Love's Welcome at Bolsover

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The Little Castle at Bolsover Bolsover Castle, Derbyshire (geograph 291425).jpg
The Little Castle at Bolsover

Love's Welcome at Bolsover is the final masque composed by Ben Jonson. It was performed on 30 July 1634, three years before the poet's death, and published in 1641. [1]

Contents

At Bolsover

The masque was not produced by the Stuart Court in one of the royal palaces around London, as many of Jonson's notable early masques were. Rather it was staged by William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Newcastle (at the time, he was the Earl of Newcastle) at Bolsover Castle in Derbyshire, in honor of King Charles I and Queen Henrietta Maria. [2]

The Earl of Newcastle had put on a Jonson masque for his royal visitors at Welbeck in Nottinghamshire the year before: The King's Entertainment at Welbeck, performed on 21 May 1633. It was such a success that the King requested another on his 1634 royal progress. The Duke spent between £14,000 and £15,000 on staging the Bolsover masque and providing for his royal guests and their attendants, which was more than double the £4,000 to £5,000 he'd spent for the Welbeck entertainment the previous year. [3] The Masque of Beauty , one of Jonson's early Court masques, had cost £4,000 to stage in 1608, and was considered exorbitantly expensive at the time.

Mathematical boys

The pillar parlour at Bolsover Castle with its original panelling and restored decoration. Bolsover Castle (28363352205).jpg
The pillar parlour at Bolsover Castle with its original panelling and restored decoration.

In Love's Welcome, Jonson continued the mockery of Inigo Jones that he had practiced for two decades, starting with Bartholomew Fair (1614) and continuing through The Masque of Augurs (1622), Neptune's Triumph for the Return of Albion (1624), The Staple of News (1626), and A Tale of a Tub (1633).

In this masque, Jones is personified as "Colonel Iniquo Vitruvius", and encourages craftsmen to dance, including a metal-smith, a woodcarver, a mason, a plumber, and a glazier, as his "true mathematical boys",

Well done my musical, arithmetical, geometrical gamesters! Or rather, my true mathematical boys! It is carried in number, weight, and measure as if the airs were all harmony and the figures a well-timed proportion! [5]

In the pillar parlour

The masque was staged in what was called the "little castle" at Bolsover, a then-recent (Jacobean) construction. [6] The pillared hall or parlour was furnished with five brilliantly colored paintings on the theme of The Senses. [7] Jonson alludes to the paintings in his text, [8] and their arrangement in the Neoplatonic hierarchy:

When were the senses in such order placed?
The sight, the hearing, smelling, touching, taste,
All at one banquet? [9]

The show was described by local witnesses as "stupendous," more than adequate to establish Newcastle's reputation as the greatest "prince...in all the northern quarter" of the kingdom. [10] Perhaps the most visually striking element in the masque lay in the two Cupids, Eros (Love) and Anteros (Love Returned), who descended "from the clouds" bearing fronds of palms.

Publication

The masque was published in 1641 in the second folio collection of Jonson's works, and was thereafter included in his canon, although it does not appear in Stephen Orgel's "Complete Masques of Ben Jonson". Manuscripts text of the masque are also extant, in the collection of Newcastle manuscripts including British Library Harley 4955. [11]

References

  1. David Lindley, Court Masques: Jacobean and Caroline Entertainments (Oxford University Press, The World's Classics, 1995), pp. xvii, 194–199, 267–269.
  2. Lucy Worsley, Bolsover Castle Guidebook (English Heritage, 2001), p. 35.
  3. Henry Ten Eck Perry, The First Duchess of Newcastle and Her Husband as Figures in Literary History (Boston: Ginn and Co., 1918), p. 18.
  4. Lucy Worsley, Bolsover Castle Guidebook (English Heritage, 2001), pp. 18, 20–21.
  5. David Lindley, Court Masques: Jacobean and Caroline Entertainments (Oxford University Press, The World's Classics, 1995), pp. 195–196, 268.
  6. Mark Girouard, Robert Smythson and the Elizabethan Country House (Yale, 1983), pp. 209, 297.
  7. Frederick Kiefer, Shakespeare's Visual Theatre: Staging the Personified Characters (Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 141–142.
  8. Timothy Raylor, "Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue: William Cavendish, Ben Jonson, and the Decorative Scheme of Bolsover Castle", Renaissance Quarterly, 52: 2 (Summer, 1999), pp. 412–415. doi : 10.2307/2902059
  9. David Lindley, Court Masques: Jacobean and Caroline Entertainments (Oxford University Press, The World's Classics, 1995), pp. 194, 268: Lucy Worsley, Bolsover Castle Guidebook (English Heritage, 2001), pp. 18-19.
  10. Julie Sanders, "Jonson's Caroline Coteries," in Kozuka and Mulryne, p. 285.
  11. Lucy Worsley, Bolsover Castle Guidebook (English Heritage, 2001), p. 35.

Further reading