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Seventeenth Century Childhood Education: Reflections from Venus and Adonis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Extract

Venus and Adonis (ca. 1682), said to be the first complete English opera, includes an episode likely to be of more than aesthetic interest to historians of education. For, in addition to the musical and poetic charm of the opera as a whole, a scene in it called the “Cupids' Lesson” reflects some significant features of seventeenth century educational theory and practice. These are clothed in mythical guise, but the opera's first audience would have had no difficulty in recognizing correspondences between the fanciful Cupids' Lesson and what were common teaching-learning patterns. To identify and interpret these correspondences is the purpose of this essay.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1965, University of Pittsburgh Press 

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References

Notes

1. Leland Clarke, Henry, “John Blow: A Tercentenary Survey,Musical Quarterly, XXXV (July, 1949), 414. John Blow (1649-1708), the composer, called his work “A Masque for the entertainment of the King,” but it is generally classified as an opera.Google Scholar

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3. Ibid., 57-63.Google Scholar

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6. Dent, loc. cit. Google Scholar

7. Lewis, op. cit., in his Foreword calls it “the Spelling Lesson.” So does Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era (New York, 1947), 190. Grout merely confuses matters when he asserts that the instruction is given “in the form of a spelling lesson.” Op. cit., 137. After all, only one word in the lesson can be said to be taught in the “form” of a spelling lesson.Google Scholar

8. Lewis, , op. cit., 58.Google Scholar

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12. According to the earliest extant evidence, the role of Cupid in the original production was performed by Lady Mary Tudor, “Liebeskind” of King Charles II and Mary (Moll) Davies, who played the part of Venus. Since little Mary was born in 1673, and the opera was first performed between 1682 and early 1685, she would have been between the ages of eight and eleven at her debut.Google Scholar

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24. Wright, Lewis B., Middle Class Culture in Elizabethan England (Chapel Hill, 1935), chap. 3.Google Scholar

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26. op cit., 18.Google Scholar

27. op. cit., 22. For a list of conduct books, see: Foster Watson, op. cit., 121-126, A more complete bibliography is provided by Noyes, Gertrude E., Bibliography of Courtesy and Conduct Books in Seventeenth Century England (New Haven, 1937).Google Scholar

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32. Aries goes so far as to say that in seventeenth century France, “there were no reading restrictions on the reading matter made available to children.” (italics added). Op. cit., 384.Google Scholar

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34. Baxter, Richard, A Christian Directory (London, 1673), Part IV, 44.Google Scholar

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