Lovers Made Men
Lovers Made Men, alternatively titled The Masque of Lethe or The Masque at Lord Hay's, was a
Background
The Lord Hay in question was
The show
As the subtitle of the work indicates, Jonson set his masque on the shores of the river
The masque is a relatively brief work, and featured only a single perspective stage set; by Inigo Jones's standards of masque design, it was a fairly spare production.
Jonson's masque ends with a reconciliation of love and wisdom. Another masque writer, Robert White, took a different tack in his Cupid's Banishment, produced later in 1617; in his work, as the title indicates, Cupid is regarded as too disruptive an influence to be accepted. Jonson in turn may have answered White's masque in his Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue (1618).[2]
The music
The most notable aspect of the masque was its musical form. "The whole masque was sung after the Italian manner stylo recitativo, by Master Nicholas Lanier; who ordered and made both the scene and the music."[3] The claim is controversial; it does not occur in the original 1617 quarto publication of Jonson's text, but only in the 1641 second folio.[4]
Sir William Davenant's The Siege of Rhodes (1656) is widely acclaimed as "the first English opera;" but Davenant's work had several precursors. If Lanier's Lovers Made Men featured through-and-through recitatives, it would certainly qualify as one. Nicholas Lanier's 1628 musical setting for Marlowe's Hero and Leander may have been a comparable work; Lanier's music for these works has not survived the centuries.[5]
Publication
As noted above, Jonson's text for Lovers Made Men was published in quarto soon after its 1617 staging. A second quarto was issued in 1622, and the text was included in the second folio collection of Jonson's works in 1641.
References
- ^ John Nichols, Progresses of James the First, vol. 3 (London, 1828), p. 247.
- ^ Robert C. Evans, Jonson and the Contexts of His Time, Lewisburg, PA, Bucknell University Press, 1994; p. 98.
- ^ William Gifford, ed., The Works of Ben Jonson, Vol. 7, London, Bickers and Son, 1875; p. 274.
- ^ Mary Chan, Music in the Theatre of Ben Jonson, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1980; pp. 273–4.
- ^ George J. Buelow, A History of Baroque Music, Bloomington, IN, Indiana University Press, 2004; p. 327.