to the event which the performance proposed to celebrate,
such as a royal marriage, or birthday, or visit, or
progress, or a marriage or other notable event among
the nobility and gentry attached to the court, or
an entertainment in honor of some distinguished personage.
To produce startling and telling stage effects, machinery
of the most ingenious contrivance was devised; scenery,
as yet unknown in ordinary exhibitions of the stage,
was painted with elaborate finish; goddesses in the
most attenuated Cyprus lawn, bespangled with jewels,
had to slide down upon invisible wires from a visible
Olympus; Tritons had to rise from the halls of Neptune
through waters whose undulations the nicer resources
of recent art could not render more genuinely marine;
fountains disclosed the most bewitching of Naiads;
and Druidical oaks, expanding, surrendered the imprisoned
Hamadryad to the air of heaven. Fairies and Elves,
Satyrs and Forsters, Centaurs and Lapithae, played
their parts in these gaudy spectacles with every conventional
requirement of shape, costume, and behavior point-de-vice,
and were supplied by the poet, to whom the letter-press
of the show had been confided, with language and a
plot, both pregnant with more than Platonic morality.
Some idea of the magnificence of these displays, which
beggared the royal privy-purse, drove household-treasurers
mad, and often left poet and machinist whistling for
pay, may be gathered from the fact that a masque sometimes
cost as much as two thousand pounds in the mechanical
getting-up, a sum far more formidable in the days
of exclusively hard money than in these of paper currency.
Scott has described, for the benefit of the general
reader, one such pageant among the “princely
pleasures of Kenilworth”; while Milton, in his
“Masque performed at Ludlow Castle,” presents
the libretto of another, of the simpler and less expensive
sort. During the reign of James, the passion
for masques kindled into a mania. The days and
nights of Inigo Jones were spent in inventing machinery
and contriving stage-effects. Daniel, Middleton,
Fletcher, and Jonson were busied with the composition
of the text; and the court ladies and cavaliers were
all from morning till night in the hands of their dancing
and music masters, or at private study, or at rehearsal,
preparing for the pageant, the representation of which
fell to their share and won them enviable applause.
Of course the burden of original invention fell upon
the poets; and of the poets, Daniel and Jonson were
the most heavily taxed. In 1616, James I., by
patent, granted to Jonson an annuity for life of one
hundred marks, to him in hand not often well and truly
paid. He was not distinctly named as Laureate,
but seems to have been considered such; for Daniel,
on his appointment, “withdrew himself,”
according to Gifford, “entirely from court.”
The strong-boxes of James and Charles seldom overflowed.
Sir Robert Pye, an ancestor of that Laureate Pye whom
we shall discuss by-and-by, was the paymaster, and
often and again was the overwrought poet obliged to
raise