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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Prose and Poetry: Sir Thomas North to Michael Drayton
>
London and the Development of Popular Literature
>
Pimlyco
Wagering Journeys
Broadsides and Street Ballads
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume IV. Prose and Poetry: Sir Thomas North to Michael Drayton.
XVI.
London and the Development of Popular Literature
.
§ 30.
Pimlyco
.
The sentiments and ideas of former ages now began to reappear in connection with localities in and around London. Brainford, Hogsden (Hoxton), Southwarke, Eyebright and Queen-hive frequently figure in catch-pennies. One publicist, under the name of Kinde-Kit of Kingstone, borrowed tales from such sources as the
Decameron
and the
Romance of the Seven Sages,
and put them in the mouths of seven fishwives who take boat for the western suburbs after a good days business in London.
142
Each prose story is introduced by a verse description of the narrator, after the manner of Skelton, and is followed by the outspoken comments of the listeners. Another story book, composed in the same style and manner, represents a journey from Billingsgate to Gravesend.
143
But the most remarkable pamphlet of this class is
Pimlyco
144
or, Runne Red Cap
(1609). The poet describes himself lying in the grass amid the delights of spring, and watching lovers sport together, while, in the background, the towers and steeples of London
Lifted their proud heads above the skies,
gleaming like gold in the morning sunlight. By chance, he finds Skeltons
Tunnyng of Elynour Rummyng;
and, while reading the satire, looks up and beholds a motley crowd of men and women surging towards Hogsden to consume its ale. The contagious enthusiasm carries him along, and, with Skeltons poem in his hand, with those mad times to weigh our times, he first breaks out into a burlesque eulogy on Pimlyco ale, and then wittily describes the insane rush for the pleasures of the resort. Payment for alehouse fare was vulgarly known as shot; so he represents the place as a fort which an impetuous army is attacking with this artillery. In the ranks are all types of society who scramble for tankards, calling Fill, Fill, Fill. Poets seek inspiration; ballad singers exercise their villanous yelping throats. Lawyers, usurers, courtiers, soldiers, lads and greasie lownes, women of every age and figure, jostle one another in their eagerness to squander money on tippling. Such a production is far more than a topical effusion.
Pimlyco
is a satirical rhapsody on the ages animal spirits and headlong folly, a burlesque review in which the genius and method of
Cocke Lorells bote
145
are adapted to the interests of Jacobean London.
68
Note 142
.
Westward for Smelts.
Steevens believes in an edition of 1603, but Collier thinks that of 1620 to be the first.
[
back
]
Note 143
.
The Cobler of Canterburie,
1608 (largely reprinted in
The Tincker of Turney,
1630).
[
back
]
Note 144
. Discussion on the origin of the word has been reopened in
N. & Q.
no. 256, 21 Nov., 1908.
[
back
]
Note 145
.
Ante,
Vol. III, Chap.
V,
pp. 9395.
[
back
]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Wagering Journeys
Broadsides and Street Ballads
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