Henry Craik, ed. English Prose. 1916.
Vol. I. Fourteenth to Sixteenth Century
George Puttenham (15291590)
[The Art of English Poesie is ascribed by Edmund Bolton, in the reign of James I., to Puttenham, one of Queen Elizabeth’s gentlemen pensioners. It is probable that George Puttenham was the author. Of the author’s life and other works (most of them lost) there are many particulars in the book itself, which have been brought together by Mr. Arber in his edition (1869). The Partheniades, poems presented by the author as a New Year’s gift to the Queen in 1579, are printed in Mr. Haslewood’s edition (Ancient Critical Essays, 1811).]
There are three books: the first dealing with poetry in general, and discussing the different kinds, mainly in a pleasant easy way, which professes to be historical, and to show how the different kinds arose, but without any distressful anxiety about names and dates. The last chapter gives an account of the English poets, and acknowledges Sir Thomas Wyat the elder, and Henry, Earl of Surrey, as “the first reformers of our English metre and style.” It naturally covers much the same ground as Webbe’s historical summary; it is much less free in its praises, and less tolerant.
The second book is “Of Proportion Poetical,” that is, of prosody. It may be gauged by two remarks: one, that “the meeter of ten sillables … must have his Cesure fall upon the fourth sillable, and leave sixe behind him;” the other, that while the verse—
The third book, “Of Ornament,” deals with figures of speech, and is as long as the other two, with elaborate illustrations, chiefly from the author’s own poems. Not the worst part of it is the careful rendering of all the Greek rhetorical terms into English. “Ironia, or the dry mock, Sarcasmus, or the bitter taunt,” followed by the “fleering frump,” “the broad flout,” and “the privy nip.” The concluding chapters on Decorum, with their anecdotes of witty speeches and repartees, give evidence of much the same standard of wit as is observed by the company in Swift’s Polite Conversation.