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STATE UINIVERSITY OF BANGLADESH
Department of EnglishStudies
Assignment on 17th century Proseand Drama
Assignment topic
Compare and contrast between William Congreve “The way of the world”, and
Francis Bacon “Ofmarriage and single life”
Crouse code:ENG-1321
Prepared by: Mojahid Billah
ID No: UG07-26-12-011
Prepared for:Rashedul Hasan
Lecturer
Department of English Studies
Submission Date:22-12-14
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Table of content
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Itroduction
William Congreve was an English dramatist who shaped the English
comedy of manners through his brilliant comic dialogue, his satirical portrayal of
the war of the sexes, and his ironic scrutiny of the affectations of his age. Taking
as its main theme the manners and behaviour of the class to which it was
addressed, that is, the anti-puritanical theatre audience drawn largely from the
court, his plays dealt with imitators of French customs, conceited wits, and
fantastic people of all kinds; but its main theme was the sexual life led by a large
number of courtiers, with their philosophy of freedom and experimentation.
Congreve placed great importance on character sketches and the themes of role
playing, conditional love, mingled with the love for money and the need for
intrigues in almost every facet of life, as can be seen through the plays ―The
Double Dealer‖, ―Love for Love‖ and ―The Way of the World‖.
Francis Bacon’s fame as a writer depends most of all on the fact that he is the
father of modern English prose. He evolved a prosestyle that proved for the first
time that English could also be used to express the subtleties of thought, in clear
and uninvolved sentences. “I have taken all knowledge for my province” says
Bacon and “Beyond any other book of the same size in any literature they are
loaded with ripest wisdom of experience.” Says Hudson regarding Bacon’s essays.
Nobodycan deny the wisdom of Bacon of his understanding of the affairs of the
world. He shows an extraordinary insight regarding the problems that men face in
life. But his wisdom is only practical and not moral. Alexander Popehas given the
following remarks about Bacon in his epic:
If parts allure these think how Bacon shin’d
The wisest, brightest and meanestof mankind
there is some basic truth in this contention. One cannot deny his wisdom, his
observation, intellect and genius. Bacon was a very complex and enigmatic
character. The dichotomy of moral values what one finds in his essays was to be
found in his character, too.
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17th Century Drama
In 1642 the theatres were closed by the authority of the parliament which was
dominated by Puritans and so no good plays were written from 1642 till the
Restoration (coming back of monarchy in England with the accessionof Charles II
to the throne) in 1660 when the theatres were re-opened. The drama in England
after 1660, called the Restoration drama, showed entirely new trends on account
of the long break with the past.
The most popular form of drama was the Comedy of Manners which portrayed the
sophisticated life of the dominant class of society—its gaiety, foppery, insolence
and intrigue. Thus the basis of the Restoration drama was very narrow. These new
trends in comedyare seen in Dryden’s Wild Gallant (1663), Etheredge’s (1635-
1691) The Comical Revenge or Love in a Tub (1664), Wycherley’s The Country
Wife and ThePlain Dealer, and the plays of Vanbrugh and Farquhar. But the most
gifted among all the Restoration dramatist was William Congreve (1670-1720)
who wrote all his best plays he was thirty years of age. He well-known comedies
are Love for Love (1695) andThe Way of the World (1700).
It is mainly on account of his remarkable style that Congreve is put at the head of
the Restoration drama. No English dramatist has even written such fine prosefor
the stage as Congreve did. He balances, polishes and sharpens his sentences until
they shine like chiselled instruments for an electrical experiment, through which
passes the current in the shape of his incisive and scintillating wit. As the plays of
Congreve reflect the fashions and foibles of the upper classes whose moral
standards had become lax, they do not have a universal appeal, but as social
documents their value is very great. Moreover, though these comedies were
subjected to a very severe criticism by the Romantics like Shelley and Lamb, they
are now again in great demand and there is a revival of interest in Restoration
comedy.
17th
Century prose
The proseof the seventeenth-century is notable for its extreme variety. Although
seventeenth-century prosetexts vary greatly in mood, tone, focus, and style, each
expresses the desire for absolute and unqualified truth. Both the individuality and
the search for truth expressed in these texts are correlated with the possibilities,
discoveries, and disappointments of the time in which they were produced. It was
an age of extreme transition, and, within their works, each of the major
seventeenth-century proseauthors echoed that uncertainty and change.
Francis Bacon also occupies a transitional place in English prose. He is a symbol
of the greatness of Elizabethan intellect and the foremost promoter of the scientific
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attitude that ascended in the seventeenth-century. Much of his work, including that
which deals with non-scientific matters, promotes inductive reasoning.
Many of Bacon’s statements are platitudes, such as “the vices of authority are
chiefly four: delays, corruption, roughness, and facility” (44). His statements, even
when somewhat vague (“so virtue in ambition is violent, in authority settled and
calm” (45)) reflect a complex and effective prosestyle that sets him apart from
Breton. Bacon’s is not the work of free-association or random reflection; rather, it
is the literary manifestation of the inductive method. Forexample, in Novum
Organum, Bacon explains that “[the inductive method] arrives at the most general
axioms last of all. This is the true way, but as yet untried” (55). He uses this
method of reasoning in his own work, arriving lastly at the general conclusion that
“there is taken for the material of philosophy either a great deal out of a few things,
or very little out of many things” (57). His proseis the intellectual answer to
Breton’s pastoral meditations. Ultimately, Bacon helped to provide a bridge to the
new scientific age.
William Congreve Biography
William Congreve, 1670-1729, was born in Yorkshire, England. As his father was
an officer in the army and the commander of a garrison near Cork in Ireland,
Congreve was educated at Kilkenny and then at Trinity College, Dublin, where he
was a slightly younger college-mate of Jonathan Swift. In 1691, he was admitted to
the Middle Temple in London to study law. It is likely that, like Young Witwoud
in The Way of the World, his interest in law was only a means to take him to
London, the center of all excitement.By 1692, Congreve was already a recognized
member of the literary world. His first play, The Old Bachelor, was first acted in
January 1693, before he was twenty-three years old, and was triumphantly
successful. His other plays, The Double-Dealer, Love for Love, The Mourning
Bride, and The Way of the World, all followed at short intervals. The last of them
was presented in March 1700.For the rest of his life, Congreve wrote no plays. The
Way of the World was not successfulon the stage, and this disappointment may
have had something to do with his decision. He engaged in controversy with
Jeremy Collier on the morality of the stage, a frustrating experience. He suffered
from gout and bad sight. He became an elder statesman of letters at the age of
thirty, honored by the nobility, highly respected by younger writers.
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PLAYS
The Old Bachelor (1693)
The Double-Dealer (1693)
Love for Love (1695)
The Mourning Bride (1697)
The Way of the World (1700)
The Works of William Congreve; Consisting of His Plays and Poems (1761)
Incognita (1922)
The Complete Works (1923)
Comedies of William Congreve (1925)
The Mourning Bride, Poems, & Miscellanies (1928)
Complete Plays (1956)
NON-FICTION
Amendments of Mr. Collier's False and Imperfect Citations (1698)
Writing Career
During his career as counseland statesman, Bacon often wrote for the court. In
1584, he wrote his first political memorandum, A Letter of Advice to Queen
Elizabeth. In 1592, to celebrate the anniversary of the queen's coronation, he wrote
an entertaining speech in praise of knowledge. The year 1597 marked Bacon's first
publication, a collection of essays about politics. The collection was later expanded
and republished in 1612 and 1625.In 1605, Bacon published The Advancementof
Learning in an unsuccessfulattempt to rally supporters forthe sciences. In 1609,
he departed from political and scientific genres when he released On the Wisdom of
the Ancients, his analysis of ancient mythology.Bacon then resumed writing about
science, and in 1620, published Novum Organum, presented as Part Two of The
Great Saturation. In 1622, he wrote a historical work for Prince Charles,
entitled TheHistory of Henry VII. Bacon also published Historia
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Ventorum and Historia Vitae et Mortis that same year. In 1623, he published De
Augmentis Scientarium, a continuation of his view on scientific reform. In 1624,
his works TheNew Atlantis and Apothegmswere published. Sylva Sylvarium,
which was published in 1627, was among the last of his written works.
Now let’s evaluate Congreve’s The Way of the World Plot, style and
theme.
The Way of the World (1700) is Congreve’s best experimental comedy even
though he employs a typical plot formula for a Restoration comedy of manners.
The world of the play reflects Congreve’s own society and revolves around a witty
young man winning a lady and her fortune after overcoming the obstacles posed by
antagonistic parents and other suitors. The society depicted in The Way of the
World is the upper class fashionable society of London. The action of the play
takes place in three places. The first is the chocolate House which was used for
socializing and entertainment during the Restoration. The second is St James’s
Park in Londonwhere the upper class people walked before dinner. Witwould says,
“We’ll all walk in the park; the ladies talked of being there.”
The third is the house of Lady Wishfort, an aristocratic woman.
Most of the male and female characters of the play are cultured, talented, formal,
artificial, fashionable, depraved, ‘cold’ and ‘courtly’. Their qualities are actually a
part of Restoration age culture.
The Restoration period was an age of loose morals and, and was devoid of moral
values. The Way of the World contains this current through the illicit love and
adulterous relations – e.g. relation between Fainall and Mrs. Marwood, between
Mirabell, the hero, and Mrs. Fainal. Mirabell married Mrs. Fainall off to Fainal,
being afraid of her being pregnant. Fainall’s illicit relationship with Mrs. Marwood
having been exposed, Fainall faces the situation fearlessly and shamelessly:
“If it must all come out, why let ‘them know it; it’s but the way of the world.”
Even Mrs. Marwood and Lady Wishfort secretly loved Mirabell.
Unhappy conjugal life can be treated as another characteristic of the time which is
expressed through the relation between Mr. and Mrs. Fainall. One of them feels
uneasy in the presence of another. Mrs. Fainall expresses her uneasiness in St
James’s park in the presence of her husband-
“He turned sort upon me unaware, and had almost overcome me.”
The Way of the World also exposes the worldliness and greed of the young men
of the time. Mercenary motives led them to seek rich heiresses in marriage Mr.
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Fainall marries Mrs. Fainall, a widow, for her property. Mirabell does not want to
marry Millament without her property.
This mercenary tendency led them to intrigue which was the order of the day in
social and domestic life. Mirabell, in order to obtain Milament with her whole
legacy, pretends to woo Lady Wishfort. He marries his servant to Wishfort’s maid
and sends his servant as Sir Roland to Lady Wishfort so that the servant can make
a marriage contact with the lady. By this intrigue, Mirabell makes Lady Wishfort
agree –
“Upon condition that she consents to [his] marriage with her niece,
And surrender[s] the moiety of her fortune in her possession.”
Even Sir Wilfull, an exception to other characters of the play, joins the web of
intrigues in the play. Moreover, Fainall makes the legacy-conflict deeper through
his cruel condition to Lady Wishfort.
In The Way of The World, we are acquainted with the vanities, affectations and
fashions of the time. Mirrabell satirically remarks in the proviso scene on women’s
fondness of wearing masks, going to the theatre with or without their husbands’
knowledge, idle gossip, slandering the absent friends etc. In her contact with
Mirabell, Millament proves her habit of late rising, contemplation in solitude
general laziness etc. She says,
“I’ll ye abed in a morning as long as I please.”
Mirabell also ridicules pregnant women’s wearing tight dresses in order to
maintain their figure which can actually deform their children. Moreover,
intelligent women like Millament allowed a crowd of admirers to a school of fools
to gather around them in order to show their demand and worth. Millament’s
vanity is revealed in causing her lover pain to have a sense of power:
“One’s cruelty is one’s power.”
Above all, Lady Wishfort, a higher class fashionable lady, seeks a husband in her
age of fifty five. Mirabell ridicules her saying,
“The good lady would marry anything that resembled a men.”
And the make up and dressing up of women of the society is expressed in the
speech of the footman about Lady Wishfort of the house-
“I can not swear to her face in a morning, before she is dressed.”
The upper class people could give up anything only to maintain/save the family
name and fame. Lady Wishfort wants to conceal the scandal of her daughter by
any means. She says,
“I’ll compound, I’ll give up all, myself and my all, my niece and her all- anything,
everything for composition.”
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dialogue is throughout witty which is something unrealistic.. Therefore the play,
like other plays of its kind, is called an ‘artificial’ comedy.
In this play, Witwould and Petulant are presented as fops and false wits, the
so-called ‘fine gentlemen’. Their pastime is to accompany ladies and passing
vulgar remarks at them. They are Millament’s suitors for ‘fashions sake’. Their air
and activities amuse us. Sir Wilfull, Witwould’s brother, calls Witwould, “the
fashion’s a fool; and you’re a fop, dear brother.” Petulant hires women to come
and ask for him at the chocolate – house. Fainall says about his purpose,
“This is in order to have something to brag of the next-time he makes Court to
Millament, and swear he has abandoned the whole sex for her sake.”
Prologue
A prologue was a convention of the plays of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries. It is normally written in verse and states the writer’s aim and theme. It
is usually spokenby one of the characters. This prologue was delivered by the
actor who played the part of Fainall. Congreve was among the rare group of writers
who possessedthe ability to stand back and objectively reflect on their work. His
prologue is therefore not a mere convention but expresses some important points.
Although Congreve describes the unfortunate condition of poets, the prologue is
not remorseful in tone. Rather, Congreve urges the audience to “save or damn”
him according to their own discretion and judgment. He knows that he cannot rely
on his past good fortune and that he is risking everything on this new venture. He
promises that he will not resent it if the audience judges his work harshly.In truth,
Congreve was extremely bitter about the poorresponsetowards this play when it
first appeared. His remark in the dedication about the poortaste of the multitudes
who favor the “coarseststrokes of Plautus” to the purity of Terence’s style is an
indication of his resentment. Some critics have suggested that Congreve did not
Write any other plays after The Way of the World becausehe was so disheartened
by its failure.
FRANCIS BACON Biography
Francis Bacon was born in London on January 22, 1561. His father, Sir Nicolas
Bacon, was Lord Keeper of the Seal. His mother, Lady Anne Cooke Bacon, was
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his father's second wife and daughter to Sir Anthony Cooke, a humanist who was
Edward VI's tutor. Francis Bacon’s mother was also the sister-in-law of Lord
Burghley.The younger of Sir Nicholas and Lady Anne's two sons, Francis Bacon
began attending Trinity College, Cambridge, in April 1573, when he was 11 years
old. He completed his courseof study at Trinity in December 1575. The following
year, Bacon enrolled in a law program at Honourable Society of Gray's Inn, the
schoolhis brother Anthony attended. Finding the curriculum at Gray's Inn stale and
old fashioned, Bacon later called his tutors "men of sharp wits, shut up in their
cells if a few authors, chiefly Aristotle, their dictator." Bacon favored the new
Renaissance humanism over Aristotelianism and scholasticism, the more
traditional schools of thought in England at the time. Sir Francis Bacon the man is
the productof Renaissance. Man’s glory, generous or tense, his opportunities of
mind and body, his eyes rolling across the subtle and magnificence of the world his
joy in learning, discovering, weighing – creating all these as it existed in Bacon’s
mind, Essays (counsels: Civil and Moral) exhibits a practical value in life. Bacon’s
essays are counsels and are designed for the practical benefits of man and not for
his emotional or imaginative development. This utilitarian attitude is most evident
in his 59 essays.
DeathandLegacy-InMarch 1626, Bacon was performing a series of experiments
with ice. While testing the effects of cold on the preservation and decay of meat, he
stuffed a hen with snow near High gate, England, and caught a chill. Ailing, Bacon
stayed at Lord Arundel's home in London. The guest room where Bacon resided
was cold and musty. He soondeveloped bronchitis. On April 9, 1626, a week after
he had arrived at Lord Arundel's estate, Francis Bacon died.
Style
His essays are also important from stylistic point of view, too. To Bacon must go
the credit, not only of introducing a new literary form into England but also that he
developed a style which is marked for its pitch and pregnancy in the
communication of thought. It was the first style set in England which later traveled
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to the age of Addison, Steele and Swift. He discovered the value of brief, crisp and
firmly-knitted sentences of a type hitherto unfamiliar in English. He also rejected
the elaborate euphuistic style overcrowded with imagery and conceits. The most
important characteristic of his style, that which gives the essays the position of a
classic in English Language is the terseness of expression and epigrammatic force.
He has an unraveled ability of packing his thoughts into the smallest possible
space. The essays may be described as one critic says, “Infinite riches in a little
room.” (Give sentential examples from his essays). Bacon was a man of the
renaissance and in his essays; we find a characteristic of his age: the use of
figurative language. Similes and Metaphors and striking comparisons are found in
his essays. The scholar’s love of learning is evidenced by the frequent use of
quotations and allusions in the essays. What is most important regarding his
contribution is the terseness and epigrammatic quality of his essays.
Aphoristic style of Bacon
An aphoristic style means a compact, condensed and epigrammatic style of
writing. Bacon’s writing has been admired for various reasons. Some have admired
them for dazzling rhetoric, others his grace. In Bacon we find a style which is
distinct and at the same time characteristic of his age. His style includes various
qualities. Firstly, he remains the best aphoristic, so he stands the most quotable
writer. There is terseness of expression and epigrammatic brevity, in the essays of
Bacon. His sentences are brief and rapid, but they are also forceful. As Dean
Church says, “They come down like the strokes of a hammer.” The force of
aphoristic style depends on other stylistic qualities which supplement it. He weighs
the pros and cons of a statement and immediately counter-balances it. (Give
examples from the above the extracts).
A Rhetorician
Bacon’s style is definitely rhetorical. In this connection, Saints bury has remarked
that no one, “knows better than —- (Bacon) how to leave a single word to produce
all its effects by using it in some slightly uncommon sense. He has great powers of
attracting and persuading his readers even though he may not convince them. In
proserhetoric, in the use, that is to say, of language to dazzle and persuade, not to
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convince. He has few rivals and no superiors in English.” There is a constantuse
of imagery and analogy in Bacon’s essays. The apt and extensive use of
metaphors, images, similitude’s and analogies is in keeping with the view of the
rhetoricians of the ancient as well as of the Renaissance. Bacon draws his imagery
from the familiar objects o nature, or from the facts of everyday life.
His Allusions and Quotations
The essay bear witness to Bacon’s learned mind in the extensive use of quotations
and allusions drawn from various sources, classical fables, the Bible, History, the
ancient Greek and the Roman writers. Of Truth includes Pilate, Lucian and
Montaigne, In Of Great Place; we have Tacitus, Galba and Vespasian, and Of
Friendship includes reference to Aristotle. Thus Bacon employs allusions to and
quotations in order to explain his point. They serve to make his style more
scholarly and enrich it while lending to his ideas. Though, his style is heavy with
learning, yet it is more flexible than any of his predecessorsand contemporaries.
His sentences are short and with this shortness come lucidity of expression. Thus
he shows mastery of the principles of prose. There almost no humor in Bacon’s
essays, but his essays is packed with astounding wit.
Wisdom, Meanness and Brightness
To a religious-minded man like Blake, advice such as what Bacon offers in his
essays must indeed have been shocking. Blake would regard any utilitarian advice
as oppositeto God’s ways, but Bacon was not so particular, for he a man of the
Renaissance. It is easy to assume that Bacon’s wisdom was cynical because many
of his advice calmly ignores ethical standards and seems to imply that nothing
succeeds like success. Baconis utilitarian, but he is so because he realized that the
vast majority of the people in the world are guided by this attitude and success for
them has only one meaning – the material success. His essays reflect the profound
wisdom of his mind, his brightness is ascertained by his vast knowledge and
literary and classical allusions made in his works, his meanness does not deal with
his money. He was reputed to be a very generous man. He was mean becausehe
showed a surprising lack of principle in promoting his selfish interests.
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Philosopher – cum – moralist:
At least two of his essays present him as entertaining deep regard for high
sentiments and the sanctity of truth. Of Truth speaks of truth, love and fair dealings
in high terms. Here he is a philosopher who advocates the pursuit of truth. He is
also a moralist when he says that “man’s mind should turn upon the “poles of
truth.” Falsehood debases man despite his material gains and success.Bacon
advocates man to follow a path of truth and truthfulness. Similarly, his essay Of
Goodness and Goodness ofNature is on a purely moral plane. He counsels
goodness, charity and benevolence and there is a clear condemnation of evil. There
are some essays in which he puts a number of moral precepts, not ignoring
prudential aspects. When we come to Bacon’s essays dealing with subjects such as
love, marriage, family life and parents and children, we are struck by the cold and
unemotional treatment of topics what could easily admit an emotional approach.
Prudence governs marriage, love and friendship. Love is an emotion, not fit for life
according to Bacon. As a philosopher, he takes a balanced view of everything,
weighs the pros and cons of every issue, presents different aspects of the picture
and counsels moderation. This is a rationalist’s approachand it preludes emotion
and feeling. The essays are a handbook of practical wisdom. Each essay is a
collection of suggestion and guideline for a man of action. His essays lack
coherence and logical sequence, otherwise a quality in a standard essay. But his
essays are unity of ideas.
Major works
1. Natural Philosophy: Struggle with Tradition
2. Natural Philosophy: Theory of the Idols and the System of Sciences
2.1 The Idols
2.2 System of Sciences
2.3 Matter Theory and Cosmology
3. Scientific Method: The Project of the Instauratio Magna
4. Scientific Method: Novum Organum and the Theory of Induction
5. Science and Social Philosophy
6. The Ethical Dimension in Bacon's Thought
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Roughly Bacon's essays can be grouped in three categories-- essays in relation to
the world and society, essays in relation to individualism and essays in relation to
his makers i.e. God or Nature. The first group that evaluates the relationship of
mankind to the physical world and their mutual relations includes Of Seditions and
Troubles, Of Great Place, Of Discourse, Of Judicature, Of Suitors, Of Gardens etc.
The second group describing man in his intellectual and moral relations with others
covers essays like: Of Parents and Children, Of Marriage , Of Envy, Of Love, Of
Travel, Of Friendship, Of Health, Of Customand Education, Of Followers and
Friends, Of Studies, Of Ceremonies and Respects, OfHonor and Reputation, Of
Fame etc.Man's relationship with his maker and the unseen world is primary focus
in the third group that include essays like: Of Death, Of Unity in Religion, Of
Goodness and Goodness ofNature, Of Atheism, Of Superstition, Of Wisdom for a
Man’s Self, Of Nature in Men etc. But grouping is more pedantic while each of the
essays of Bacon marks interrelated studies and views.

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17th century prose and drama

  • 1. 1 STATE UINIVERSITY OF BANGLADESH Department of EnglishStudies Assignment on 17th century Proseand Drama Assignment topic Compare and contrast between William Congreve “The way of the world”, and Francis Bacon “Ofmarriage and single life” Crouse code:ENG-1321 Prepared by: Mojahid Billah ID No: UG07-26-12-011 Prepared for:Rashedul Hasan Lecturer Department of English Studies Submission Date:22-12-14
  • 3. 3 Itroduction William Congreve was an English dramatist who shaped the English comedy of manners through his brilliant comic dialogue, his satirical portrayal of the war of the sexes, and his ironic scrutiny of the affectations of his age. Taking as its main theme the manners and behaviour of the class to which it was addressed, that is, the anti-puritanical theatre audience drawn largely from the court, his plays dealt with imitators of French customs, conceited wits, and fantastic people of all kinds; but its main theme was the sexual life led by a large number of courtiers, with their philosophy of freedom and experimentation. Congreve placed great importance on character sketches and the themes of role playing, conditional love, mingled with the love for money and the need for intrigues in almost every facet of life, as can be seen through the plays ―The Double Dealer‖, ―Love for Love‖ and ―The Way of the World‖. Francis Bacon’s fame as a writer depends most of all on the fact that he is the father of modern English prose. He evolved a prosestyle that proved for the first time that English could also be used to express the subtleties of thought, in clear and uninvolved sentences. “I have taken all knowledge for my province” says Bacon and “Beyond any other book of the same size in any literature they are loaded with ripest wisdom of experience.” Says Hudson regarding Bacon’s essays. Nobodycan deny the wisdom of Bacon of his understanding of the affairs of the world. He shows an extraordinary insight regarding the problems that men face in life. But his wisdom is only practical and not moral. Alexander Popehas given the following remarks about Bacon in his epic: If parts allure these think how Bacon shin’d The wisest, brightest and meanestof mankind there is some basic truth in this contention. One cannot deny his wisdom, his observation, intellect and genius. Bacon was a very complex and enigmatic character. The dichotomy of moral values what one finds in his essays was to be found in his character, too.
  • 4. 4 17th Century Drama In 1642 the theatres were closed by the authority of the parliament which was dominated by Puritans and so no good plays were written from 1642 till the Restoration (coming back of monarchy in England with the accessionof Charles II to the throne) in 1660 when the theatres were re-opened. The drama in England after 1660, called the Restoration drama, showed entirely new trends on account of the long break with the past. The most popular form of drama was the Comedy of Manners which portrayed the sophisticated life of the dominant class of society—its gaiety, foppery, insolence and intrigue. Thus the basis of the Restoration drama was very narrow. These new trends in comedyare seen in Dryden’s Wild Gallant (1663), Etheredge’s (1635- 1691) The Comical Revenge or Love in a Tub (1664), Wycherley’s The Country Wife and ThePlain Dealer, and the plays of Vanbrugh and Farquhar. But the most gifted among all the Restoration dramatist was William Congreve (1670-1720) who wrote all his best plays he was thirty years of age. He well-known comedies are Love for Love (1695) andThe Way of the World (1700). It is mainly on account of his remarkable style that Congreve is put at the head of the Restoration drama. No English dramatist has even written such fine prosefor the stage as Congreve did. He balances, polishes and sharpens his sentences until they shine like chiselled instruments for an electrical experiment, through which passes the current in the shape of his incisive and scintillating wit. As the plays of Congreve reflect the fashions and foibles of the upper classes whose moral standards had become lax, they do not have a universal appeal, but as social documents their value is very great. Moreover, though these comedies were subjected to a very severe criticism by the Romantics like Shelley and Lamb, they are now again in great demand and there is a revival of interest in Restoration comedy. 17th Century prose The proseof the seventeenth-century is notable for its extreme variety. Although seventeenth-century prosetexts vary greatly in mood, tone, focus, and style, each expresses the desire for absolute and unqualified truth. Both the individuality and the search for truth expressed in these texts are correlated with the possibilities, discoveries, and disappointments of the time in which they were produced. It was an age of extreme transition, and, within their works, each of the major seventeenth-century proseauthors echoed that uncertainty and change. Francis Bacon also occupies a transitional place in English prose. He is a symbol of the greatness of Elizabethan intellect and the foremost promoter of the scientific
  • 5. 5 attitude that ascended in the seventeenth-century. Much of his work, including that which deals with non-scientific matters, promotes inductive reasoning. Many of Bacon’s statements are platitudes, such as “the vices of authority are chiefly four: delays, corruption, roughness, and facility” (44). His statements, even when somewhat vague (“so virtue in ambition is violent, in authority settled and calm” (45)) reflect a complex and effective prosestyle that sets him apart from Breton. Bacon’s is not the work of free-association or random reflection; rather, it is the literary manifestation of the inductive method. Forexample, in Novum Organum, Bacon explains that “[the inductive method] arrives at the most general axioms last of all. This is the true way, but as yet untried” (55). He uses this method of reasoning in his own work, arriving lastly at the general conclusion that “there is taken for the material of philosophy either a great deal out of a few things, or very little out of many things” (57). His proseis the intellectual answer to Breton’s pastoral meditations. Ultimately, Bacon helped to provide a bridge to the new scientific age. William Congreve Biography William Congreve, 1670-1729, was born in Yorkshire, England. As his father was an officer in the army and the commander of a garrison near Cork in Ireland, Congreve was educated at Kilkenny and then at Trinity College, Dublin, where he was a slightly younger college-mate of Jonathan Swift. In 1691, he was admitted to the Middle Temple in London to study law. It is likely that, like Young Witwoud in The Way of the World, his interest in law was only a means to take him to London, the center of all excitement.By 1692, Congreve was already a recognized member of the literary world. His first play, The Old Bachelor, was first acted in January 1693, before he was twenty-three years old, and was triumphantly successful. His other plays, The Double-Dealer, Love for Love, The Mourning Bride, and The Way of the World, all followed at short intervals. The last of them was presented in March 1700.For the rest of his life, Congreve wrote no plays. The Way of the World was not successfulon the stage, and this disappointment may have had something to do with his decision. He engaged in controversy with Jeremy Collier on the morality of the stage, a frustrating experience. He suffered from gout and bad sight. He became an elder statesman of letters at the age of thirty, honored by the nobility, highly respected by younger writers.
  • 6. 6 PLAYS The Old Bachelor (1693) The Double-Dealer (1693) Love for Love (1695) The Mourning Bride (1697) The Way of the World (1700) The Works of William Congreve; Consisting of His Plays and Poems (1761) Incognita (1922) The Complete Works (1923) Comedies of William Congreve (1925) The Mourning Bride, Poems, & Miscellanies (1928) Complete Plays (1956) NON-FICTION Amendments of Mr. Collier's False and Imperfect Citations (1698) Writing Career During his career as counseland statesman, Bacon often wrote for the court. In 1584, he wrote his first political memorandum, A Letter of Advice to Queen Elizabeth. In 1592, to celebrate the anniversary of the queen's coronation, he wrote an entertaining speech in praise of knowledge. The year 1597 marked Bacon's first publication, a collection of essays about politics. The collection was later expanded and republished in 1612 and 1625.In 1605, Bacon published The Advancementof Learning in an unsuccessfulattempt to rally supporters forthe sciences. In 1609, he departed from political and scientific genres when he released On the Wisdom of the Ancients, his analysis of ancient mythology.Bacon then resumed writing about science, and in 1620, published Novum Organum, presented as Part Two of The Great Saturation. In 1622, he wrote a historical work for Prince Charles, entitled TheHistory of Henry VII. Bacon also published Historia
  • 7. 7 Ventorum and Historia Vitae et Mortis that same year. In 1623, he published De Augmentis Scientarium, a continuation of his view on scientific reform. In 1624, his works TheNew Atlantis and Apothegmswere published. Sylva Sylvarium, which was published in 1627, was among the last of his written works. Now let’s evaluate Congreve’s The Way of the World Plot, style and theme. The Way of the World (1700) is Congreve’s best experimental comedy even though he employs a typical plot formula for a Restoration comedy of manners. The world of the play reflects Congreve’s own society and revolves around a witty young man winning a lady and her fortune after overcoming the obstacles posed by antagonistic parents and other suitors. The society depicted in The Way of the World is the upper class fashionable society of London. The action of the play takes place in three places. The first is the chocolate House which was used for socializing and entertainment during the Restoration. The second is St James’s Park in Londonwhere the upper class people walked before dinner. Witwould says, “We’ll all walk in the park; the ladies talked of being there.” The third is the house of Lady Wishfort, an aristocratic woman. Most of the male and female characters of the play are cultured, talented, formal, artificial, fashionable, depraved, ‘cold’ and ‘courtly’. Their qualities are actually a part of Restoration age culture. The Restoration period was an age of loose morals and, and was devoid of moral values. The Way of the World contains this current through the illicit love and adulterous relations – e.g. relation between Fainall and Mrs. Marwood, between Mirabell, the hero, and Mrs. Fainal. Mirabell married Mrs. Fainall off to Fainal, being afraid of her being pregnant. Fainall’s illicit relationship with Mrs. Marwood having been exposed, Fainall faces the situation fearlessly and shamelessly: “If it must all come out, why let ‘them know it; it’s but the way of the world.” Even Mrs. Marwood and Lady Wishfort secretly loved Mirabell. Unhappy conjugal life can be treated as another characteristic of the time which is expressed through the relation between Mr. and Mrs. Fainall. One of them feels uneasy in the presence of another. Mrs. Fainall expresses her uneasiness in St James’s park in the presence of her husband- “He turned sort upon me unaware, and had almost overcome me.” The Way of the World also exposes the worldliness and greed of the young men of the time. Mercenary motives led them to seek rich heiresses in marriage Mr.
  • 8. 8 Fainall marries Mrs. Fainall, a widow, for her property. Mirabell does not want to marry Millament without her property. This mercenary tendency led them to intrigue which was the order of the day in social and domestic life. Mirabell, in order to obtain Milament with her whole legacy, pretends to woo Lady Wishfort. He marries his servant to Wishfort’s maid and sends his servant as Sir Roland to Lady Wishfort so that the servant can make a marriage contact with the lady. By this intrigue, Mirabell makes Lady Wishfort agree – “Upon condition that she consents to [his] marriage with her niece, And surrender[s] the moiety of her fortune in her possession.” Even Sir Wilfull, an exception to other characters of the play, joins the web of intrigues in the play. Moreover, Fainall makes the legacy-conflict deeper through his cruel condition to Lady Wishfort. In The Way of The World, we are acquainted with the vanities, affectations and fashions of the time. Mirrabell satirically remarks in the proviso scene on women’s fondness of wearing masks, going to the theatre with or without their husbands’ knowledge, idle gossip, slandering the absent friends etc. In her contact with Mirabell, Millament proves her habit of late rising, contemplation in solitude general laziness etc. She says, “I’ll ye abed in a morning as long as I please.” Mirabell also ridicules pregnant women’s wearing tight dresses in order to maintain their figure which can actually deform their children. Moreover, intelligent women like Millament allowed a crowd of admirers to a school of fools to gather around them in order to show their demand and worth. Millament’s vanity is revealed in causing her lover pain to have a sense of power: “One’s cruelty is one’s power.” Above all, Lady Wishfort, a higher class fashionable lady, seeks a husband in her age of fifty five. Mirabell ridicules her saying, “The good lady would marry anything that resembled a men.” And the make up and dressing up of women of the society is expressed in the speech of the footman about Lady Wishfort of the house- “I can not swear to her face in a morning, before she is dressed.” The upper class people could give up anything only to maintain/save the family name and fame. Lady Wishfort wants to conceal the scandal of her daughter by any means. She says, “I’ll compound, I’ll give up all, myself and my all, my niece and her all- anything, everything for composition.”
  • 9. 9 dialogue is throughout witty which is something unrealistic.. Therefore the play, like other plays of its kind, is called an ‘artificial’ comedy. In this play, Witwould and Petulant are presented as fops and false wits, the so-called ‘fine gentlemen’. Their pastime is to accompany ladies and passing vulgar remarks at them. They are Millament’s suitors for ‘fashions sake’. Their air and activities amuse us. Sir Wilfull, Witwould’s brother, calls Witwould, “the fashion’s a fool; and you’re a fop, dear brother.” Petulant hires women to come and ask for him at the chocolate – house. Fainall says about his purpose, “This is in order to have something to brag of the next-time he makes Court to Millament, and swear he has abandoned the whole sex for her sake.” Prologue A prologue was a convention of the plays of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It is normally written in verse and states the writer’s aim and theme. It is usually spokenby one of the characters. This prologue was delivered by the actor who played the part of Fainall. Congreve was among the rare group of writers who possessedthe ability to stand back and objectively reflect on their work. His prologue is therefore not a mere convention but expresses some important points. Although Congreve describes the unfortunate condition of poets, the prologue is not remorseful in tone. Rather, Congreve urges the audience to “save or damn” him according to their own discretion and judgment. He knows that he cannot rely on his past good fortune and that he is risking everything on this new venture. He promises that he will not resent it if the audience judges his work harshly.In truth, Congreve was extremely bitter about the poorresponsetowards this play when it first appeared. His remark in the dedication about the poortaste of the multitudes who favor the “coarseststrokes of Plautus” to the purity of Terence’s style is an indication of his resentment. Some critics have suggested that Congreve did not Write any other plays after The Way of the World becausehe was so disheartened by its failure. FRANCIS BACON Biography Francis Bacon was born in London on January 22, 1561. His father, Sir Nicolas Bacon, was Lord Keeper of the Seal. His mother, Lady Anne Cooke Bacon, was
  • 10. 10 his father's second wife and daughter to Sir Anthony Cooke, a humanist who was Edward VI's tutor. Francis Bacon’s mother was also the sister-in-law of Lord Burghley.The younger of Sir Nicholas and Lady Anne's two sons, Francis Bacon began attending Trinity College, Cambridge, in April 1573, when he was 11 years old. He completed his courseof study at Trinity in December 1575. The following year, Bacon enrolled in a law program at Honourable Society of Gray's Inn, the schoolhis brother Anthony attended. Finding the curriculum at Gray's Inn stale and old fashioned, Bacon later called his tutors "men of sharp wits, shut up in their cells if a few authors, chiefly Aristotle, their dictator." Bacon favored the new Renaissance humanism over Aristotelianism and scholasticism, the more traditional schools of thought in England at the time. Sir Francis Bacon the man is the productof Renaissance. Man’s glory, generous or tense, his opportunities of mind and body, his eyes rolling across the subtle and magnificence of the world his joy in learning, discovering, weighing – creating all these as it existed in Bacon’s mind, Essays (counsels: Civil and Moral) exhibits a practical value in life. Bacon’s essays are counsels and are designed for the practical benefits of man and not for his emotional or imaginative development. This utilitarian attitude is most evident in his 59 essays. DeathandLegacy-InMarch 1626, Bacon was performing a series of experiments with ice. While testing the effects of cold on the preservation and decay of meat, he stuffed a hen with snow near High gate, England, and caught a chill. Ailing, Bacon stayed at Lord Arundel's home in London. The guest room where Bacon resided was cold and musty. He soondeveloped bronchitis. On April 9, 1626, a week after he had arrived at Lord Arundel's estate, Francis Bacon died. Style His essays are also important from stylistic point of view, too. To Bacon must go the credit, not only of introducing a new literary form into England but also that he developed a style which is marked for its pitch and pregnancy in the communication of thought. It was the first style set in England which later traveled
  • 11. 11 to the age of Addison, Steele and Swift. He discovered the value of brief, crisp and firmly-knitted sentences of a type hitherto unfamiliar in English. He also rejected the elaborate euphuistic style overcrowded with imagery and conceits. The most important characteristic of his style, that which gives the essays the position of a classic in English Language is the terseness of expression and epigrammatic force. He has an unraveled ability of packing his thoughts into the smallest possible space. The essays may be described as one critic says, “Infinite riches in a little room.” (Give sentential examples from his essays). Bacon was a man of the renaissance and in his essays; we find a characteristic of his age: the use of figurative language. Similes and Metaphors and striking comparisons are found in his essays. The scholar’s love of learning is evidenced by the frequent use of quotations and allusions in the essays. What is most important regarding his contribution is the terseness and epigrammatic quality of his essays. Aphoristic style of Bacon An aphoristic style means a compact, condensed and epigrammatic style of writing. Bacon’s writing has been admired for various reasons. Some have admired them for dazzling rhetoric, others his grace. In Bacon we find a style which is distinct and at the same time characteristic of his age. His style includes various qualities. Firstly, he remains the best aphoristic, so he stands the most quotable writer. There is terseness of expression and epigrammatic brevity, in the essays of Bacon. His sentences are brief and rapid, but they are also forceful. As Dean Church says, “They come down like the strokes of a hammer.” The force of aphoristic style depends on other stylistic qualities which supplement it. He weighs the pros and cons of a statement and immediately counter-balances it. (Give examples from the above the extracts). A Rhetorician Bacon’s style is definitely rhetorical. In this connection, Saints bury has remarked that no one, “knows better than —- (Bacon) how to leave a single word to produce all its effects by using it in some slightly uncommon sense. He has great powers of attracting and persuading his readers even though he may not convince them. In proserhetoric, in the use, that is to say, of language to dazzle and persuade, not to
  • 12. 12 convince. He has few rivals and no superiors in English.” There is a constantuse of imagery and analogy in Bacon’s essays. The apt and extensive use of metaphors, images, similitude’s and analogies is in keeping with the view of the rhetoricians of the ancient as well as of the Renaissance. Bacon draws his imagery from the familiar objects o nature, or from the facts of everyday life. His Allusions and Quotations The essay bear witness to Bacon’s learned mind in the extensive use of quotations and allusions drawn from various sources, classical fables, the Bible, History, the ancient Greek and the Roman writers. Of Truth includes Pilate, Lucian and Montaigne, In Of Great Place; we have Tacitus, Galba and Vespasian, and Of Friendship includes reference to Aristotle. Thus Bacon employs allusions to and quotations in order to explain his point. They serve to make his style more scholarly and enrich it while lending to his ideas. Though, his style is heavy with learning, yet it is more flexible than any of his predecessorsand contemporaries. His sentences are short and with this shortness come lucidity of expression. Thus he shows mastery of the principles of prose. There almost no humor in Bacon’s essays, but his essays is packed with astounding wit. Wisdom, Meanness and Brightness To a religious-minded man like Blake, advice such as what Bacon offers in his essays must indeed have been shocking. Blake would regard any utilitarian advice as oppositeto God’s ways, but Bacon was not so particular, for he a man of the Renaissance. It is easy to assume that Bacon’s wisdom was cynical because many of his advice calmly ignores ethical standards and seems to imply that nothing succeeds like success. Baconis utilitarian, but he is so because he realized that the vast majority of the people in the world are guided by this attitude and success for them has only one meaning – the material success. His essays reflect the profound wisdom of his mind, his brightness is ascertained by his vast knowledge and literary and classical allusions made in his works, his meanness does not deal with his money. He was reputed to be a very generous man. He was mean becausehe showed a surprising lack of principle in promoting his selfish interests.
  • 13. 13 Philosopher – cum – moralist: At least two of his essays present him as entertaining deep regard for high sentiments and the sanctity of truth. Of Truth speaks of truth, love and fair dealings in high terms. Here he is a philosopher who advocates the pursuit of truth. He is also a moralist when he says that “man’s mind should turn upon the “poles of truth.” Falsehood debases man despite his material gains and success.Bacon advocates man to follow a path of truth and truthfulness. Similarly, his essay Of Goodness and Goodness ofNature is on a purely moral plane. He counsels goodness, charity and benevolence and there is a clear condemnation of evil. There are some essays in which he puts a number of moral precepts, not ignoring prudential aspects. When we come to Bacon’s essays dealing with subjects such as love, marriage, family life and parents and children, we are struck by the cold and unemotional treatment of topics what could easily admit an emotional approach. Prudence governs marriage, love and friendship. Love is an emotion, not fit for life according to Bacon. As a philosopher, he takes a balanced view of everything, weighs the pros and cons of every issue, presents different aspects of the picture and counsels moderation. This is a rationalist’s approachand it preludes emotion and feeling. The essays are a handbook of practical wisdom. Each essay is a collection of suggestion and guideline for a man of action. His essays lack coherence and logical sequence, otherwise a quality in a standard essay. But his essays are unity of ideas. Major works 1. Natural Philosophy: Struggle with Tradition 2. Natural Philosophy: Theory of the Idols and the System of Sciences 2.1 The Idols 2.2 System of Sciences 2.3 Matter Theory and Cosmology 3. Scientific Method: The Project of the Instauratio Magna 4. Scientific Method: Novum Organum and the Theory of Induction 5. Science and Social Philosophy 6. The Ethical Dimension in Bacon's Thought
  • 14. 14 Roughly Bacon's essays can be grouped in three categories-- essays in relation to the world and society, essays in relation to individualism and essays in relation to his makers i.e. God or Nature. The first group that evaluates the relationship of mankind to the physical world and their mutual relations includes Of Seditions and Troubles, Of Great Place, Of Discourse, Of Judicature, Of Suitors, Of Gardens etc. The second group describing man in his intellectual and moral relations with others covers essays like: Of Parents and Children, Of Marriage , Of Envy, Of Love, Of Travel, Of Friendship, Of Health, Of Customand Education, Of Followers and Friends, Of Studies, Of Ceremonies and Respects, OfHonor and Reputation, Of Fame etc.Man's relationship with his maker and the unseen world is primary focus in the third group that include essays like: Of Death, Of Unity in Religion, Of Goodness and Goodness ofNature, Of Atheism, Of Superstition, Of Wisdom for a Man’s Self, Of Nature in Men etc. But grouping is more pedantic while each of the essays of Bacon marks interrelated studies and views.