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Essay on Ben Jonson's Volpone - A New Form of Comedy

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Many critics of Ben Jonson's ''Volpone'' have argued that it is not a true comedy but rather a mix of tragedy, comedy, and satire. Many have also claimed that it follows the traditional beast-fable that can be found in the tales of Aesop. Although Volpone takes on some characteristics of tragedy, it seems to follow closer to the conventions of comedy. But it is not the traditional form of comedy. It is a play that takes on the form of a comical satire as well as a morality play. It also adapts the features of a fable in that it strives to teach a moral. Yet this play, even though it adopts these traditions, puts a different twist on what people would expect from a comedy or morality play. Jonson presents his audience with an …show more content…

This deformity is seen in the first two lines of the play where Volpone wakes up and says "Good morning to the day; and next, my gold: open the shrine, that I may see my saint" (1.1,1-2).

In this opening scene the audience can see that the world of Volpone is not in order. When God is supposed to be the object of worship it is clear that the greed that envelops most of the characters of the play is the subject of Jonson's comedy. This play is also a satire on the morals of the time. In this first scene Jonson is paving the way for a satire as well as a morality play.

The satire consists of the deformity that exists in Jonson's London. It is a satire on the "very fabric of justice" in London as well as the worth people put on wealth over "such basic concerns as the ties between husband and wife, (and) the ties between father and son." (Dessen 80-81) The main thrust of this satire on social values is addressed in the situation of Corvino and his wife.

In the Mountebank scene we see the traditional values take hold of Corvino. During the scene Corvino's wife, Celia acts out the part of the flirt with Volpone. Corvino witnesses this and thinks it is the "death of mine honor" (2.1, 1). Up to this point in the play he is the jealous husband. But once Mosca presents him with an opportunity to prostitute his wife for the

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