This book offers a critical assessment of the career of one of the most
formidable figures of English literature, the most influential poet and
dramatist of the early seventeenth century. Richard Dutton focuses on
the greatest landmark of Jonson's career, the 1616 folio collection of
his works with which he crowned his growing reputation as a man of
letters, collecting together the majority of his most enduring works -
including Every Man in his Humour, Volpone, The Alchemist; the tragedies
Sejanus and Catiline; and the major masques and poems. The book relates
these works (and another masterpiece, Bartholomew Fair, which belongs to
the same period) to Jonson's tempestuous life and times, touching on
such issues as his involvement with the Gunpowder Plot, his frequent
confrontations with the political authorities, his emergence as Poet
Laureate at Court and his often touchy relations with fellow authors
like Shakespeare and Donne. But the principal aim throughout is to offer
detailed critical analyses of Jonson's major works showing how, for all
that they are rooted in the concerns of his own age, they are far more
accessible and relevant to modern readers than is often assumed.