Historical Background
Elizabethan period → Jacobean period (James I) → Caroline period (Charles I) → Commonwealth / Puritan Age
Jacobean period continues many Elizabethan ideas but begins major change.
Major divide: Monarchy (James I & Charles I) vs Commonwealth (Cromwell)
The 17th century = Age of Transitions
Absolute monarchy under James I & Charles I
Growing Parliament power → Civil War
Rule by Puritan Parliament & Cromwell (Commonwealth)
Restoration of monarchy (Stuarts)
Beginning of constitutional monarchy
Shift from medieval / scholastic worldview to rationalism & science
Religion & science start to separate
Colonisation fuels economic change
Elizabethan spirit: optimistic, unified, humanist, festive
Jacobean spirit: critical, satirical, questioning, rebellious
Scottish king succeeding Elizabeth (distant relative)
Lacked political skill compared to Tudors (the ruling house Elizabeth was from)
Tried peace with Catholic Spain → unpopular
Growing national discontent because he:
Dissolved Parliament (1629) → acted like an absolute monarch
Raised taxes without consent of Parliament
Censored the press
Upset Puritans
Supported High Church Anglicanism (close to Catholicism)
Tolerated Catholics (married a Catholic queen)
Royalists / Cavaliers
Parliamentarians / Roundheads
King Charles I
Parliament
Aristocracy
Puritans
Church of England
Middle & lower-class townspeople
Parliament wins (1649)
Charles I executed
Son Charles escapes to France
Leader: Oliver Cromwell (Lord Protector, 1653)
Strict Puritan control
No fun: theatres, festivals, dancing banned → end of “Merry England”
Transition from absolute monarchy → parliamentary power
Shift from medieval worldview → scientific rationalism
Conflict between Anglican monarchy vs Puritan Parliament
Cultural movement from joy & celebration → austerity & moral strictness
The early 17th century in England saw a shift from Elizabethan optimism to Jacobean criticism, leading to conflict between monarchy and Parliament, the Civil War, the Puritan Commonwealth under Cromwell, and major cultural, political, and scientific transitions that paved the way for constitutional monarchy.
Drama
Jacobean = reign of James I. Drama remained creative and prolific, but themes became darker, cynical, and more critical than in the Elizabethan period.
Elizabethan
Jacobean
Optimistic, adventurous
Cynical, pessimistic, world-weary
Harmonious worldview
Violent passion, corruption, satire
Focus on idealism, heroism
Focus on psychological realism, vice, moral decay
In this period wrote:
Dark comedies
Great tragedies
Late romances
Comedies (e.g., The Shoemaker’s Holiday, The Honest Whore)
Influenced by Greene & Shakespeare
Known for keen social observation despite sometimes clumsy plots
Tragedies of intense passion & dense language
The White Devil — Woman kills husband for love → punished
The Duchess of Malfi — Duchess secretly remarries; brothers seek revenge → imprisonment & murder — Evil seems to win, but duchess’s nobility morally condemns villains
Theme: violence, corruption, psychological darkness
Classical, learned, realist
Contrast to Shakespeare (sharper, more critical, less sympathetic)
Aim: correct vice through satire
Portrayed real contemporary London
Attacked moral weaknesses and rising merchant wealth
Characters driven by one dominant passion = "humour characters" (based on four bodily humours)
Key plays:
Every Man in His Humour (1598)
Volpone (1605–06)
The Alchemist (1610)
Bartholomew Fair (1614)
Tone: bitter, moralizing, satirical
Author
Style
John Marston (1576–1634)
Bitter, grim realism
Thomas Middleton (1580–1627)
Satirized Puritans & society; psychological interest; less formal
Cyril Tourneur (1580–1627)
Horror, brutality, motiveless evil
Francis Beaumont (1584–1616) + John Fletcher
Romantic tragedies & comedies
World-weariness → escapism
Exotic settings
Themes: love, honour, friendship in conflict with vulgar society
Characters often weak, overwhelmed, sometimes choosing suicide
Shift to wealthy, elite audience
Blackfriars Theatre (1609) → higher ticket prices, indoor theatre
Under Charles I & Catholic Queen Henrietta Maria (not Catherine of Aragon — note: this text is mistaken!) → preference for conservative, courtly, elaborate plays
Consequences
Theatre becomes expensive, artificial, detached from real life
Decline in independent theatres
Puritans opposed this extravagance → theatres closed in 1642
When reopened in 1660 (Restoration) drama remained upper-class entertainment
Lost Elizabethan vitality and realism
Prose
Elizabethan prose (16th century) = imaginative, ornate, elaborate, sophisticated in style.
17th-century prose shifts dramatically:
Writers move away from fiction and embellished language.
They adopt practical, direct, and useful writing — a “prose of utility.”
Focus is on political, religious, and social conflicts of the time.
Aim: clarity, precision, purpose.
They deliberately avoid the decorative style of Lyly and Sidney.
However, even supposedly simple writers can sound ornate or indirect to modern readers.
In letters to his son, King James I encourages:
Plain, natural language “not painted with artifice.”
Practical, straightforward communication.
New prose principles:
Do not write unless you have something meaningful to say.
When you write, say it simply and clearly.
Represents the new ideal of clear, purposeful prose.
Commissioned by James I, at request of Puritan-leaning merchants.
Produced by ~40 scholars.
Based on earlier translations:
Tyndale, Coverdale, Geneva Bible, Bishops’ Bible
Added deliberately archaic phrasing to give dignity.
Qualities:
Poetic, balanced, majestic style.
One of the greatest prose works in English.
Profound influence on English literature and culture.
Used in the Anglican Church up to mid-20th century
Modern versions = more accurate but less poetic.
Jonson = classical scholar.
Discoveries = paraphrases + translations from Latin authors, plus his own judgements.
Style: Roman clarity, compactness, economy of expression.
The Anatomy of Melancholy (1621)
Essays exploring:
Human dissatisfaction and melancholy
Remedies for unhappiness
Became hugely popular — reflects psychological & philosophical concerns of the age.
Primarily known as a poet, but also major prose figure.
Wrote 29 political & religious pamphlets (1641–1660)
Early works defend Presbyterians against royal & episcopal power (Reason of Church-Government Urged Against Prelaty, 1641)
Later opposed Presbyterians when they censored ideas → Areopagitica (1644) → eloquent defence of freedom of speech & against censorship
Also wrote a treatise on education (1644), influenced by Comenius (Czech reformer)
Other religious prose writers
Thomas Fuller — popular Anglican preacher
Richard Baxter — mild Puritan; The Saints’ Everlasting Rest (1650)
Most significant figure of the prose of utility.
Introduces Montaigne-style essay into English literature:
But unlike Montaigne's personal reflections,
Bacon aims to instruct and form capable public men (young Jacobean gentlemen).
His focus: efficiency, practical wisdom, success in public life — not personal happiness or morality.
Major works:
Work
Date
Importance
The Advancement of Learning
1605
Separates faith from reason, challenges scholasticism, analyses learning, promotes empirical thinking
Novum Organum
1620
Written in Latin; advocates inductive scientific method, observation & experimentation; foundation of modern science
Challenges medieval scholastic tradition & linguistic misuse.
Establishes empiricism, rationalism, pragmatism.
Father of the scientific method:
Induction (facts → conclusions), not medieval deduction (premises → conclusions)
Style not always simple to modern readers, but marks shift from ornate prose to practical philosophy.
Theme
Explanation
Shift from art to purpose
Prose becomes functional, political, scientific, moral
Empiricism rises
Truth sought through observation & reason, not tradition
Movement toward clarity
Language used for precision, not ornament
Religious & political turmoil
Pamphlets, essays, sermons reflect intense ideological struggle
Science & modernity
Bacon paves the way for modern scientific inquiry
Born to an almost illiterate vicar → rose to become one of the greatest scholars of his age.
Attended Oxford at age 15, already fluent in Greek & Latin.
Became a mathematician; believed motion explains nature, mind, and society.
Travelled on the continent; exiled 10 years in Paris, where he met René Descartes.
His most famous work, written during the English Civil War.
Title refers to the Biblical sea monster → symbol of overwhelming power.
In Hobbes’s theory, Leviathan = the State / Society
A strong central authority needed to restrain chaos.
Very pessimistic about human nature.
Without government → “state of nature” = “war of all against all.”
Only way to avoid violence: strong, unified state power.
One of the first major social contract theorists.
Social contract principle:
Individuals surrender some freedom to the State in exchange for protection & social order.
Hobbes = father of modern political theory of the State.
A distinctly 17th-century form, popular when fiction was out of fashion.
Short sketches of virtues & vices in everyday people.
Offered natural, varied portrayals of human types.
Helped prepare the way for the 18th-century novel.
As numerous in this century as sonnet sequences in the Elizabethan era.
Turbulent times → people wrote to justify themselves.
Charles I — Eikon Basilike (1649)
Title means “The King's Image”.
Published at his execution.
Purports to be his spiritual autobiography:
reflections on his reign, sufferings, prayers,
and advice for his son (future Charles II).
Created a huge emotional impact upon publication.
Isaak Walton (1593–1683)
A self-made London shopkeeper, friend of many leading figures.
Wrote “lives” of admired people, including:
John Donne
George Herbert
The Complete Angler (1653):
A hymn to peaceful country life and contemplation.
Reacts against Puritan cruelty and bloodshed.
Nostalgic for happier Elizabethan times.
Reaction against plain prose: Some writers embraced intense imagery, striking metaphors, emotional excess.
Known as a major poet, but also significant Anglican preacher.
Dean of St Paul’s Cathedral.
Sermons = dramatic, emotional, spiritually intense.
Depicts inner conflict of the Christian soul in vivid, frightening language.
Style = baroque:
moral intensity
extreme contrasts (sin vs grace)
elaborate metaphors
balanced, musical sentences
Famous quote from Meditation XVII:
“No man is an island… any man's death diminishes me… never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.”
Mixes the sublime and the terrifying.
A physician and thoughtful Anglican writer.
Religio Medici (1642):
Private, reflective spiritual journal.
Combines science & religion.
Calm, tolerant, personal tone — unlike Donne’s emotional agony.
Advocates charity, moderation, and peace in a divided age.
Seen as a remedy against religious fanaticism.
Work became well-known in Europe.
Concept
Meaning
Hobbes
Foundation of modern political theory; strong state needed to prevent chaos
Social Contract
Individuals give up some freedom for protection & order
Character Books
Human sketches; precursor to the novel
Autobiography in Revolution
Self-defence & self-presentation in turbulent times
“Lives”
Early biographies; admiration of moral & intellectual figures
Donne’s baroque prose
Intense, metaphorical, dramatic religious writing
Browne’s prose
Calm, tolerant, introspective fusion of science & faith
Poetry
Key poets of the period:
Walter Raleigh
George Chapman
Ben Jonson (influenced the Cavalier poets)
John Donne, George Herbert, Andrew Marvell (Metaphysical poets)
The towering, solitary figure of John Milton (transitional to later period)
This period bridges late Elizabethan poetic tradition and the newer, more questioning Jacobean/Caroline spirit.
A true Elizabethan adventurer: soldier, sailor, explorer, colonial expeditions vs Spain and in the New World.
Supported Elizabeth’s campaigns (including in Ireland).
Under James I:
Imprisoned for 13 years in the Tower (wrote History of the World, unfinished)
Later released to lead an expedition to Guyana → failed
Executed to appease Spain
Friend of Spenser and Marlowe
Though mostly Elizabethan, Raleigh’s lyrics show questioning, scepticism typical of Jacobean mood
Famous for his translations of Homer (Iliad, Odyssey) → praised by John Keats (“On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer”)
More serious, philosophical poet
Subversive, questioning tone
In The Shadow of Night:
Day = tyranny of daily life, shallow routine
Night = silence, study, contemplation, regeneration
Represents a shift toward introspection, intellectual depth
Moved in aristocratic circles
One poetry volume: Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum (1611)
Advocates female virtue; engages Biblical themes
Attempts to redeem Eve’s reputation
Uses conventional social and poetic forms of the time (Not to be overstated as a precursor to Milton, but notable as early female poetic voice)
Classical-minded poet and dramatist
Self-conscious heir of the Ancients
Values control, balance, discipline, refined diction
Rejects Elizabethan emotional excess and rhetorical ornament
Master of the ode (inspired later Romantic odes by Keats and Shelley)
Aesthetic:
Measured, polished style
Musical harmony, classical restraint
Influenced a school of young poets → “Sons of Ben”
Continuation of courtly lyric tradition, influenced by Jonson’s style.
Elegant, light-hearted, witty
Themes: love, loyalty, carpe diem, court life
Tone ranges from idealizing love to playfully erotic
Classical balance and polish
John Suckling
Thomas Carew
Richard Lovelace
Robert Herrick
Essentially royalist poets celebrating refinement and pleasure.
Term coined by John Dryden and Samuel Johnson (initially negative: “obscure”)
Vindicated by T. S. Eliot in the 20th century
Key traits:
Paradox, conceits (unexpected metaphors)
Intellectual intensity
Juxtaposition of opposites (“yoking together” contradictions)
Colloquial rhythm, argumentative tone
Major figures:
Andrew Marvell
Life
Adventurous early career:
Naval expedition vs Spain
Secretary to government minister
Imprisoned for eloping with his employer’s niece
Later became Dean of St Paul’s Cathedral
Style & Themes
Life and mind full of restlessness, intensity, tension
Combines:
Sensual passion + philosophical reasoning
Emotion fused with intellect
Vivid, often shocking imagery
Anti-Petrarchan reaction:
Rejects sweet Elizabethan lyricism
Prefers bold realism, abrupt rhythms, colloquial tone
Imagery drawn from:
Sensual experience
Science
Theology & medieval learning
Major works
Songs and Sonnets (secular love poems)
Passion ranges from worshipful devotion to cynical detachment
Holy Sonnets (religious poems)
Spiritual torment, sin, fear of judgement
Faith in grace, repentance as path to salvation
Donne’s poetry is a constant interplay of body & soul, doubt & faith, intellect & passion.
Tradition
New direction
Elizabethan sweetness & idealism
Jacobean scepticism, complexity, realism
Courtly love lyric
Metaphysical paradox and intellectual passion
Spenserian ornamentation
Jonsonian classical restraint or Donne’s bold colloquialism
Wrote exclusively religious poetry
Unlike Donne:
Less intense, less extreme
More simple, homely, intimate
Rejects pompous, “sonorous” style
Uses everyday language & familiar images
Seen as “God’s troubadour” → expresses love of God, not romantic love
Tone: devotional, humble, personal
Focus on faith, inner conflict, obedience, love
God is a loving presence who values sincere sacrifice
Famous example: poem “Love” (gentle welcoming God figure)
Hybrid poet — combines:
Metaphysical (Donne-like imagery, paradox, tension, intellect)
Cavalier (grace, clarity, smoothness, elegant style)
Clever, intellectually playful, but also graceful and controlled
Balance of wit + lyric simplicity
Strong rhythm and clear style
Anticipates neo-classical clarity of the next age
Marvell = bridge between metaphysical complexity and classical elegance.
Austere, solitary temperament
Educated at Puritan school → Cambridge University
Deeply learned; classical training
Early works written in retirement:
Comus (masque)
L’Allegro (“joyful mood,” Elizabethan spirit)
Il Penseroso (“melancholy mood,” Jacobean spirit)
Planned a great epic from early on
Went on a Grand Tour of Europe (especially Italy)
Civil War begins → he returns to England
Devotes himself to Puritan cause
Writes political pamphlets (also served Cromwell)
Never ignored Cromwell’s faults
Under Charles II (Restoration, 1660) → lives in retirement, completely blind
Paradise Lost (1665) — masterpiece
Paradise Regained (1671) — lighter & simpler
Samson Agonistes (1671) — tragedy in Greek style (chorus, messengers, speeches)
Famous sonnet: “On His Blindness”
Purpose: to “justify/vindicate the ways of God to Man.”
Story of Satan’s Fall + Fall of Man
Humans fall due to wrong choice and denial of God’s authority
Salvation possible only through:
Right reason
Repentance
Christ’s mediation
Sonorous blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter)
Blindness sharpened his musical ear
Elevated, Latinate diction and sentence structure
Far from everyday speech → majestic, solemn, monumental
Result: one of the greatest achievements in English literature
After Milton, two poets prepare the way for Restoration & classical style:
Loyal to monarchy → exiled in France with Charles II’s court
Reaction against metaphysical complexity and Donne’s obscurities
Advocated:
Naturalness of language
Regular meter
Clarity
Simplicity in theme and diction
“Though deep, yet clear; though gentle, yet not dull; Strong without rage; without overflowing, full.”
Became aesthetic motto for neoclassical poets
Ideal qualities:
Deep but clear
Gentle but strong
Controlled, balanced, harmonious
These values guide Restoration and 18th-century poetry (Pope, Dryden, etc.)
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