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Reference
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Cambridge History
>
The Drama to 1642, Part Two
>
University Plays
>
Pedantius
Hymenaeus; Laelia
Attack on Academic Personages and on the Civic Authorities
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume VI. The Drama to 1642, Part Two.
XII.
University Plays
.
§ 13.
Pedantius
.
Pedantius
is an admirable combination of Plautine machinery and types with the conditions of English university life in the later sixteenth century. The lovesick pedant of southern comedy is here transformed into a Cambridge humanist, who is the unsuccessful rival of a freedman for the hand of a slave girl Lydia, and whose rhetorial flights avail him nothing except to stave off payment of his tailors bills. But the pedant is not merely modernised, he is individualised into a caricature of Gabriel Harvey. This is vouched for by Nashe in
Have with you to Saffron Walden,
where he declares that, in the concise and firking finicaldo fine schoolmaster, Harvey, was full drawen and delineated from the soule of the foote to the crowne of his head. Internal evidence confirms the identification. Not only is Pedantius, as was Harvey, according to the view of his enemies, a fop and a sycophant, but phrases from the Cambridge rhetoricians works occur repeatedly in the play, and his
Musarum Lachrymae
is directly named. As satellite and contrast to the main figure appears another contemporary academic type, the solemnly argumentative, logic-chopping philosopher Dromodotus.
28
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Hymenaeus; Laelia
Attack on Academic Personages and on the Civic Authorities
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