Everything about The Golden Age Restored totally explained
The Golden Age Restored was a
Jacobean era
masque, written by
Ben Jonson and designed by
Inigo Jones; it was performed on January 1 and January 6,
1616, almost certainly at
Whitehall Palace.
Somewhat less is known about this masque that others of the Jacobean era, since none of Jones's designs for the work has survived. The twelve gentleman masquers were styled "Sons of Phoebus," and took the parts of great English poets of the past —
Geoffrey Chaucer,
John Gower,
Edmund Spenser, and others. The corresponding figures in the anti-masque were twelve "Evils," ambition, pride, avarice, etc. The speeches were "presented" by the mythological figures standard in the masque form — in this case,
Pallas Athena and
Astraea were the primaries. Pallas banishes the personified Iron Age, thus allowing the return of Astraea, goddess of Justice, and the restoration of the Golden Age.
A major theme of Jonson's text was the reform of a corrupt court — relevant at the time because the
Stuart Court was suffering the aftermath of the scandal over the murder of Sir
Thomas Overbury. King
James's favorite,
Robert Carr, 1st Earl of Somerset, was still awaiting trial for his role in the murder when the masque was presented, and his successor,
George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, was moving into prominence as Carr's replacement. The King was so pleased with the masque that he'd a repeat performance scheduled for the evening of
Twelfth Night, a few days after the initial presentation.
Jonson's text was published in the
first folio collection of Jonson's works in 1616; it was the last work to be included in that volume. Thereafter
The Golden Age Restored was included in the collected editions of Jonson's works.
Dating
Scholars have disputed the order in which two of the Jonson-Jones masques were performed at Court.
Traditionally,
Mercury Vindicated from the Alchemists was assigned to the 1614–15 Christmas holiday season, and
The Golden Age Restored to the following 1615–16 holiday season. C. H. Herford and Percy Simpson, in their edition of Jonson's works, argued that the two masques had been chronologically transposed, and that
TGAR was the earlier work. Their argument received some general acceptance for a time, but was refuted by later researchers.
The masques in the 1616 folio appear to be arranged in a consistent chronological order; and
The Golden Age Restored, as noted, is last. Its title page dates it to 1615 — but the English began the New Year on March 25 prior to 1751. See:
Old Style and New Style dates. If
TGAR had been performed in the previous year, it should have been dated 1614. Recent scholarship tends to rely on the implications of the original text, and treats
TGAR as the later work.
Further Information
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