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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Drama to 1642, Part Two
>
Ben Jonson
> Later years
Maturity; Prosperity
Eminence in letters
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume VI. The Drama to 1642, Part Two.
I.
Ben Jonson
.
§ 5. Later years.
The later years of Jonsons life brought many misfortunes. All his books and several manuscripts of unpublished works were burnt in 1623,
12
the year in which the Shakespeare folio appeared, introduced by Jonsons fine tribute. Within a few years, he was suffering from paralysis and dropsy, and had become much bed-ridden. After an interval of nine years he now again essayed the public stage; but his comedies,
The Staple of Newes,
acted in 1625,
The New Inne,
in 1629,
The Magnetick Lady,
in 1632, and the revised
Tale of a Tub,
in 1633, were either failures or only partial successes. With the accession of Charles I, Jonson seems, for a time, to have lost favour at court; and, later, a quarrel with the architect Inigo Jones led to loss of employment as a writer of masques. Jonsons appeals to the king, however, brought a gift of one hundred pounds in 1629, and, later, the increase of his pension from a hundred marks to a hundred pounds, together with the grant of an annual butt of canary. He succeeded Middleton in the office of city chronologer in 1628, and, when he was deprived of this because of neglecting his duties, the king obtained his restoration in 1635. In 1631, after an interval of six years, he wrote two court masques; and, in 1633 and 1634, he prepared two entertainments for the king at the earl of Newcastles. On 6 August, 1637, Jonson died. He was buried in Westminster Abbey; the troublesome times that ensued prevented the erection of a monument in his memory; but the inscription of a chance admirer upon his grave has proved unforgettable: O rare Ben Jonson!
9
Among his unpublished manuscripts were a collection of miscellaneous poems entitled
Underwoods, Timber:
or
Discoveries: made upon men and matter,
a translation of
Ars Poetica,
a fragment of a tragedy
The Fall of Mortimer,
13
the
English Grammar
and an unfinished pastoral
The Sad Shepherd.
14
These were included in the second folio edition of his works, published in 1640. A collection of memorial verses, edited by Bryan Duppa, bishop of Winchester, appeared in 1637/8, under the title
Jonsonus Virbius,
and contained eulogies from the most famous men of the time.
10
Note 12
. See his
Execration upon Vulcan
for a list of lost works: a translation of
Ars Poetica,
with a commentary from Aristotle, an English grammar, a poetical narrative of his journey to Scotland, a poem in three books on the rape of Proserpine, a history of Henry V, philological collections of twenty-four year and humbler gleanings in divinity.
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Note 13
.
The Fall of Mortimer
was completed by William Mountfort and published in 1731. Later, in 1763, it was revived, acted and published with a satirical dedication by Wilkes to Bute. Schelling,
Eliz. Drama,
vol. I, p. 306, apparently connects Jonsons fragment with the non-extant play mentioned by Henslowe.
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]
Note 14
. Published as completed by Waldron, F. G., 1783. See Gregs reprint in Bangs
Materialien,
vol. XI, 1905.
[
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]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Maturity; Prosperity
Eminence in letters
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