Bartholomew Fair
by Ben Jonson
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Description
Early modern London - too foggy and Protestant to have a carnival - offered its inhabitants commercial events during which to indulge their need for bodily delights and festival exuberance. The fair of St Bartholmew, held anually in Smithfield on 24 August, served Jonson as an opportunity to dissect a wide cross-section of Londoners and their various reasons for spending a day out among the booths, stalls, smells and noises of the fair. Unusually magnanimous for a Jonsonian city comedy, the show more main thrust of the satire is not against fools, madmen, fortune-hunters, cuckolds or prostitutes, but against hypocrisy and bigotry. This edition shows that the play can be read as a comprehensive refutation of puritanism and the London magistracy, both of whom were attacking the theatre (and the festive culture of which it was still part) as idolatrous, seditious and disorderly. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
The other Jonson play that is popular. I found it to be not as strong as Jonson's other main play and that it was a bit dated.
Never actually finished this, I found it horrible to read.
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Author Information

267+ Works 5,661 Members
Born in 1572, Ben Jonson rejected his father's bricklaying trade and ran away from his apprenticeship to join the army. He returned to England in 1592, working as an actor and playwright. In 1598, he was tried for murder after killing another actor in a duel, and was briefly imprisoned. One of his first plays, Every Man Out of His Humor (1599) had show more fellow playwright William Shakespeare as a cast member. His success grew with such works as Volpone (1605) and The Alchemist (1610) and he was popular at court, frequently writing the Christmas masque. He is considered a very fine Elizabethan poet. In some anti-Stratfordian circles he is proposed as the true author of Shakespeare's plays, though this view is not widely accepted. Jonson was appointed London historian in 1628, but that same year, his life took a downward turn. He suffered a paralyzing stroke and lost favor at court after an argument with architect Inigo Jones and the death of King James I. Ben Jonson died on August 6, 1637. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Alternate titles
- Bartholmew fair
- Original publication date
- 1614-10-31 (first performance) (first performance)
- People/Characters
- Littlewit; Quarlous; Winwife; Dame Purecraft; Cokes; Grace Wellborn (show all 14); Adam Overdo; Win; Justice Overdo; Edgeworth; Whit; Zeal-of-the-land Busy; Trouble-All; Madame Overdo
- Important places
- Bartholomew Fair
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 196
- Popularity
- 167,191
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.30)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 27
- ASINs
- 5






























































