Christopher Marlowe: Poet and Spy.Park Honan Honan: see Henan, China. . Christopher Marlowe: Poet and Spy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007. xvi + 422 pp. index. append. illus. tbls. $23. ISBN ISBN abbr. International Standard Book Number ISBN International Standard Book Number ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m : 978-0-19-923269-7. Like Doctor Faustus, we are "glutted ... with learning's golden gifts." After waiting since the 1940s, students of Christopher Marlowe now have three substantial biographies to dine on: Park Honan's Christopher Marlowe: Poet and Spy has joined Constance Kuriyama's Christopher Marlowe: A Renaissance Life (2002) and David Riggs's The World of Christopher Marlowe (2004) on the bookshelves. Each study has its own particular virtues; each gives a somewhat different picture of an intriguing sixteenth-century figure. Honan's Marlowe is more sympathetic than the others. He exhibits the usual antisocial antisocial /an·ti·so·cial/ (-so´sh'l) 1. denoting behavior that violates the rights of others, societal mores, or the law. 2. denoting the specific personality traits seen in antisocial personality disorder. behavior (spy, blasphemer blas·pheme v. blas·phemed, blas·phem·ing, blas·phemes v.tr. 1. To speak of (God or a sacred entity) in an irreverent, impious manner. 2. To revile; execrate. v.intr. , streetfighter, homosexual) but is committed to the role of poet. Where Riggs presents the playwright as skeptical, libertine lib·er·tine n. 1. One who acts without moral restraint; a dissolute person. 2. One who defies established religious precepts; a freethinker. adj. Morally unrestrained; dissolute. , and the voice of the underclass, Honan views him as "a highly critical and original enquirer into human nature and social behaviour" (1). His heroes are "not autobiographical at all" (302) but psychologically complex. His art "privileges" the audience (64): it "does not judge life but evokes, challenges, disturbs, and delights" (329). In bringing "our sense of him [Marlowe] up to date" (2), Honan suggests that the plays' insights into violence, prejudice, and power accord with our post-Holocaust understandings. Marlowe, our contemporary. This is a generous and fascinating book. Honan's stated aims are simple: "to offer the facts of Marlowe's life reliably" with "modest inferences about personal relationships" (2). His project, nevertheless, is decidedly more ambitious, synthesizing earlier research and assembling a mass of material: documentary traces; the "fine detail" (sights, sounds, smells) of living in Canterbury, Cambridge, London, and Flushing; potted biographies; and information about education, culture, religion, politics, diplomacy, espionage, and sexuality. The comprehensive approach extends to useful analyses of Marlowe's plays, poetry, and translations. There is little new material. Honan ponders the Timon manuscript as a possible juvenile play, adds details about the discovery of the "Marlowe portrait" at Corpus Christi, and reviews the Scadbury archaeological dig. On responsibility for Marlowe's death, he rejects political conspiracy (Charles Nicholl), Queen Elizabeth (Riggs), and Marlowe himself (Kuriyama) to blame the man with the dagger, Ingram Frizer, who murdered him (Honan suggests) to protect his interests and, quite possibly, those of his master Thomas Walsingham. Honan searches assiduously as·sid·u·ous adj. 1. Constant in application or attention; diligent: an assiduous worker who strove for perfection. See Synonyms at busy. 2. for the connections between life and works, for mutually reinforcing details. Spying and writing plays are thus both seen as the product of an innate "inquisitiveness": "a need to pierce the surfaces in life" (37). Of course,imaginative reconstruction and even speculation are necessary tools of the literary biographer, especially when the facts of a life are few and their interpretation contentious. Honan is less cautious than Riggs or Kuriyama, and his argument less clearly structured; yet his attention to "fine detail" does result in convincing descriptions of physical and social contexts. There are occasions, however, when the point of the narrative is lost in digressions and obscurities, as with some of the summarizing of history, or "the kind of circular report" on Marlowe's probable relationship with Shakespeare, featuring "convivial con·viv·i·al adj. 1. Fond of feasting, drinking, and good company; sociable. See Synonyms at social. 2. Merry; festive: a convivial atmosphere at the reunion. " lunches hosted by Burbage (292). More disconcerting dis·con·cert tr.v. dis·con·cert·ed, dis·con·cert·ing, dis·con·certs 1. To upset the self-possession of; ruffle. See Synonyms at embarrass. 2. for the reader are the book's uncertainties and inconsistencies. Honan's inferences become less "modest" when much of his argument is hypothetical and analogical an·a·log·i·cal adj. Of, expressing, composed of, or based on an analogy: the analogical use of a metaphor. an . With the "Marlowe portrait" he resorts to wishful thinking wishful thinking Psychology Dereitic thought that a thing or event should have a specified outcome : "Anyway, it is important to know what he looked like" (111); and finally to intuition: "the picture looks right" (119). Indeed Honan's opinions are not always settled, and he switches between caution and assertion. One small instance is Marlowe's influencing a "Mr Fineaux of Dover" to turn atheist: Honan signals this as "seduction" and a "species of pederasty The criminal offense of unnatural copulation between men. The term pederasty is usually defined as anal intercourse of a man with a boy. Pederasty is a form of Sodomy. ," then explains that any personal contact was most unlikely, but then concludes that "the poet, if new data comes to light, may yet be linked with the 13-year old boy" (249-50). The sensational is always a temptation for writers on Marlowe. The example also points to another area of uncertainty: Honan's book is aimed at both popular and scholarly audiences, which may account for the occasional lack of documentation, the imprecise references to "a recent book" (1) and to "one modern critic" (277), and the absence of a bibliography. Honan's Christopher Marlowe: Poet and Spy is rich fare: impressive, informative, engrossing engrossing, in English law, practice of acquiring a monopoly of goods in order to sell them at an inflated price. The offense was ordinarily limited to monopolies of foods. Related practices were forestalling, i.e. , deserving of a place on the bookshelves, but to be consumed with care. RUTH LUNNEY University of Newcastle, Australia The university has enrolled approximately 17,000 full-time students (including more than 14,600 undergraduates) and about 9,000 part-time students. Historically, the university is known for its educational innovation which is, in part, due to a sharpened nexus between teaching and |
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