The Noble Gentleman

Jacobean era stage play

The Noble Gentleman is a Jacobean era stage play, a comedy in the canon of John Fletcher and his collaborators that was first published in the first Beaumont and Fletcher folio of 1647. It is one of the plays in Fletcher's canon (see Love's Cure and Thierry and Theodoret for other examples) that presents significant uncertainties about its date and authorship.

Performance

The earliest certain fact known about the play is that it was licensed for performance by Sir Henry Herbert, the Master of the Revels, on 3 February 1626 (new style). The play was acted by the King's Men at the Blackfriars Theatre.

Authorship

Broadly speaking, there are two competing scenarios for The Noble Gentleman:

  • The play is a "Beaumont and Fletcher play" – either a direct and overt collaboration between the two dramatists, or a work by Beaumont that was later revised by Fletcher. In the context of this hypothesis, dates for the play have been postulated that range from 1606 to 1613.[1]
  • The play is a later work written by Fletcher without Beaumont's participation; it may have been left unfinished at Fletcher's death in 1625 and been completed by someone else.

Cyrus Hoy, who favored the first of these interpretations, provided this breakdown of the authors' putative contributions in his survey of authorship problems in Fletcher's canon:

Beaumont – Act I, scene 4; Act II, 2; Act III, 1, 3, and 4; Act IV, 3-5;
Fletcher – Act I, scenes 1-3; Act II, 1; Act III, 2; Act IV, 1 and 2; Act V.[2]

Earlier researchers had provided comparable divisions.[3] Other scholars, however, have judged the evidence of Beaumont's presence too weak to be persuasive.[4] Darren Freebury-Jones has proposed that John Ford was responsible for completing the play after Fletcher died in 1625.[5]

Date

Commentators who advocate Beaumont's authorial contribution must postulate a date of authorship prior to Beaumont's 1613 retirement and 1616 death, in the face of a lack of evidence. Conversely, Fletcher is supposed by some calculations to have worked on eleven plays in the last four years of his life; adding a twelfth stretches the credulity of some commentators.[6] A compromise view, that Fletcher did a late (c. 1625) revision of a much earlier play that contained Beaumont's work, may have merit.[7]

After 1660

Like the majority of the plays in Fletcher's canon, The Noble Gentleman was both revived and adapted into new forms during the Restoration era. Thomas D'Urfey's adaptation, called A Fool's Preferment, was licensed on 31 May 1688.[8]

The plot

The play is a farcical comedy about a benign but not very sensible French gentleman, Monsieur Mount-Marine, who has an ambition to become a great courtier. His sensible wife is concerned about the possible negative consequences of this lofty ambition. With the help of friends, she manages to fool her husband into believing that the King of France has promoted him to the rank of knight...then, baron...then, earl...then, duke, all in quick succession. But his precipitate (fictitious) rise in society is matched by an equally vertiginous (and fictitious) decline in wealth; by the end of the play, Mount-Marine is convinced that he retains his title of Duke of Burgundy, though he must never mention it to strangers. His situation is paralleled by that of another character, Chatillion, who has been driven slightly mad by love and fancies himself a claimant to the throne of France. As a result, he believes himself surrounded by perils – all in his own imagination.

References

  1. ^ Robert F. Wilson Jr., "Francis Beaumont and The Noble Gentleman," English Studies 49 (1968), pp. 523–9.
  2. ^ Terence P. Logan and Denzell S. Smith, eds., The Later Jacobean and Caroline Dramatists: A Survey and Bibliography of Recent Studies in English Renaissance Drama, Lincoln, NE, University of Nebraska Press, 1978; pp. 78.
  3. ^ E. H. C. Oliphant, The Plays of Beaumont and Fletcher: An Attempt to Determine Their Respective Shares and the Shares of Others, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1927; pp. 183–201.
  4. ^ Logan and Smith, p. 79.
  5. ^ Freebury-Jones, Darren (8 March 2021). "John Fletcher's Collaborator on The Noble Gentleman". Studia Metrica et Poetica. 7 (2): 43–60. doi:10.12697/smp.2020.7.2.03. S2CID 234415643. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  6. ^ Baldwin Maxwell, Studies in Beaumont, Fletcher, and Massinger, Chapel Hill, NC, University of North Carolina Press, 1939; pp. 147–65, especially p. 148.
  7. ^ Gordon McMullan, The Politics of Unease in the Plays of John Fletcher, Amherst, MA, University of Massachusetts Press, 1994; p. 135.
  8. ^ Arthur Colby Sprague, Beaumont and Fletcher on the Restoration Stage, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1926; pp. 67–8, 238-44.
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The "Beaumont and Fletcher" Canon
Plays
(some
attributions
conjectural)
Beaumont
Beaumont
and Fletcher
Fletcher
Fletcher and
Massinger
Fletcher
and others
with Beaumont & Massinger
Thierry and Theodoret
Beggars' Bush
Love's Cure
with Massinger & Field
The Honest Man's Fortune
The Queen of Corinth
The Knight of Malta
with Field
Four Plays, or Moral Representations, in One
with Shakespeare
Henry VIII
The Two Noble Kinsmen
with Shirley
The Night Walker
Wit Without Money
with Rowley
The Maid in the Mill
with Massinger, Chapman & Jonson
Rollo, Duke of Normandy
with Massinger, Ford & Webster
The Fair Maid of the Inn
Others
Performance
and publicationRelated
† = Not published in the Beaumont and Fletcher folios