Richard Flecknoe

Richard Flecknoe (c. 1600 – 1678) was an English dramatist, poet and musician who was made the butt of satires by Andrew Marvell (1681) and John Dryden (1682).

Life and work

Little is known of Flecknoe's life. He was probably of English birth though he may have been of Irish heritage. He was a Catholic and may have been ordained a lay-priest by the Jesuits while abroad.[1] There was once a suggestion that he may have been the nephew of the Jesuit William Flecknoe or Flexney of Oxford, though there is no evidence of this.[2] Much of his early life seems to have been spent outside England and Andrew Marvell encountered him in Rome in 1645, from which period dates Marvell's satire "Flecknoe, an English Priest at Rome", although it was not published until 1681. His verse is charactised there as "hideous" and it is also mentioned that he performed on the lute.[3]

Flecknoe provides information about his travels in his collection of letters, Relation of Ten Years' Travels in Europe, Asia, Affrique, and America, completed around 1655. It contains correspondence with friends and patrons, beginning in 1640, and comprises accounts of the Ottoman dominions in Western Asia and of a voyage to and stay in Brazil. By 1653 he was in London, when he began publishing, and so far compromised his Catholic identity as to praise Oliver Cromwell in his The idea of His Highness Oliver, late Lord Protector, with certain brief reflexions on his life (1659).

In the field of drama his Ariadne...a dramatick piece for recitative music has a claim to be the first English opera, though the musical score (also composed by himself) is now lost.[4] He also wrote a masque, The Marriage of Oceanus and Brittania; an unacted tragi-comedy, Erminia or The Fair and Vertuous Lady; and an unacted comedy, The Demoiselles à La Mode, the plot and subplot of which were taken from Molière’s Les Précieuses Ridicules and L'École des Femmes. One other production, Love’s Dominion, a pastoral with songs, was performed privately on the continent and later acted in Restoration England as Love's Kingdom.[5]

Much of Flecknoe's later poetry was epigrammatic, in the line of Ben Jonson, with aristocratic addressees, which led one critic to remark that he was "better acquainted with the Nobility than with the Muses".[6] Flecknoe explains his taste for the epigram in a dedicatory epistle which is itself epigrammatic and paradoxical: “I write chiefly to avoid idleness, and print to avoid the imputation; and as others do it to live after they are dead, I do it only not to be thought dead whilst I can live.” Its lightness is the reason he chooses this form, “who love not to take pains in anything, and rather affect a little negligence than too great curiosity”.[7] The separate section of “Epigrams Divine and Moral” in the 1670 edition is, however, indicative of a religious seriousness persisting from his first publication some 44 years before in the devotional Hierothelamium.

He also took a moral stance in his prose works on English drama, and it may have been one of those that prompted Dryden to make him an object of satire in his Mac Flecknoe (1682), where he is depicted as the dying Monarch of Nonsense, bequeathing his title to the playwright Thomas Shadwell.[8] The attack is unexpected, since Flecknoe had written an epigram in Dryden's praise and both were Catholics. Robert Southey, giving it as his openion that "Flecknoe is by no means the despicable writer that we might suppose" from Dryden's vicious attack, accounted for it by supposing that Dryden was "offended at his invectives against the obscenity of the stage, feeling himself more notorious, if not more culpable than any of his rivals".[9]

One of Dryden's later editors conjectured that "the plan of the poem required a dead author and Flecknoe suited the purpose". It might also have been that Dryden believed him to be author of a pamphlet signed "R. F." and published in 1668, in defence of Sir Robert Howard against Dryden in a controversy about rhyme and blank-verse, and was taking his revenge 14 years later.[10] More recently, Paul Hammond accounts for it by the literary politics of the time and points out that many details in his depiction are drawn from the imagery of Flecknoe’s own poems.[11]

Bibliography

References

  1. The Poems of Andrew Marvell, edited by Nigel Smith, Pearson Education 2003, pp.166-8
  2. Bibliographical Dictionary of the English Catholics, vol. ii., 1885
  3. Online text
  4. The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
  5. Ricorso
  6. John Hawkesworth, Supplement to Dr Swift's Works, London 1779, Vol.2, p.430
  7. Richard Ryan, Poetry and Poets, being a collection of the choicest anecdotes, London 1826, p.122
  8. Online text, lines 1-64
  9. Omniana (1812) 1:105-06
  10. Charles Read, A Cabinet of Irish Literature
  11. The chapter "Flecknoe and Mac Flecknoe" in The Making of Restoration Poetry, Cambridge 2006, p.168-80
  12. See Letter XXIII, "Of his sea-voyage from Lisbon to the Brasils"
  13. Google Books
  14. Sources for the bibliographical material are Acton F. Griffith, Bibliotheca Anglo-Poetica: a descriptive cataloque, London 1815, pp.109-10 and The Literary History of England, London 2003, Vol 3, p.814

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.