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172

ON

JOHN LYLY AND HIS WORKS.

JOHN LYLY was an ingenious scholar, with some fancy; but if poetry be the heightened expression of natural sentiments and impressions, he has little title to the rank of a poet. His thoughts and his language are usually equally artificial, the results of labour and study; and in scarcely a single instance does he seem to have yielded to the impulses of genuine feeling.

He is therefore to be placed in a rank inferior to most of his contemporaries; but it is not to be forgotten that, strictly speaking, some writers with whom he may have been compared, were not his contemporaries: he began to write a little before them, and he was the inventor of a style which, however factitious, had the recommendations of refinement and novelty *. Lyly became so fashionable, that better pens, as in the case of Robert Greene and Thomas Lodge, followed his example, and became his imitators. The chief characteristic of his style, besides its smoothness, is

*It was called Euphuism, from his work Euphues the Anatomy of Wit, which was entered on the books of the Stationers' Company in 1578, and was no doubt published early in 1579. Malone (see Shakespeare by Boswell, ii. 188) had a copy dated 1579, which he supposed to be the second edition, the first being without the insertion of the year on the title-page.

the employment of a species of fabulous or unnatural natural philosophy, in which the existence of certain animals, vegetables, and minerals with peculiar properties is presumed, in order to afford similes and illustrations. Malone contends that Lyly's plays, compared with his pamphlets, are free from these affected allusions, and that three of them are quite of a different character; but he seems to have been only superficially read in Lyly's works, and among the proofs of his want of an exact acquaintance with them, may be noticed his statement that Galathea was one of the comedies he produced in 1584*, when, in fact, the annus mirabilis' of 1588 is twice mentioned in it. In the employment of this fabulous natural history nearly all Lyly's dramatic productions may be placed upon an equality; and if such frequent resort be not had to it in his plays as in his tracts, it seems only because allusions of the kind could not be so conveniently made in dialogues between the persons concerned. It is astonishing how Malone could have brought himself to the conclusion, that Lyly unquestionably makes a nearer approach to a just delineation of character and life,' than any dramatist who preceded Shakespeare: seven of his plays are merely mythological or pastoral, and were never meant for representations of character and life;' and although the scene of Mother Bombie is laid near Rochester, the names of nearly all the persons are

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* Malone's Shakespeare by Boswell, ii. 192,

classical, and no attempt is made to depict by them the manners of the time. Alexander and Campaspe is Lyly's only piece which has any pretension to the delineation of character, and then chiefly in the part of Diogenes, whom the author has drawn sufficiently cynical.

Lyly was born in Kent, in 1554, and was matriculated at Oxford in 1571, when it was recorded in the entry, that he was seventeen years old. It is a circumstance connected with his early life, mentioned in the Annals of the Stage,' that on the 16th May, 1574, he wrote to Lord Burghley (whom he terms patronus colendissimus) a Latin letter, in a good style, and a beautiful specimen of penmanship, which was thus indorsed, probably by his lordship's secretary: John Lilie, a Scholar of Oxford, an Epistle for the Queen's letters to Magdalen College to admit him a fellow.' The Lord Treasurer is there addressed in a strain of extravagant hyperbole, and the epistle is directed-Viro illustrissimo, et insignissimo Heroi, domino Burgleo. We are without evidence as to the result of this application, but Lyly having been made Bachelor of Arts in 1573, proceeded Master of Arts in 1575-6. He produced his Euphues early in 1579, and from the prefatory matter to it we learn that he had previously been rusticated from Oxford, for what he calls glancing at some abuses' perhaps he supplied his necessities, even at this date, by writing for the stage, although his earliest

It is among the Lansdown MSS. No. xix. Art. 16.

printed works, Sapho and Phao, and Alexander and Campaspe did not appear until four or five years afterwards. One of his first patrons was the Earl of Oxford, himself a writer of verses; but, in July, 1582, Lyly seems to have lost the favour of that nobleman : this circumstance is stated in a letter which Lyly wrote upon the occasion to Lord Burghley, in which he protests his innocence from all just imputation. In what capacity he served Lord Oxford is not mentioned, but may be gathered from the terms of the letter, that he occupied a place of pecuniary trust, which he was supposed to have abused.

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Lyly had certainly produced six dramatic pieces prior to 1589, including Galathea, which, for a reason already given, may perhaps be given to that year. In Midas, printed in 1592, and in Mother Bombie, printed in 1594, he seems to allude to a tract he had published in 1589, Pap with a Hatchet, which was written against Martin Mar-prelate, and is so lively a piece of satirical bantering as to afford some evidence that this was the style to which Lyly's talents naturally tended*. Lyly was at one time a candidate for the office of Master of the Revels: when he died we have

*It was published without date, and Reed erroneously states, in Dodsley's Old Plays, ii., 99, last edit., that it appeared in 1593. It must have been printed before 1590, as it is particularly mentioned by Nash in the first part of Pasquil's Apologie, 1590:-'I warrant you 'the cunning Pap-maker knew what he did when he made choice of 'no other spoon than a hatchet for such a mouth, no other lace than a 'halter for such a necke.' Nash again praises the performance in his Almond for a Parrot, n. d.

no information, but there is reason to think that he lived into the seventeenth century. His last, and unquestionably his worst play was published in 1601.

Of all Lyly's dramas it is to be observed, that they seem to have been written for court entertainments, although they were also performed at theatres, most usually by the Children of St. Paul's and the Revels. Including The Maid's Metamorphosis, of which there is no sufficient reason to deprive him, (unless that it is better in some respects than his other plays,) Lyly wrote nine dramatic pieces-seven in prose, one in rhyme, and one in blank-verse. I shall notice them in the order in which, judging from external and internal evidence, (into which we have not space to enter) it may be presumed that they were produced.

Alexander und Campaspe (twice printed, in 1584, and 1591) has some claim to be considered in the light of an historical play. Although we learn from the prologue at the Blackfriars theatre, (where it was acted after it had been represented at court) that it had been written in haste for the particular occasion, it is certainly one of the best of Lyly's productions, and the force and distinctness with which Diogenes is drawn has already been praised. Some interest is also felt for Apelles, who had fallen in love with Campaspe, while employed by Alexander to paint her picture. The time is just after the siege and conquest of Thebes, and Timoclea is brought in a prisoner in the first act she is soon dismissed, and Campaspe (who also becomes enamoured of Apelles) is the only female

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