Courtly Shakespeare, III

Dobson again: “after Charles II’s death in 1685 England would never again have another monarch with such an informed interest in the drama (or, mercifully, such a lascivious one), and deprived of royal patronage and protection the playhouses came under renewed attack from the moralists (led by the redoubtable clergyman Jeremy Collier), who wanted the threatre at best stringently reformed and at worst closed down altogether. Nor surprisingly, the occasional new adaptations of unfamiliar Shakespeare plays produced in the wake of Collier’s A Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage (1698) . . . are quick to present themselves as impeccably virtuous, and are even more thoroughgoing than their predecessors in excising vulgar low comedy.”

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Deliver Us from Evil

Kari Jenson Gold

In a recent New York Times article entitled “Freedom With a Side of Guilt: How Food Delivery…

Natural Law Needs Revelation

Peter J. Leithart

Natural law theory teaches that God embedded a teleological moral order in the world, such that things…

Letters

Glenn C. Loury makes several points with which I can’t possibly disagree (“Tucker and the Right,” January…