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British Drama



                 Notes          16.3 Act II


                                16.3.1 Scene I
                                The scene is the public square outside Corvino’s home, slightly later in the day. Sir Politic Would-
                                be, the English knight residing in Venice, and Peregrine, an English traveler who has just arrived in
                                Venice, are strolling together. Sir Politic explains that is was his wife’s wish that the two should go
                                to Venice, for she desired to pick up some of the local culture. He asks Peregrine for news from the
                                home country, and says that he has heard many strange things from England; for example, a raven
                                has been building a nest in one of the king’ ships. Having decided that Sir Politic will believe anything
                                anyone tells him, as his name indicates, Peregrine proceeds to let him tell some more improbable
                                stories for his and the audience’s amusement, including the one about Mas’ Stone, the supposed
                                drunken illiterate who Politic is convinced was a dangerous spy. According to Politic, Stone had
                                secret messages smuggled out of the Netherlands in cabbages. To see just how much Politic will
                                pretend to know, Peregrine mentions a race of spy baboons living near to China. Politic, of course,
                                says he has heard of them, and calls them “the Mameluchi”, another name for the Mamelukes.
                                Peregrine says, sarcastically, that he is fortunate to have run into Sir Politic, because he has only
                                read books about Italy, and needs some advice on how to negotiate his way through Venetian life.
                                Sir Politic seems to be agreeing when Peregrine interrupts him, asking him to identify the people
                                entering the square.


                                Analysis
                                This scene introduces us to the Sir Politic Would-be subplot of Volpone. The subplot is a key
                                component of Elizabethan drama; it is a secondary storyline which, like a variation on a theme,
                                should take up the themes of the main story, or related themes, and treats them in a slightly different
                                way, either with a different tone or with a different emphasis. The subplot usually often revolves
                                around a central character that plays a less central role in the main plot. Volpone has been criticized
                                for the fact that the central characters in its subplot-Sir Politic, Lady Politic and Peregrine—play
                                almost no role in the central plot. But the satirical intent of the two plots and their light-hearted tone
                                are similar, as are their focus on gullibility. In the main plot, the gullibility of the main characters is
                                inspired by their greed. In the subplot instead of satirizing greed, Jonson attacks another selfish
                                virtue, that of vanity. Sir Politic considers himself wise and learned, and wants everyone to see him
                                that way; he speaks confidently of knowing the ways of Venetians, even though he has only lived in
                                Venice a short while. His name gives us the central indication of his vice, that he “would be politic,”
                                or knowledgeable, if he could; his desire to appear so at all costs makes him agree to anything
                                anyone says as if he knew it already, before trying to add his own bit of (usually incorrect) insight to
                                the statement. His situation is ironic (situationally) because in trying so hard to appear
                                knowledgeable, he in fact appears gullible and stupid to anyone who meets him for even the briefest
                                period of time—such as Peregrine.
                                The Sir Politic subplot is also directed to a specific segment of Jonson’s audience, namely Italo-phile
                                Englishmen like himself, for whom a very serious issue at the time was whether or not Englishmen
                                in love with the grandeur of Italian civilization should take the risk of traveling to Italy. The “risk”
                                involved was not that of disease or death, but of “moral degeneration”; Italy was seen as a corrupt
                                and decadent place, full of liars, swindlers, and immoral hedonists, and Englishmen who traveled
                                there risked bringing the moral contagion of vanity and deceit back to the mother country, as if
                                introducing a previously unknown disease to their homeland. Indeed, Venice was the corrupt,
                                decadent city; as we can see from the main plot, where every single character is engaged in some
                                form of deceit, Jonson’s portrayal of Venetian life fully buys into the stereotype, and the play’s
                                setting probably lent it a great deal of believability in the eyes of its English audiences. Sir Politic
                                functions serves, then, as an example of all Englishmen who go to Italy and are corrupted by its
                                decadent ways. The satire leveled against his vanity is also leveled against his desire to talk and act




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