Everything about Pastoral totally explained
Pastoral, as an adjective, refers to the lifestyle of
shepherds and
pastoralists, moving livestock around larger areas of land according to seasons and availability of water and feed. "Pastoral" also describes literature, art and music which depicts the life of shepherds, often in a highly idealised manner. It may also be used as a noun (a
pastoral) to describe a single work of pastoral poetry, music or drama. An alternative name for the literary "pastoral" (both as an adjective and a noun) is
bucolic, from the Greek βουκóλος, meaning a "cowherd". This reflects the Greek origin of the pastoral tradition.
Pastoral literature
Pastoral literature in general
In
literature, the adjective 'pastoral' refers to rural subjects and aspects of life in the countryside among
shepherds,
cowherds and other farm workers that are often
romanticized and depicted in a highly unrealistic manner. Indeed, the pastoral life is sometimes depicted as being far closer to the
Golden age than the rest of human life. A typical mood is set by
Christopher Marlowe's well known lines from
"The Passionate Shepherd to His Love":
» Come live with me and be my Love,
And we'll all the pleasures prove » That hills and valleys, dale and field,
And all the craggy mountains yield.
» There will we sit upon the rocks
And see the shepherds feed their flocks, » By shallow rivers, to whose falls
Melodious birds sing madrigals.
Pastoral shepherds and maidens usually have
Greek names like Corydon or Philomela, reflecting the origin of the pastoral genre. Pastoral poems are set in beautiful rural landscapes, the literary term for which is "locus amoenus" (Latin for "beautiful place"), such as
Arcadia, a rural region of
Greece, mythological home of the god
Pan, which was portrayed as a sort of
Eden by the poets. The tasks of their employment with sheep and other rustic chores is held in the fantasy to be almost wholly undemanding and is left in the background, abandoning the shepherdesses and their swains in a state of almost perfect
leisure. This makes them available for embodying perpetual
erotic fantasies. The shepherds spend their time chasing pretty girls — or, at least in the Greek and Roman versions, pretty lads as well. The eroticism of Virgil's second
eclogue,
Formosum pastor Corydon ardebat Alexin ("The shepherd Corydon burned with passion for pretty Alexis") is entirely
homosexual.
Pastoral poetry
Pastoral literature began with the poetry of the
Hellenistic Greek
Theocritus, several of whose
Idylls are set in the countryside (probably reflecting the landscape of the island of
Cos where the poet lived) and involve dialogues between herdsmen. Theocritus may have drawn on authentic folk traditions of Sicilian shepherds. He wrote in the
Doric dialect but the metre he chose was the
dactylic hexameter associated with the most prestigious form of Greek poetry,
epic. This blend of simplicity and sophistication would play a major part in later pastoral verse. Theocritus was imitated by the Greek poets
Bion and
Moschus. The Roman poet
Virgil adapted the genre into Latin with his highly influential
Eclogues. Virgil presented a more idealised vision of rural life than Theocritus and was the first to set his poems in
Arcadia, the favourite location of subsequent pastoral literature. He also included elements of political allegory.
Italian poets revived the pastoral from the 14th century onwards, first in Latin (examples include works by
Petrarch,
Pontano and
Mantuan) then in the Italian vernacular (
Boiardo). The fashion for pastoral spread throughout Renaissance Europe. In Spain,
Garcilaso de la Vega was an important pioneer and his motifs find themselves renewed in the 20th Century Spanish language poet Giannina Braschi. Leading French pastoral poets include
Marot and
Ronsard.
The first pastorals in English were the
Eclogues (c.1515) of
Alexander Barclay, which were heavily influenced by Mantuan. A landmark in English pastoral poetry was
Spenser’s
The Shepheardes Calender, first published in 1579. Spenser's work consists of twelve eclogues, one for each month of the year, and is written in dialect. It contains
elegies,
fables and a discussion of the role of poetry in contemporary England. Spenser and his friends appear under various pseudonyms (Spenser himself is "Colin Clout"). Spenser's example was imitated by such poets as
Michael Drayton (
Idea, The Shepherd's Garland) and
William Browne (
Britannia's Pastorals). The most famous pastoral elegy in English is
John Milton's
Lycidas (1637), written on the death of Edward King, a fellow student at
Cambridge University. Milton used the form both to explore his vocation as a writer and to attack what he saw as the abuses of the Church. The formal pastoral in English died out in the 18th century, one of the last notable examples being
Alexander Pope's
Pastorals (1709). The form was parodied by writers such as
John Gay (in his
Shepherd's Week), criticised for its artificiality by
Doctor Johnson and attacked for its lack of realism by
George Crabbe, who attempted to give a true picture of rural life in his poem
The Village (1783). Pastoral nevertheless survived as a mood rather than a genre, as can be seen from such works as
Matthew Arnold's
Thyrsis (1867), a lament on the death of his fellow poet
Arthur Hugh Clough.
Pastoral romances
Italian writers invented a new genre, the pastoral romance, which mixed pastoral poems with a fictional narrative in prose. Although there was no classical precedent for the form, it drew some inspiration from ancient Greek novels set in the countryside, such as
Daphnis and Chloe . The most influential Italian example of the form was
Sannazzaro's
Arcadia (1504). The vogue for the pastoral romance spread throughout Europe producing such notable works as
Montemayor's
Diana (1559) in Spain,
Sir Philip Sidney's
Arcadia (1590) in England, and
Honoré d'Urfé's
Astrée (1607-27) in France.
Pastoral plays
Pastoral drama also emerged in Renaissance Italy. Again, there was little Classical precedent, with the possible exception of Greek
satyr plays.
Poliziano's
Orfeo (1480) shows the beginnings of the new form, but it reached its zenith in the late 16th century with
Tasso's
Aminta (1573) and
Guarini's
Il pastor fido (1590).
John Lyly's
Endimion (1579) brought the Italian-style pastoral play to England.
John Fletcher's
The Faithful Shepherdess and
Ben Jonson's
The Sad Shepherd are later examples. Some of
Shakespeare's plays contain pastoral elements, most notably
As You Like It (whose plot was derived from
Thomas Lodge's pastoral romance
Rosalynde) and
The Winter's Tale, of which Act 4 Scene 4 is a lengthy pastoral digression.
Pastoral music
Theocritus's
Idylls include strophic songs and musical laments, and, as in Homer, his shepherds often play the syrinx, or
Pan flute, considered a quintessentially pastoral instrument. Virgil's
Eclogues were performed as sung mime in the 1st century, and there's evidence of the pastoral song as a legitimate genre of classical times.
The pastoral genre was a significant influence in the development of
opera. After settings of pastoral poetry in the
pastourelle genre by the
troubadours, Italian poets and composers became increasingly drawn to the pastoral. Musical settings of pastoral poetry became increasingly common in first polyphonic and then monodic madrigals: these later led to the
cantata and the
serenata, in which pastoral themes remained on a consistent basis. Partial musical settings of
Giovanni Battista Guarini's
Il pastor fido were highly popular: the texts of over 500 madrigals were taken from this one play alone.
Tasso's
Aminta was also a favourite. As
opera developed, the dramatic pastoral came to the fore with such works as
Jacopo Peri's
Dafne and, most notably,
Monteverdi's
L'Orfeo. Pastoral opera remained popular throughout the 17th-century, and not just in Italy, as is shown by the French genre of
pastorale héroïque, Englishman
Henry Lawes's music for
Milton's Comus (not to mention
John Blow's
Venus and Adonis), and Spanish
zarzuela. At the same time, Italian and German composers developed a genre of vocal and instrumental pastorals, distinguished by certain stylistic features, associated with Christmas Eve.
The pastoral, and parodies of the pastoral, continued to play an important role in musical history throughout the 18th and 19th centuries.
John Gay may have satirized the pastoral in
The Beggar's Opera, but also wrote an entirely sincere libretto for
Handel's
Acis and Galatea.
Rousseau's
Le Devin du village draws on pastoral roots, and
Metastasio's libretto
Il re pastore was set over 30 times, most famously by Mozart.
Rameau was an outstanding exponent of French pastoral opera.
Beethoven also wrote his famous
Pastoral Symphony, avoiding his usual musical dynamism in favour of relatively slow rhythms. More concerned with psychology than description, he labelled the work "more the expression of feeling than [realistic] painting". The pastoral also appeared as a feature of
grand opera, most particularly in Meyerbeer's operas: often composers would develop a pastoral-themed "oasis", usually in the centre of their work. Notable examples include the shepherd's "alte Weise" from
Wagner's
Tristan und Isolde, or the pastoral ballet occupying the middle of
Tchaikovsky's
The Queen of Spades. The 20th-century continued to bring new pastoral interpretations, particularly in ballet, such as Ravel's
Daphis and Cloe, Nijinsky's use of Debussy's
Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune, and
Stravinsky's
Le sacre du printemps and
Les Noces.
Pastoral art
Idealised pastoral landscapes appear in Hellenistic and Roman wall paintings. Interest in the pastoral as a subject for art revived in Renaissance Italy, partly inspired by the descriptions of pictures Sannazzaro included in his
Arcadia. The
Fête champêtre (
Pastoral Concert) attributed to
Giorgione is perhaps the most famous painting in this style. Later, French artists were also attracted to the pastoral, notably
Claude,
Poussin (for example
Et in Arcadia ego) and
Watteau (in his
Fêtes galantes).
Further Information
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