The Renaissance Period (1500-1600)
The Renaissance Period
in English literature is also called the Elizabethan Period or the Age of
Shakespeare. The middle Ages in Europe were followed by the Renaissance. Renaissance
means the Revival of Learning, and it denotes in its broadest sense the gradual
enlightenment of the human mind after the darkness of the Middle Ages.
With the fall of
Constantinople in 1453 A.D. by the invasion of the Turks, the Greek scholars
who were residing there, spread all over Europe, and brought with them
invaluable Greek manuscripts. The discovery of these classical models resulted
in the Revival of Learning in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The
essence of this movement was that “man discovered himself and the universe”,
and that “man, so long blinded had suddenly opened his eyes and seen”. The
flood of Greek literature which the new art of printing carried swiftly to
every school in Europe revealed a new world of poetry and philosophy. Along
with the Revival of Learning, new discoveries took place in several other
fields. Vascoda Gama circumnavigated the earth; Columbus discovered America;
Copernicus discovered the Solar System and prepared the way for Galileo. Books
were printed, and philosophy, science, and art were systematized. The middle
Ages were past, and the old world had become new. Scholars flocked to the
universities, as adventurers to the new world of America, and there the old
authority received a death blow. Truth only was authority; to search for truth
everywhere, as men sought for new lands and gold and the Fountain of Youth—that
was the new spirit, which awoke in Europe with the Revival of Learning.
The chief
characteristic of the Renaissance was its emphasis on Humanism, which means man’s
concern with himself as an object of contemplation. This movement was started in
Italy by Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio in the fourteenth century, and from
there it spread to other countries of Europe. In England it became popular during
the Elizabethan period. This movement which focused its interest on ‘the proper
study of mankind’ had a number of subordinate trends. The first in importance
was the rediscovery of classical antiquity, and particularly of ancient Greece.
During the medieval period, the tradition-bound Europe had forgotten the
liberal tone of old Greek world and its spirit of democracy and human dignity. With
the revival of interest in Greek Classical Antiquity, the new spirit of Humanism
made its impact on the Western world. The first Englishman who wrote under the
influence of Greek studies was Sir Thomas More. His Utopia, written in Latin,
was suggested by Plato’s Republic. Sir Philip Sidney in his Defense of Poesie
accepted and advocated the critical rules of the ancient Greeks.
The second important
aspect of Humanism was the discovery of the external universe, and its
significance for man. But more important than this was that the writers
directed their gaze inward, and became deeply interested in the problems of human
personality. In the medieval morality plays, the characters are mostly
personifications: Friendship, Charity, Sloth, Wickedness and the like. But now
during the Elizabethan period, under the influence of Humanism, the emphasis
was laid on the qualities which distinguish one human being from another, and
give an individuality and uniqueness. Moreover, the revealing of the writer’s
own mind became full of interest. This tendency led to the rise of a new
literary form—the Essay, which was used successfully by Bacon. In drama Marlowe
probed down into the deep recesses of the human passion. His heroes,
Tamburlaine, Dr. Faustus and Barabas, the Jew of Malta, are possessed of
uncontrolled ambitions. Shakespeare, a more consummate artist, carried Humanism
to perfection. His genius, fed by the spirit of the Renaissance, enabled him to
see life whole, and to present it in all its aspects. It was this new interest
in human personality, the passion for life, which was responsible for the
exquisite lyrical poetry of the Elizabethan Age, dealing with the problems of
death, decay, transitoriness of life etc.
Another aspect of
Humanism was the enhanced sensitiveness to formal beauty, and the cultivation
of the aesthetic sense. It showed itself in a new ideal of social conduct, that
of the courtier. An Italian diplomat and man of letters, Castiglione, wrote a
treatise entitled Il Cortigiano (The Courtier) where he sketched the pattern of
gentlemanly behavior and manners upon which the conduct of such men as Sir
Phillip Sidney and Sir Walter Raleigh was modeled. This cult of elegance in
prose writing produced the ornate style called Euphuism by Lyly. Though it
suffered from exaggeration and pedantry, yet it introduced order and balance in
English prose, and gave it pithiness and harmony. Another aspect of Humanism
was that men came to be regarded as responsible for their own actions, as
Casius says to Brutus in Julius Caesar:
The
Fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are
underlings.
Instead of looking up
to some higher authority, as was done in The Middle Ages, during the Renaissance
Period guidance was to be found from within. Lyly wrote his romance of Euphues
not merely as an exercise in a new kind of prose, but with the serious purpose
of inculcating righteousness of living, based on self-control. Sidney wrote his
Arcadia in the form of fiction in order to expound an ideal of moral
excellence. Spenser wrote his Faerie Queen, with a view “to fashion a gentleman
or noble person in virtuous and gentle disposition”. Though we do not look for
direct moral teaching in Shakespeare, nevertheless, we find underlying his work
the same profoundly moral attitude.
(a) Elizabethan Drama
During the Renaissance
Period or the Elizabethan Period, as it is popularly called, the most memorable
achievement in literature was in the field of drama. One of the results of the humanist
teaching in the schools and universities had been a great development of the
study of Latin drama and the growth of the practice of acting Latin plays by
Terence, Plautus and Seneca, and also of contemporary works both in Latin and
in English. These performances were the work of amateur actors, school boys or
students of the Universities and the Inns of Court, and were often given in honor
of the visits of royal persons or ambassadors. Their significance lies in the
fact that they brought the educated classes into touch with a much more highly
developed kind of drama, than the older English play. About the middle of the
sixteenth century some academic writers made attempts to write original plays
in English on the Latin model. The three important plays of this type are
Nicholas Udall’s Ralph Roister Doister, John Still’s Grummar Gurton’s Needle,
and Thomas Sackville’s Gorbuduc or Ferrex and Porrex—the first two are comedies
and last one a tragedy. All these plays are monotonous and do not possess much literary
merit.
The second period of
Elizabethan drama was dominated by the “University Wits”, a professional set of
literary men. Of this little constellations, Marlowe was the central sun, and round
him revolved as minor stars, Lyly, Greene, Peele, Lodge and Nash.
Lyly
(1554-1606)
The author of Euphues,
wrote a number of plays, the best known of them are Compaspe (1581), Sapho and
Phao (1584), Endymion (1591), and Midas (1592), These plays are mythological
and pastoral and are nearer to the Masque (court spectacles intended to satisfy
the love of glitter and novelty) rather than to the narrative drama of Marlowe.
They are written in prose intermingled with verse. Though the verse is simple and
charming prose is marred by exaggeration, a characteristic of Euphuism.
George Peele (1558-97?)
Formed, along with
Marlowe, Greene and Nash, one of those band of dissolute young men endeavoring
to earn a livelihood by literary work. He was an actor as well as writer of
plays. He wrote some half dozen plays, which are richer in beauty than any of
his group except Marlowe. His earnest work is The Arraignment of Paris, (1584);
his most famous is David and Bathsheba (1599). The Arraignment of Paris, which
contains an elaborate eulogy of Queen Elizabeth, is really a court play of the
Masque order. David and Bathsheba contain many beautiful lines. Like Marlowe,
Peele was responsible for giving the blank verse musical quality, which later
attained perfection in the deft hands of Shakespeare.
Thomas
Kyd (1558-95)
Achieved great popularity with his first work, The
Spanish Tragedy, which was translated in many European languages. He introduced
the ‘blood and thunder’ element in drama, which proved one of the attractive
features of the pre-Shakespearean drama. Though he is always violent and
extravagant, yet he was responsible for breaking away from the lifeless
monotony of Gorboduc.
Robert
Greene (1560-1592)
He lived a most
dissolute life, and died in distress and debt. His plays comprise Orlando
Furioso, Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay, Alphonsus King of Aragon and George a
Greene. His most effective play is Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay, which deals
partly with the tricks of the Friar, and partly with a simple love story
between two men with one maid. Its variety of interest and comic, relief and to
the entertainment of the audience. But the chief merit of the play lies in the
lively method of presenting the story. Greene also achieves distinction by the
vigorous humanity of his characterization.
Christopher Marlowe
(1564-1593)
The dramatic work of
Lodge and Nash is not of much importance. Of all the members of the group
Marlowe is the greatest. In 1587 his first play Tamburlaine was produced and it
took the public by storm on account of its impetuous force, its splendid command
of blank verse, and its sensitiveness to beauty, in this play Marlowe dramatized
the exploits of the Scythian shepherd who rose to be “the terror of the world”,
and “the scourge of God”. Tamburlaine was succeeded by The Tragically History
of Doctor Faustus, in which Marlowe gave an old medieval legend a romantic
setting. The story of the scholar, who sells his soul to the Devil for worldly enjoyment
and unlimited power, is presented in a most fascinating manner. Marlowe’s
Faustus is the genuine incarnation of the Renaissance spirit. The Jew of Malta,
the third tragedy of Marlowe, is not as fine as Doctor Faustus, though it has a
glorious opening. His last play, Edward II, is his best from the technical
point of view. Though it lacks the force and rhythmic beauty of the earlier
plays, it is superior to them on account of its rare skill of construction and
admirable characterization.
Marlowe’s contributions
to the Elizabethan drama were great. He raised the subject-matter of drama to a
higher level. He introduced heroes who were men of great strength and vitality,
possessing the Renaissance characteristic of insatiable spirit of adventure. He
gave life and reality to the characters, and introduced passion on the stage.
He made the blank verse supple and flexible to suit the drama, and thus made
the work of Shakespeare in this respect easy. He gave coherence and unity to
the drama, which it was formerly lacking. He also gave beauty and dignity and
poetic glow to the drama. In fact, he did the pioneering work on which
Shakespeare built the grand edifice. Thus he has been rightly called “the
Father of English Dramatic Poetry.”
Shakespeare (1564-1616)
The greatest of all
Elizabethan dramatists was Shakespeare in whose hands the Romantic drama
reached its climax. As we do not know much about his life, and it is certain
that he did not have proper training and education as other dramatists of the
period had, his stupendous achievements are an enigma to all scholars up to the
present day. It is still a mystery how a country boy, poor and uneducated, who
came to London in search of odd jobs to scrape a living, could reach such
heights in dramatic literature. Endowed with a marvelous imaginative and creative
mind, he could put new life into old familiar stories and make them glow with
deepest thoughts and tenderest feelings. There is no doubt that Shakespeare was
a highly gifted person, but without proper training he could not have scaled
such heights. In spite of the meager material we have got about his life, we
can surmise that he must have undergone proper training first as an actor,
second as a reviser of old plays, and the last as an independent dramatist. He
worked with other dramatists and learned the secrets of their trade. He must
have studied deeply and observed minutely the people he came in contact with.
His dramatic output must, therefore, have been the result of his natural genius
as well as of hard work and industry.
Besides none—dramatic
poetry consisting of two narrative poems, Venice and Adonis and The Rape of
Lucrece, and 154 sonnets, Shakespeare wrote 37 plays. His work as a dramatist extended
over some 24 years, beginning about 1588 and ending about 1612. This work is generally
divided into four periods.
(i) 1577-93
This was the period of
early experimental work. To this period belong the revision of old plays as the
three parts of Henry VI and Titus Andronicus; his first comedies—Love’s Labor Lost,
The Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Comedy of Errors and A Midsummer Night’s Dream;
his first chronicle play—Richard III; a youthful tragedy—Romeo and Juliet.
(ii) 1594-1600
To the second period
belong Shakespeare’s great comedies and chronicle plays – Richard II, King
John, The Merchant of Venice, Henry IV, Part I and II, Henry V, The Taming of
the Shrew, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Much Ado about Nothing, As You Like It
and Twelfth Night. These plays reveal Shakespeare’s great development as a
thinker and technician. They show the maturity of his mind and art.
(iii) 1601-1608
To the third period
belong Shakespeare’s greatest tragedies and somber or bitter comedies. This is
his peak period characterized by the highest development of his thought and
expression. He is more concerned with the darker side of human experience and
its destructive passions. Even in comedies, the tone is grave and there is a
greater emphasis on evil. The plays of this period are—Julius Caesar, Hamlet,
All’s Well that Ends Well, Measure for Measure; Troilus and Cressida, Othello,
King Lear, Macbeth, Antony and Cleopatra, Coriolanus, and Timon of Athens.
(iv) 1608-1612
To the fourth period
belong the later comedies or dramatic romances. Here the clouds seem to have
been lifted and Shakespeare is in a changed mood. Though the tragic passions
still play their part as in the third period, the evil is now controlled and
conquered by good. The tone of the plays is gracious and tender, and there is a
decline in the power of expression and thought. The plays written during this
period are—Cymbeline, The Tempest and The Winter’s Tale, which were completely
written in collaboration with some other dramatist.
The plays of
Shakespeare are so full of contradictory thoughts expressed so convincingly indifferent
contexts, that it is not possible to formulate a system of philosophy out of
them. Each of his characters—from the king to the clown, from the most highly
intellectual to the simpleton—judges life from his own angle, and utters something
which is so profound and appropriate, that one is astonished at the playwright’s
versatility of genius. His style and versification are of the highest order. He
was not only the greatest dramatist of the age, but also the first poet of the
day, and one of the greatest of all times. His plays are full of a large number
of exquisite songs, and his sonnets glowing with passion and sensitiveness to
beauty reach the high water mark of poetic excellence in English literature. In
his plays there is a fine commingling of dramatic and lyric elements. Words and
images seem to flow from his brain spontaneously and they are clothed in a
style which can be called perfect.
Though Shakespeare
belonged to the Elizabethan Age, on account of his universality he belongs to
all times. Even after the lapse of three centuries his importance, instead of decreasing,
has considerably increased. Every time we read him, we become more conscious of
his greatness, like the charm of Cleopatra, Age cannot wither her, nor custom
stale her infinite variety. The appeal of Shakespeare is perennial. His plays
and poetry are like a great river of life and beauty.
Ben Jonson (1573-1637)
Ben Jonson a
contemporary of Shakespeare, and a prominent dramatist of his times, was just
the opposite of Shakespeare. Jonson was a classicist, a moralist, and a
reformer of drama. In his comedies he tried to present the true picture of the
contemporary society. He also made an attempt to have the ‘unities’ of time,
place and action in his plays. Unlike Shakespeare who remained hidden behind
his works, Jonson impressed upon the audience the excellence of his works and
the object of his plays. He also made his plays realistic rather than romantic,
and introduced ‘humours’ which mean some peculiar traits in character, which
obsess an individual and govern all this faculties.
Jonson was mainly a
writer of comedies, and of these the four which attained outstanding success
are Volpone; The Silent Woman; The Alchemist; and Bartholomew Fair. Two other important
comedies of his, which illustrate his theory of ‘humour’ are—Every Man in His Humour
and Every Man out of Humour. The Alchemist, which is the most perfect in
structure, is also the most brilliant realistic Elizabethan comedy. Volpone is
a satirical study of avarice on the heroic scale. Bartholomew Fair presents a
true picture of Elizabethan ‘low life’. The Silent Woman, which is written in a
lighter mood, approaches the comedy of manners. Ben Jonson wrote two tragic
plays. Sejanus and Cataline on the classical model, but they were not successful.
Ben Jonson was a profound classical scholar who
wanted to reform the Elizabethan drama, and introduce form and method in it. He
resolved to fight against cheap romantic effects, and limit his art within the
bounds of reason and common sense. He was an intellectual and satirical writer
unlike Shakespeare who was imaginative and sympathetic. His chief contribution
to dramatic theory was his practice to construct plays based on ‘humour’, or
some master passion. In this way he created a new type of comedy having its own
methods, scope and purpose.
Though he drew his
principles from the ancients, he depicted the contemporary life in his plays in
a most realistic manner. In this way Jonson broke from the Romantic tendency of
Elizabethan drama.
(b) Elizabethan Poetry
Poetry in the
Renaissance period took a new trend. It was the poetry of the new age of discovery,
enthusiasm and excitement. Under the impact of the Renaissance, the people of
England were infused with freshness and vigor, and these qualities are clearly
reflected in poetry of that age.
The poetry of the
Elizabethan age opens with publications of a volume known as Tottel’s Miscellany
(1577). This book which contained the verse of Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503?-1542)
and the Earl of Surrey, (1577?-1547) marks the first English poetry of the
Renaissance. Wyatt and Surrey wrote a number of songs, especially sonnets which
adhered to the Petrarcan model, and which was later adopted by Shakespeare.
They also attempted the blank verse which was improved upon by Marlowe and then
perfected by Shakespeare. They also experimented a great variety of metres
which influenced Spenser. Thus Wyatt and Surrey stand in the same relation to the
glory of Elizabethan poetry dominated by Spenser and Shakespeare, as Thomson
and Collins do to Romantic poetry dominated by Wordsworth and Shelley.
Another original writer
belonging to the early Elizabethan group of poets, who were mostly courtiers,
was Thomas Sackville (1536-1608). In his Mirror for Magistrates he has given a powerful
picture of the underworld where the poet describes his meetings with some
famous Englishmen who had been the victims of misfortunes. Sackville, unlike
Wyatt and Surrey, is not a cheerful writer, but he is superior to them in
poetic technique.
The greatest of these
early Elizabethan poets was Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586). He was a many-sided
person and a versatile genius—soldier, courtier and poet—and distinguished
himself in all these capacities. Like Dr. Johnson and Byron he stood in symbolic
relation to his times. He may be called the ideal Elizabethan, representing in
himself the great qualities of that great age in English history and
literature. Queen Elizabeth called him one of the jewels of her crown, and at
the age of twenty-three he was considered ‘one of the ripest statesmen of the
age’.
As a literary figure,
Sidney made his mark in prose as well as in poetry. His prose works are Arcadia
and the Apologie for Poetrie (1595). With Arcadia begins a new kind of
imaginative writing. Though written in prose it is strewn with love songs and
sonnets. The Apologie for Poetry is first of the series of rare and very useful
commentaries which some English poets have written about their art. His
greatest work, of course, is in poetry—the sequence of sonnets entitled Atrophic
and Stella, in which Sidney celebrated the history of his love for Penelope Devereax,
sister of the Earl of Essex,- a love which came to a sad end through the
intervention of Queen Elizabeth with whom Sidney had quarrelled. As an example
of lyrical poetry expressing directly in the most sincere manner an intimate
and personal experience of love in its deepest passion, this sonnet sequence
marks an epoch. Their greatest merit is their sincerity. The sequence of the
poet’s feelings is analyzed with such vividness and minuteness that we are convinced
of their truth and sincerity. Here we find the fruit of experience, dearly
bought: Desire; desire; I have too dearly bought with price of mangled mind.
Thy worthless ware. Too long, too long, asleep thou hast me brought, who should
my mind to higher prepare. Besides these personal and sincere touches,
sometimes the poet gives a loose reign to his imagination, and gives us
fantastic imagery which was a characteristic of Elizabethan poetry.
Spenser (1552-1599)
The greatest name in
non-dramatic Elizabethan poetry is that of Spenser, who may be called the poet
of chivalry and medieval allegory. The Elizabethan Age was the age of
transition, when the time-honored institutions of chivalry, closely allied to
Catholic ritual were being attacked by the zeal of the Protestant reformer and
the enthusiasm for letters of the European humanists. As Spenser was in
sympathy with both the old and the new, he tried to reconcile these divergent
elements in his greatest poetic work—The Faerie Queen. Written in the form of an
allegory, though on the surface it appears to be dealing with the petty
intrigues, corrupt dealings and clever manipulations of politicians in the
court of Elizabeth, yet when seen from a higher point of view, it brings before
us the glory of the medieval times clothed in an atmosphere of romance. We
forget the harsh realities of life, and lifted into a fairy land where we see
the knights performing chivalric deeds for the sake of the honour Queen
Gloriana. We meet with shepherds, sylvan nymphs and satyrs, and breathe the air
of romance, phantasy and chivalry. Though Spenser’s fame rests mainly on The
Faerie Queen, he also wrote some other poems of great merit. His Shepherd’s
Calendar (1579) is a pastoral poem written in an artificial classical style
which had become popular in Europe on account of the revival of learning.
Consisting of twelve
parts, each devoted to a month of the year, here the poet gives expression to his
unfruitful love for a certain unknown Rosalind, through the mouth of shepherds
talking and singing. It also deals with various moral questions and the contemporary
religious issues. The same type of conventional pastoral imagery was used by
Spenser in Astrophel (1586), an elegy which he wrote on the death of Sidney to
whom he had dedicated the Calendar. Four Hymns which are characterized by
melodious verse were written by Spenser in honor of love and beauty. His
Amoretti, consisting of 88 sonnets, written in the Petrarcan manner which had become
very popular in those days under the influence of Italian literature, describes
beautifully the progress of his love for Elizabeth Boyle whom he married in
1594. His Epithalamion is the most beautiful marriage hymn in the English
language.
The greatness of
Spenser as a poet rests on his artistic excellence. Though his poetry is surcharged
with noble ideas and lofty ideals, he occupies an honored place in the front
rank of English poets as the poet of beauty, music and harmony, through which
he brought about reconciliation between the medieval and the modern world. There
is no harsh note in all his poetry. He composed his poems in the spirit of a
great painter, a great musician. Above all, he was the poet of imagination,
who, by means of his art, gave an enduring to the offsprings of his imagination.
As a metrist his greatest contribution to English poetry is the Spenserian
stanza which is admirably suited to descriptive or reflective poetry. It is
used by Thomson in The Castle of Indolence, by Keats in the Eve of St. Agnes,
by Shelley in the Revolt of Islam and by Byron in Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage.
On account of all these factors, Spenser has been a potent influence on the
English poets of all ages, and there is no exaggeration in the remark made by Charles
Lamb that “Spenser is the poets’ poet.”
(c) Elizabethan Prose
The Elizabethan period
was also the period of the origin of modern English prose. During the reign of
Elizabeth prose began to be used as a vehicle of various forms of amusement and
information, and its popularity increased on account of the increased facility
provided by the printing press. Books on history, travel, adventures, and
translations of Italian stories appeared in a large number. Though there were a
large number of prose-writers, there were only two- Sidney and Lyly who were
conscious of their art, and who made solid contributions to the English prose
style when it was in its infancy. The Elizabethan people were intoxicated with
the use of the English language which was being enriched by borrowings from
ancient authors. They took delight in the use of flowery words and graceful,
grandiloquent phrases. With the new wave of patriotism and national prestige
the English language which had been previously eclipsed by Latin, and relegated
to a lower position, now came to its own, and it was fully exploited. The Elizabethans
loved decorative modes of expression and flowery style.
John Lyly (1554-1606)
The first author who
wrote prose in the manner that the Elizabethans wanted, was Lyly, who’s
Euphues, popularized a highly artificial and decorative style. It was read and
copied by everybody. Its maxims and phrases were freely quoted in the court and
the market-place, and the word ‘Euphuism’ became a common description of an artificial
and flamboyant style. The style of Euphues has three main characteristics. In
the first place, the structure of the sentence is based on antithesis and
alliteration. In other words, it consists of two equal parts which are similar
in sound but with a different sense. For example, Euphues is described as a young
man “of more wit than wealth, yet of more wealth than wisdom”. The second characteristic
of this style is that no fact is stated without reference to some classical
authority.
For example, when the
author makes a mention of friendship, he quotes the friendship that existed
between David and Jonathan. Besides these classical allusions, there is also an
abundance of allusion to natural history, mostly of a fabulous kind, which is
its third characteristic. For example, “The bull being tied to the fig tree loseth
his tale; the whole herd of dear stand at gaze if they smell sweet apple.” The
purpose of writing Euphues was to instruct the courtiers and gentlemen how to
live, and so it is full of grave reflections and weighty morals. In it there is
also criticism of contemporary society, especially its extravagant fashions.
Though Puritanic in tone, it inculcates, on the whole, a liberal and humane
outlook. Sidney’s Arcadia is the first English example of prose pastoral
romance, which was imitated by various English authors for about two hundred
years. The story related in Arcadia in the midst of pastoral surrounding where
everything is possible, is long enough to cover twenty modern novels, but its
main attraction lies in its style which is highly poetical and exhaustive.
One word is used again
and again in different senses until it’s all meanings are exhausted. It is also
full of pathetic fallacy which means establishing the connection between the appearances
of nature with the mood of the artist. On the whole, Arcadia goes one degree
beyond Euphues in the direction of Freedom and poetry. Two other important
writers who, among others, influenced Elizabethan prose were: Malory and
Hakluyt. Malory wrote a great prose romance Morte de Arthur dealing with the romantic
treasures of the middle Ages. It was by virtue of the simple directness of the
language, that it proved an admirable model to the prose story-tellers of the
Renaissance England. Richard Hakluyt’s Voyages and other such books describing
sea adventures were written in simple and unaffected directness. The writer was
conscious of only that he had something to tell that was worth telling.

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