''Cupid and Death'' is a mid-seventeenth-century
masque
The masque was a form of festive courtly entertainment that flourished in 16th- and early 17th-century Europe, though it was developed earlier in Italy, in forms including the intermedio (a public version of the masque was the pageant). A mas ...
, written by the
Caroline era dramatist
James Shirley, and performed on 26 March
1653 before the Portuguese ambassador to Great Britain. The work and its performance provide a point of contradiction to the standard view that the England of
Oliver Cromwell
Oliver Cromwell (25 April 15993 September 1658) was an English statesman, politician and soldier, widely regarded as one of the most important figures in British history. He came to prominence during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, initially ...
and the
Interregnum
An interregnum (plural interregna or interregnums) is a period of revolutionary breach of legal continuity, discontinuity or "gap" in a government, organization, or social order. Archetypally, it was the period of time between the reign of one m ...
was uniformly hostile to stage drama.
Background
After the
closure of the theatres in 1642 at the start of the
English Civil War
The English Civil War or Great Rebellion was a series of civil wars and political machinations between Cavaliers, Royalists and Roundhead, Parliamentarians in the Kingdom of England from 1642 to 1651. Part of the wider 1639 to 1653 Wars of th ...
, Shirley earned a living as a schoolteacher. As part of his new occupation, he wrote dramas – morality plays and masques – for his students to perform. The final works of his career, including ''
Honoria and Mammon'' and ''
The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses'' (both published in 1659), were works for student performers. ''Cupid and Death'' is another work in this category, though its resemblances with the great masques of the late
Stuart Court have been noted by critics – it "is much more like a Court Masque than any of Shirley's other school Masques". Perhaps this aspect of the work made it seem appropriate for the Portuguese ambassador, the Count of Peneguiaõ. Shirley's past Royalist connections with the Stuart Court, and even his
Roman Catholicism
The Catholic Church (), also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the List of Christian denominations by number of members, largest Christian church, with 1.27 to 1.41 billion baptized Catholics Catholic Church by country, worldwid ...
, clearly (if surprisingly) did not stand as insuperable obstacles to a public staging of the work.
Publication
''Cupid and Death'' was first published in
quarto
Quarto (abbreviated Qto, 4to or 4º) is the format of a book or pamphlet produced from full sheets printed with eight pages of text, four to a side, then folded twice to produce four leaves. The leaves are then trimmed along the folds to produc ...
in 1653, by the booksellers John Crook and John Baker. It was reprinted in
1659. The full musical score for the masque, by
Matthew Locke and
Christopher Gibbons, has survived, and was published together with Shirley's text in a modern edition in 1951.
Sources
The drama depends on a traditional tale, found in
Aesop
Aesop ( ; , ; c. 620–564 BCE; formerly rendered as Æsop) was a Greeks, Greek wikt:fabulist, fabulist and Oral storytelling, storyteller credited with a number of fables now collectively known as ''Aesop's Fables''. Although his existence re ...
and many subsequent versions. For his source, Shirley employed a
1651 translation of Aesop by
John Ogilby, with whom he'd worked at the
Werburgh Street Theatre in the later 1630s. Shirley wrote
commendatory verses for Ogilby's volume.
Plot
In the tale and in Shirley's retelling, Death and Cupid accidentally exchange their arrows and cause chaos as a result. Cupid shoots potential lovers and inadvertently kills them. Death shoots at elderly people whose time of passing has come, and strikes them ardent instead; he shoots duellists about to fight, and they drop their swords to embrace and dance and sing. The "serious" portion of the masque features the kind of personifications standard in the masque form: Nature, Folly, Madness, and Despair. As usual in masques of Shirley's era, the work contains a comic anti-masque, with a tavern Host and a Chamberlain, and a dance of "
Satyr
In Greek mythology, a satyr (, ), also known as a silenus or ''silenos'' ( ), and sileni (plural), is a male List of nature deities, nature spirit with ears and a tail resembling those of a horse, as well as a permanent, exaggerated erection. ...
s and Apes." (The poor Chamberlain is struck by Death with Cupid's arrow, and falls in love with an ape.) The god
Mercury eventually intervenes to set things right; Cupid is banished from the courts of princes to common people's cottages (a suitably sober moral for the
Puritan
The Puritans were English Protestants in the 16th and 17th centuries who sought to rid the Church of England of what they considered to be Roman Catholic practices, maintaining that the Church of England had not been fully reformed and should b ...
regime then in power). The slain lovers are shown rejoicing in
Elysium
Elysium (), otherwise known as the Elysian Fields (, ''Ēlýsion pedíon''), Elysian Plains or Elysian Realm, is a conception of the afterlife that developed over time and was maintained by some Greek religious and philosophical sects and cult ...
.
"''Cupid and Death'' resembles Caroline masque in its use of staging, music, dance, singing and dialogue. Yet it differs in that the masquers take part in the action and they do not dance with the audience at the end...The balance between spoken prose dialogue, recitative and song carries the performance away from masque and towards
opera
Opera is a form of History of theatre#European theatre, Western theatre in which music is a fundamental component and dramatic roles are taken by Singing, singers. Such a "work" (the literal translation of the Italian word "opera") is typically ...
, a form
Davenant planned to introduce to the London stage as early as 1639."
''Cupid and Death'' was performed at
Rutland Boughton's Glastonbury Festival in 1919,
[Rose, p. 29.] by the Consorte of Musicke (notably
Anthony Rooley and
Emma Kirkby) in 1985, and by the
Halastó Kórus (directed by
Göttinger Pál) in Budapest in 2008.
Notes
Sources
* Clare, Janet. ''Drama of the English Republic, 1649–60.'' Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2006.
* Corns, Thomas N. ''A History of Seventeenth-Century English Literature.'' London, Blackwell, 2007.
* Logan, Terence P., and Denzell S. Smith, eds. ''The Later Jacobean and Caroline Dramatists: A Survey and Bibliography of Recent Studies in English Renaissance Drama.'' Lincoln, NE, University of Nebraska Press, 1978.
* Rose, Martial. ''Forever Juliet,'' Dereham, Norfolk, Larks Press, 2003.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cupid and Death
English Renaissance plays
1653 plays
Masques
Masques by James Shirley