comically attempts to share his
vision with us: his vision of 'the truth'. In the third lyric, his eyes and
limbs restored, the poet is struck in the heart, yet vows to write on:
Loser-like, now, all my wreak
Is that I have leave to speak,
And in either prose, or song,
To revenge me with my tongue;
Which how dextrously I do,
Hear, and make example too.
(iii. 21-6)
19
14
Wesley Trimpi's remarks on Jonson's general high regard for 'the truth'
overlook this point: Ben Jonson's Poems, p. 210.
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!h,e visio~ of female yanity here is quite different from that offered
~n ~n EpIstle to a Fnend, to Persuade Him to the Wars' not simply
m Its tone (affectionately teasing, where that was angrily
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What is 'here sung' is not 'Her Triumph' or indeed any lyric we are
to encounter in the sequence; the poetic images that Cupid declares
'your verse discloses' (v. 21) are neverfully shown to us: a fact which
has puzzled editors and prompted them to search elsewhere for the
21
22
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The seventh and eighth lyrics are each in their different ways acts of
persuasion, urging Charis once more to a kiss, then to her
declaration. The function of the verse throughout the sequence is
thus constantly mobile: it is not in any simple sense that of
'celebration' or of satire or of narrative or of unalloyed lyric, but
shifts unpredictably from one mode to another. The lyrics
constitute a story that is told to us; they are also part of an amorous
game that is played within that story. This multiplicity of poetic
function, like the multiplicity of poetic viewpoint, lend the
sequence a teasing complexity and self-reflexiveness more often
encountered in Jonson's dramatic than in his non-dramatic work.
In the ninth lyric of the sequence the object of adoration is at last
permitted to speak in her own voice.
Of your trouble, Ben, to ease me,
I will tell what man would please me.
I would have him, if I could,
Noble, or of greater blood;
Titles, I confess, do take me,
And a woman God did make me;
French to boot, at least in fashion,
And his manners of that nation.
(ix. 1-8)
23
See for example Poems of Ben Jonson, ed. G. B. Johnston (London, 1954), p.
332. Underwood 19 is sometimes guessed to be the 'missing' lyric.
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The sentiments are flawless, yet the unstrenuous rhymes ('be such'/
'too much', 'condemn'/'contemn') and even imperturbability of
metre lend the catalogue an air of faintly languid facility. The
declaration which set out to 'ease me' and 'please me' leads
insouciantly to 'truth and me', and comes to its final point of rest
'where I am'. It is difficult to see how these lines can mean anything
other than what they appear to mean: that until the perfect lover
materializes, Charis will keep herself to herself, giving no public
pledge either to Ben or to any of the numerous other suitors who
pursue her (viii. 5-10).
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'Truth and me': in her closing words, Charis effortlessly elides the
two. Her phrase returns us to the opening lyric, in which the poet
declares his love not only for Charis but also for those several
qualities -language, truth, ardour, passion - that make him a
poet; qualities that he believes may win him Charis, against all odds.
His poetry does not in the long run achieve this result. The 'truth' it
urges, though passionately felt, seems (like the 'truth' of which
Charis lightly speaks) merely one component in a larger and more
various dramatic truth which the sequence as a whole has revealed
to us. That truth concerns not merely the nature of love, but also the
nature of poetry: what it can do, and what it cannot do.
Jonson's own great trust in the power of poetry is evident not only
in the passage from the Epistle Dedicatory to the two Universities
prefixed to Vo/pone that has already been quoted, but thoughout
his writings as a whole. 24 Yet some ofJonson's most touching poems
turn upon the realization that such power has its limits: that his
poetry, for all its grace and dignity, cannot bring to life a dead son,
cannot perpetually 'Keep the middle age at stay', cannot ultimately
secure him the lady whom he loves. This wry knowledge is an
important part of the final 'truth' of 'A Celebration of Charis', as it
is of 'My Picture Left in Scotland' (The Underwood, 9).25
'Charis' is the singular form of charites, the Graces, and the
notion of grace appropriately recurs throughout the sequence. 26
Traditionally, the three Graces are benevolent; iconographically,
they are represented naked and holding hands: two of the figures
always advance towards us, while one presents her back. Their
hands are joined to show the 'perpetual and never-ceasing
intercourse of kindness and benevolence among friends'; the
disposition of their figures suggests that for every grace going from
us, two graces will always come our way. 27 The final balance of the
accounts in 'A Celebration of Charis' cannot be simply drawn up;
the notion of winning and losing is lightly played over throughout
the sequence, but it is on a note of apparent loss that the story of
Charis ends. Ben seems to be pursuing a Grace who is walking
away.
24
25
26
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The final lyric of the sequence has been described by one critic as
revengeful in its display ofthe fury of an old lover scorned. Showing 'ire more
than danger', Ben concludes the 'Celebration' of Charis by hurling a final,
carnal statement in the face of his vain, apparently worthless, pseudo-Platonic
mistress by way of putting her in her place in a manner reminiscent of
Hamlet's turning on Ophelia ... 28
28
29
20
Weinberger, p. 324.
bpigrams, 131.2; Catiline, 'To the Reader in Ordinary', 3; Bartholomew Fair,
Induction, 87 (Herford and Simpson edn).