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John Ford (baptised April 17, 1586 – c. 1640?) was an English Jacobean and Caroline playwright and poet born in Ilsington in Devon in 1586.

Life and work

Ford left home to study in London, although more specific details are unclear — a sixteen-year-old John Ford of Devon was admitted to Exeter College, Oxford on March 26, 1601, but this was when the dramatist had not yet reached his sixteenth birthday. He joined an institution that was a prestigious law school but also a centre of literary and dramatic activity — the Middle Temple. A prominent junior member in 1601 was the playwright John Marston. (It is unknown whether Ford ever actually studied law while a resident of the Middle Temple, or whether he was strictly a gentleman boarder, which was a common arrangement at the time.)

It was not until 1606 that Ford wrote his first works for publication. In the spring of that year he was expelled from Middle Temple, due to his financial problems, and Fame's Memorial and Honour Triumphant soon followed. Both works are clear bids for patronage: Fame's Memorial is an elegy of 1169 lines on the recently-deceased Charles Blount, 1st Earl of Devonshire, while Honour Triumphant is a prose pamphlet, a verbal fantasia written in connection with the jousts planned for the summer 1606 visit of King Christian IV of Denmark.[1] It is unknown whether either of these brought any financial remuneration to Ford; yet by June 1608 he had enough money to be readmitted to the Middle Temple.

Prior to the start of his career as a playwright, Ford wrote other non-dramatic literary works—the long religious poem Christ's Bloody Sweat (1613), and two prose essays published as pamphlets, The Golden Mean (1613) and A Line of Life (1620).[2] After 1620 he began active dramatic writing, first as a collaborator with more experienced playwrights — primarily Thomas Dekker, but also John Webster and William Rowley — and by the later 1620s as a solo artist.

Ford is best known for the tragedy 'Tis Pity She's a Whore (1633), a family drama with a plot line of incest. The play's title has often been changed in new productions, sometimes being referred to as simply Giovanni and Annabella — the play's leading, incestuous brother-and-sister characters; in a nineteenth-century work it is coyly called The Brother and Sister.[3] Shocking as the play is, it is still widely regarded as a classic piece of English drama.

He was a major playwright during the reign of Charles I. His plays deal with conflicts between individual passion and conscience and the laws and morals of society at large; Ford had a strong interest in abnormal psychology that is expressed through his dramas. His plays often show the influence of Robert Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy. While virtually nothing is known of Ford's personal life, one reference suggests that Ford's interest in melancholia may have been more than merely intellectual. The volume Choice Drollery (1656) asserts that

Deep in a dump alone John Ford was gat,
With folded arms and melancholy hat.[4]

The canon of Ford's plays

— and probably —

As is typical for pre-Restoration playwrights, a significant portion of Ford's output has not survived. Lost plays by Ford include The Royal Combat and Beauty in a Trance, plus more collaborations with Dekker: The London Merchant, The Bristol Merchant, The Fairy Knight,[5] and Keep the Widow Waking, the last with William Rowley and John Webster.

And there are possible or questionable attributions: The Laws of Candy, a play in the canon of Fletcher, may contain much of Ford's work. Scholars have also considered The Welsh Ambassador and The Fair Maid of the Inn as in part the work of Ford.[6]

In 1940, critic Alfred Harbage argued that Sir Robert Howard's play The Great Favourite, or The Duke of Lerma is an adaptation of a lost play by Ford. Harbage noted that many previous critics had judged to play suspiciously good, perhaps too good, for Howard; and Harbage pointed to a range of resemblances between the play and Ford's work.[7] The case, however, relies solely upon internal evidence and to-some-degree subjective judgements.

Notes

  1. ^ Stavig, pp. 3-19.
  2. ^ Stavig, pp. 20-35.
  3. ^ William Francis Collier, A History of English Literature in a Series of Biographical Sketches, London, T. Nelson, 1871; p. 170.
  4. ^ Halliday, p. 172.
  5. ^ Critics regard the Ford/Dekker Fairy Knight as distinct from the extant manuscript play of the same name.
  6. ^ Stavig, p. 207.
  7. ^ Harbage, pp. 299-304.

References

  • Halliday, F. E. A Shakespeare Companion 1564–1964. Baltimore, Penguin, 1964.
  • Harbage, Alfred. "Elizabethan:Restoration Palimpsest." Modern Language Review Vol. 35 No. 3 (July 1940), pp. 278-319.
  • 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, Nebraska, University of Nebraska Press, 1978.
  • Stavig, Mark. John Ford and the Traditional Moral Order. Madison, WI, University of Wisconsin Press, 1968.

External links


Quotes

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikiquote

John Ford (1586 – c. 1640) was one of the last English playwrights in the great Jacobean school that produced Marlowe, William Shakespeare and Jonson.

Contents

Sourced

  • Her words are trusty heralds to her mind.
  • Oh, happy kings,
    Whose thrones are raised in their subjects' hearts.
  • A bachelor
    May thrive by observation, on a little.
    A single life's no burden: but to draw
    In yokes is chargeable, and will require
    A double maintenance.
    • The Fancies, Chaste and Noble Act I, sc. iii.

The Lover's Melancholy (1628)

  • Flattery
    Is monstrous in a true friend.
    • Act I, sc. i.
  • Physicians are the cobblers, rather the botchers, of men's bodies; as the one patches our tattered clothes, so the other solders our diseased flesh.
    • Act I, sc. ii.
  • Tell us, pray, what devil
    This melancholy is, which can transform
    Men into monsters.
    • Act III, sc. i.
  • Melancholy
    Is not, as you conceive, indisposition
    Of body, but the mind's disease.
    • Act III, sc. i.
  • Philosophers dwell in the moon.
    • Act III, sc. iii.
  • Love is the tyrant of the heart; it darkens
    Reason, confounds discretion; deaf to Counsel
    It runs a headlong course to desperate madness.
    • Act III, sc. iii.
  • Fly hence, shadows, that do keep,
    Watchful sorrows, charmed in sleep.
    • Act V, sc. i.

The Broken Heart (c. 1625-33)

  • Tempt not the stars, young man, thou canst not play
    With the severity of fate.
    • Act I, sc. iii.
  • I am, gay creature,
    With pardon of your deities, a mushroom
    On whom the dew of heaven drops now and then.
    • Act I, sc. iii.
  • Green indiscretion, flattery of greatness,
    Rawness of judgement, wilfulness in folly,
    Thoughts vagrant as the wind, and as uncertain.
    • Act II, sc. ii.
  • The joys of marriage are the heaven on earth,
    Life's paradise, great princess, the soul's quiet,
    Sinews of concord, earthly immortality,
    Eternity of pleasures; no restoratives
    Like to a constant woman!
    • Act II, sc. ii.
  • Glories
    Of human greatness are but pleasing dreams,
    And shadows soon decaying.
    • Act III, sc. v.
  • Revenge proves its own executioner.
    • Act IV, sc. i.
  • There's not a hair
    Sticks on my head but, like a leaden plummet,
    It sinks me to the grave: I must creep thither;
    The journey is not long.
    • Act IV, sc. ii.
  • Truth is child of time.
    • Act IV, sc. iii.
  • Love is dead; let lovers' eyes
    Locked in endless dreams
    Th' extreme of all extremes
    Ope no more, for now Love dies.
    • Act IV, sc. iii.
  • He hath shook hands with time.
    • Act V, sc. ii.

'Tis Pity She's a Whore (1629-33?)

  • Nice philosophy
    May tolerate unlikely arguments,
    But heaven admits no jest.
    • Act I, sc. i.
  • I have spent
    Many a silent night in sighs and groans,
    Ran over all my thoughts, despised my fate,
    Reasoned against the reasons of my love,
    Done all that smoothed-cheek Virtue could advise,
    But found all bootless: 'tis my destiny
    That you must either love, or I must die.
    • Act I, sc. iii.
  • Brother, even by my mother's dust, I charge you,
    Do not betray me to your mirth or hate.
    • Act I, sc. iii.
  • Delay in vengeance gives a heavier blow.
    • Act III, sc. iii.
  • There is a place,
    List, daughter! in a black and hollow vault,
    Where day is never seen; there shines no sun,
    But flaming horror of consuming fires;
    A lightless sulphur, choked with smoky fogs
    Of an infected darkness; in this place
    Dwell many thousand thousand sundry sorts
    Of never-dying deaths.
    • Act III, sc. v.
  • Busy opinion is an idle fool.
    • Act V, sc. iii.
  • Why, I hold fate
    Clasped in my fist, and could command the course
    Of time's eternal motion, hadst thou been
    One thought more steady than an ebbing sea.
    • Act V, sc. v.

The Lady's Trial (1638)

  • He is a noble gentleman; withal
    Happy in his endeavours: the general voice
    Sounds him for courtesy, behaviour, language,
    And every fair demeanour, an example:
    Titles of honour add not to his worth;
    Who is himself an honour to his title.
    • Act I, sc. iii.
  • Let them fear bondage who are slaves to fear;
    The sweetest freedom is an honest heart.
    • Act I, sc. iii.
  • We can drink till all look blue.
    • Act IV, sc. ii.

Criticism

  • Ford was of the first order of poets. He sought for sublimity, not by parcels in metaphors or visible images, but directly where she has her full residence in the heart of man; in the actions and sufferings of the greatest minds.
    • Charles Lamb Specimens of English Dramatic Poets ([1808] 1854) p. 228.

External links

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