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Reference
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Cambridge History
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The Drama to 1642, Part One
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Early English Comedy
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Jacke Jugeler
Ralph Roister Doister
English adaptations of Textors Neo-classic Plays
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume V. The Drama to 1642, Part One.
V.
Early English Comedy
.
§ 15.
Jacke Jugeler
.
Another adaptation from Plautus for performance by boys is
Jacke Jugeler,
entered for printing in 1562/3, but written, very probably, during the reign of Mary. The author states in the prologue that the plot is based upon
Amphitruo,
and it is true that the chief characters in the Roman play have English citizen equivalents. But the central theme of Jupiters amour, in her husbands shape, with Alcmena, disappears, and nothing is retained but the successful trick of Jacke Jugelerthe Vice who replaces Mercuryupon Jenkin Careaway, who corresponds to Sosia, servant of Amphitryon. Disguising himself like Jenkin, Jacke, by arguments and blows, forces the hapless lackey to believe that he, and not himself, is the genuine Careaway. When Jenkin tells the tale of his loss of identity to his mistress dame Coy, and her husband Bongrace, he gets further drubbings for his nonsensical story
That one man may have two bodies and two faces,
And that one man at on time may be in too placis.
Regarded purely as a play,
Jacke Jugeler,
in spite of its classical origin, is little more than a briskly written farcical episode. But, beneath its apparently jocular exterior, it veils an extraordinarily dextrous attack upon the doctrine of transubstantiation and the persecution by which it was enforced. This is hinted at in the epilogue, where this trifling enterlude is credited with some further meaning, if it be well searched.
Such is the fashyon of the world now a dayes,
That the symple innosaintes ar deluded
And by strength, force, and violence oft tymes compelled
To believe and saye the moune is made of a grene chese
Or ells have great harme, and parcace their life lese.
It has been the fate of many dramatic forms and conventions to go through a remarkable sea-change in their transportation from one country or epoch to another. But seldom has any device of the comic muse been translated more nearly out of recognition than the classical confusion of identity, when enlisted, as here, in the service of protestant theology.
28
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Ralph Roister Doister
English adaptations of Textors Neo-classic Plays
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