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PART I - ELIZABETHAN DEMONOLOGY.
1. It is impossible to understand and appreciate thoroughly the
production of any great literary genius who lived and wrote in times
far removed from our own, without a certain amount of familiarity, not
only with the precise shades of meaning possessed by the vocabulary he
made use of, as distinguished from the sense conveyed by the same words
in the present day, but also with the customs and ideas, political,
religious and moral, that predominated during the period in which his
works were produced. Without such information, it will be found
impossible, in many matters of the first importance, to grasp the
writer's true intent, and much will appear vague and lifeless that was
full of point and vigour when it was first conceived; or, worse still,
modern opinion upon the subject will be set up as the standard of
interpretation, ideas will be forced into the writer's sentences that
could not by any manner of possibility have had place in his mind, and
utterly false conclusions as to his meaning will be the result. Even
the man who has had some experience in the study of an early
literature, occasionally finds some difficulty in preventing the
current opinions of his day from obtruding themselves upon his work and
warping his judgment; to the general reader this must indeed be a
frequent and serious stumbling-block.
2. This is a special source of danger in the study of the works of
dramatic poets, whose very art lies in the representation of the
current opinions, habits, and foibles of their times—in holding up the
mirror to their age. It is true that, if their works are to live, they
must deal with subjects of more than mere passing interest; but it is
also true that many, and the greatest of them, speak upon questions of
eternal interest in the particular light cast upon them in their times,
and it is quite possible that the truth may be entirely lost from want
of power to recognize it under the disguise in which it comes. A
certain motive, for instance, that is an overpowering one in a given
period, subsequently appears grotesque, weak, or even powerless; the
consequent action becomes incomprehensible, and the actor is contemned;
and a simile that appeared most appropriate in the ears of the author's
contemporaries, seems meaningless, or ridiculous, to later generations.
3. An example or two of this possibility of error, derived from
works produced during the period with which it is the object of these
pages to deal, will not be out of place here.
A very striking illustration of the manner in which a word may
mislead is afforded by the oft-quoted line:
“Assume a virtue, if you have it not.”
By most readers the secondary, and, in the present day, almost
universal, meaning of the word assume—“pretend that to be, which in
reality has no existence;”—that is, in the particular case, “ape the
chastity you do not in reality possess”—is understood in this
sentence; and consequently Hamlet, and through him, Shakspere, stand
committed to the appalling doctrine that hypocrisy in morals is to be
commended and cultivated. Now, such a proposition never for an instant
entered Shakspere's head. He used the word “assume” in this case in its
primary and justest sense; ad-sumo, take to, acquire; and the
context plainly shows that Hamlet meant that his mother, by
self-denial, would gradually acquire that virtue in which she was so
conspicuously wanting. Yet, for lack of a little knowledge of the
history of the word employed, the other monstrous gloss has received
almost universal and applauding acceptance.
4. This is a fair example of the style of error which a reader
unacquainted with the history of the changes our language has undergone
may fall into. Ignorance of changes in customs and morals may cause
equal or greater error.
The difference between the older and more modern law, and popular
opinion, relating to promises of marriage and their fulfilment, affords
a striking illustration of the absurdities that attend upon the
interpretation of the ideas of one generation by the practice of
another. Perhaps no greater nonsense has been talked upon any subject
than this one, especially in relation to Shakspere's own marriage, by
critics who seem to have thought that a fervent expression of acute
moral feeling would replace and render unnecessary patient
investigation.
In illustration of this difference, a play of Massinger's, “The Maid
of Honour,” may be advantageously cited, as the catastrophe turns upon
this question of marriage contracts. Camiola, the heroine, having been
precontracted by oath[1] to Bertoldo, the king's natural brother, and
hearing of his subsequent engagement to the Duchess of Sienna,
determines to quit the world and take the veil. But before doing so,
and without informing any one, except her confessor, of her intention,
she contrives a somewhat dramatic scene for the purpose of exposing her
false lover. She comes into the presence of the king and all the court,
produces her contract, claims Bertoldo as her husband, and demands
justice of the king, adjuring him that he shall not—
“Swayed or by favour or affection,
By a false gloss or wrested comment, alter
The true intent and letter of the law.”
[Footnote 1: Act v. sc. I.]
Now, the only remedy that would occur to the mind of the reader of
the present day under such circumstances, would be an action for breach
of promise of marriage, and he would probably be aware of the very
recent origin of that method of procedure. The only reply, therefore,
that he would expect from Roberto would be a mild and sympathetic
assurance of inability to interfere; and he must be somewhat taken
aback to find this claim of Camiola admitted as indisputable. The
riddle becomes somewhat further involved when, having established her
contract, she immediately intimates that she has not the slightest
intention of observing it herself, by declaring her desire to take the
veil.
5. This can only be explained by the rules current at the time
regarding spousals. The betrothal, or handfasting, was, in Massinger's
time, a ceremony that entailed very serious obligations upon the
parties to it. There were two classes of spousals—sponsalia de
futuro and sponsalia de praesenti: a promise of marriage in
the future, and an actual declaration of present marriage. This last
form of betrothal was, in fact, marriage, as far as the contracting
parties were concerned.[1] It could not, even though not consummated,
be dissolved by mutual consent; and a subsequent marriage, even though
celebrated with religious rites, was utterly invalid, and could be set
aside at the suit of the injured person.
[Footnote 1: Swinburne, A Treatise of Spousals, 1686, p. 236. In
England the offspring were, nevertheless, illegitimate.]
The results entailed by sponsalia de futuro were less
serious. Although no spousals of the same nature could be entered into
with a third person during the existence of the contract, yet it could
be dissolved by mutual consent, and was dissolved by subsequent
sponsalia in praesenti, or matrimony. But such spousals could be
converted into valid matrimony by the cohabitation of the parties; and
this, instead of being looked upon as reprehensible, seems to have been
treated as a laudable action, and to be by all means encouraged.[1] In
addition to this, completion of a contract for marriage de futuro
confirmed by oath, if such a contract were not indeed indissoluble, as
was thought by some, could at any rate be enforced against an unwilling
party. But there were some reasons that justified the dissolution of
sponsalia of either description. Affinity was one of these;
and—what is to the purpose here, in England before the Reformation,
and in those parts of the continent unaffected by it—the entrance into
a religious order was another. Here, then, we have a full explanation
of Camiola's conduct. She is in possession of evidence of a contract of
marriage between herself and Bertoldo, which, whether in praesenti
or in futuro, being confirmed by oath, she can force upon him,
and which will invalidate his proposed marriage with the duchess.
Having established her right, she takes the only step that can with
certainty free both herself and Bertoldo from the bond they had
created, by retiring into a nunnery.
[Footnote 1: Swinburne, p. 227.]
This explanation renders the action of the play clear, and at the
same time shows that Shakspere in his conduct with regard to his
marriage may have been behaving in the most honourable and praiseworthy
manner; as the bond, with the date of which the date of the birth of
his first child is compared, is for the purpose of exonerating the
ecclesiastics from any liability for performing the ecclesiastical
ceremony, which was not at all a necessary preliminary to a valid
marriage, so far as the husband and wife were concerned, although it
was essential to render issue of the marriage legitimate.
6. These are instances of the deceptions that are likely to arise
from the two fertile sources that have been specified. There can be no
doubt that the existence of errors arising from the former
source—misapprehension of the meaning of words—is very generally
admitted, and effectual remedies have been supplied by modern scholars
for those who will make use of them. Errors arising from the latter
source are not so entirely recognized, or so securely guarded against.
But what has just been said surely shows that it is of no use reading a
writer of a past age with merely modern conceptions; and, therefore,
that if such a man's works are worth study at all, they must be read
with the help of the light thrown upon them by contemporary history,
literature, laws, and morals. The student must endeavour to divest
himself, as far as possible, of all ideas that are the result of a
development subsequent to the time in which his author lived, and to
place himself in harmony with the life and thoughts of the people of
that age: sit down with them in their homes, and learn the sources of
their loves, their hates, their fears, and see wherein domestic
happiness, or lack of it, made them strong or weak; follow them to the
market-place, and witness their dealings with their fellows—the
honesty or baseness of them, and trace the cause; look into their very
hearts, if it may be, as they kneel at the devotion they feel or
simulate, and become acquainted with the springs of their dearest
aspirations and most secret prayers.
7. A hard discipline, no doubt, but not more hard than salutary.
Salutary in two ways. First, as a test of the student's own earnestness
of purpose. For in these days of revival of interest in our elder
literature, it has become much the custom for flippant persons, who are
covetous of being thought “well-read” by their less-enterprising
companions, to skim over the surface of the pages of the wisest and
noblest of our great teachers, either not understanding, or
misunderstanding them. “I have read Chaucer, Shakspere, Milton,” is the
sublimely satirical expression constantly heard from the mouths of
those who, having read words set down by the men they name, have no
more capacity for reading the hearts of the men themselves, through
those words, than a blind man has for discerning the colour of flowers.
As a consequence of this flippancy of reading, numberless writers,
whose works have long been consigned to a well-merited oblivion, have
of late years been disinterred and held up for public admiration,
chiefly upon the ground that they are ancient and unknown. The man who
reads for the sake of having done so, not for the sake of the knowledge
gained by doing so, finds as much charm in these petty writers as in
the greater, and hence their transient and undeserved popularity. It
would be well, then, for every earnest student, before beginning the
study of any one having pretensions to the position of a master, and
who is not of our own generation, to ask himself, “Am I prepared
thoroughly to sift out and ascertain the true import of every allusion
contained in this volume?” And if he cannot honestly answer “Yes,” let
him shut the book, assured that he is not impelled to the study of it
by a sincere thirst for knowledge, but by impertinent curiosity, or a
shallow desire to obtain undeserved credit for learning.
8. The second way in which such a discipline will prove salutary is
this: it will prevent the student from straying too far afield in his
reading. The number of “classical” authors whose works will repay such
severe study is extremely limited. However much enthusiasm he may throw
into his studies, he will find that nine-tenths of our older literature
yields too small a harvest of instruction to attract any but the pedant
to expend so much labour upon them. The two great vices of modern
reading will be avoided—flippancy on the one hand, and pedantry on the
other.
9. The object, therefore, which I have had in view in the
compilation of the following pages, is to attempt to throw some
additional light upon a condition of thought, utterly different from
any belief that has firm hold in the present generation, that was
current and peculiarly prominent during the lifetime of the man who
bears overwhelmingly the greatest name, either in our own or any other
literature. It may be said, and perhaps with much force, that enough,
and more than enough, has been written in the way of Shakspere
criticism. But is it not better that somewhat too much should be
written upon such a subject than too little? We cannot expect that
every one shall see all the greatness of Shakspere's vast and complex
mind—by one a truth will be grasped that has eluded the vigilance of
others;—and it is better that those who can by no possibility grasp
anything at all should have patient hearing, rather than that any
additional light should be lost. The useless, lifeless criticism
vanishes quietly away into chaos; the good remains quietly to be
useful: and it is in reliance upon the justice and certainty of this
law that I aim at bringing before the mind, as clearly as may be, a
phase of belief that was continually and powerfully influencing
Shakspere during the whole of his life, but is now well-nigh forgotten
or entirely misunderstood. If the endeavour is a useless and
unprofitable one, let it be forgotten—I am content; but I hope to be
able to show that an investigation of the subject does furnish us with
a key which, in a manner, unlocks the secrets of Shakspere's heart, and
brings us closer to the real living man—to the very soul of him who,
with hardly any history in the accepted sense of the word, has left us
in his works a biography of far deeper and more precious meaning, if we
will but understand it.
10. But it may be said that Shakspere, of all men, is able to speak
for himself without aid or comment. His works appeal to all, young and
old, in every time, every nation. It is true; he can be understood. He
is, to use again Ben Jonson's oft-quoted words, “Not of an age, but for
all time.” Yet he is so thoroughly imbued with the spirit and opinions
of his era, that without a certain comprehension of the men of the
Elizabethan period he cannot be understood fully. Indeed, his greatness
is to a large extent due to his sympathy with the men around him, his
power of clearly thinking out the answers to the all-time questions,
and giving a voice to them that his contemporaries could
understand;—answers that others could not for themselves
formulate—could, perhaps, only vaguely and dimly feel after. To
understand these answers fully, the language in which they were
delivered must be first thoroughly mastered.
11. I intend, therefore, to attempt to sketch out the leading
features of a phase of religious belief that acquired peculiar
distinctness and prominence during Shakspere's lifetime—more, perhaps,
than it ever did before, or has done since—the belief in the existence
of evil spirits, and their influence upon and dealings with mankind.
The subject will be treated in three sections. The first will contain a
short statement of the laws that seem to be of universal operation in
the creation and maintenance of the belief in a multitudinous band of
spirits, good and evil; and of a few of the conditions of the
Elizabethan epoch that may have had a formative and modifying influence
upon that belief. The second will be devoted to an outline of the chief
features of that belief, as it existed at the time in question—the
organization, appearance, and various functions and powers of the evil
spirits, with special reference to Shakspere's plays. The third and
concluding section, will embody an attempt to trace the growth of
Shakspere's thought upon religious matters through the medium of his
allusions to this subject.
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