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Eastward Ho

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Eastward Hoe or Eastward Ho, is an early Jacobean era stage play, a satire and city comedy written by George Chapman, Ben Jonson, and John Marston, printed in 1605. The play was written in response to Westward Ho, an earlier satire by Thomas Dekker and John Webster. Eastward Ho offended King James I with its anti-Scottish comedy, which caused Jonson and Chapman to be arrested for a time, and which made their play one of the famous dramatic scandals of its era. The play deals with a goldsmith and his household. He has two apprentices and two daughters. One apprentice, Golding, is industrious and temperate; the other, Quicksilver, is rash and ambitious. One daughter, Mildred, is mild and modest; the other, Gertrude, is vain. Mildred and Golding marry. Gertrude marries the fraudulent Sir Petronel Flash, a man who possesses a title but no money. Sir Petronel promises Gertrude a coach and six and a castle. Sir Petronel takes her dowry and sends her off in a coach for an imaginary castle while he and Quicksilver set off for Virginia after Quicksilver has robbed the goldsmith. During this time, the provident and careful Golding has become a deputy alderman. Quicksilver and Petronel are shipwrecked on the Isle of Dogs and are brought up on charges for their actions. They come before Golding. After time in prison, where they repent of their schemes and dishonesty, Golding has them released.

128 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1605

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About the author

Ben Jonson

1,427 books189 followers
Benjamin Jonson was an English Renaissance dramatist, poet and actor. A contemporary of William Shakespeare, he is best known for his satirical plays, particularly Volpone, The Alchemist, and Bartholomew Fair, which are considered his best, and his lyric poems. A man of vast reading and a seemingly insatiable appetite for controversy, Jonson had an unparalleled breadth of influence on Jacobean and Caroline playwrights and poets. A house in Dulwich College is named after him.

See more at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Jonson

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5 stars
16 (10%)
4 stars
37 (23%)
3 stars
68 (43%)
2 stars
29 (18%)
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5 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Florence Ridley.
179 reviews
May 25, 2025
Maybe my brain is just frazzled, but this wasn't that good. The plot wasn't exactly complicated because nothing actually happens but there were too many characters with silly names constantly yapping. It feels silly to criticise a play for having too much talking in it but there we go. Kind of boring.
Profile Image for Orinoco Womble (tidy bag and all).
2,286 reviews236 followers
April 18, 2018
Written with 2 collaborators, this is the play that landed Jonson in jail for making fun of the king and the first recorded scandal of "pounds for peerages". Before trash TV, there was trash theatre. Playwrights had to churn out enough material for a new show every week or two, it couldn't all be Hamlet, you know--even Will Shakespeare wrote a couple of right dogs.

The "city play" satirizes life in London and the downside of the upwardly mobile, and this is no exception. The status-hungry daughter ends up with no estate and no joy; the money-hungry moneylender ends up with no wife and no reputation; the young rakehell discovers just how much fun hell actually is to those locked up in it. And of course, the wise, hardworking and modest carry the day.

Light as air, and yet rather tedious and dull, with a rushed and very unconvincing end, moral as it purports to be. Basically, they slapped a moral on the end and finished it that way. Read it because I must, for class.
Two and a half stars.
Profile Image for Gill.
556 reviews7 followers
May 12, 2022
Great fun. Written by Chapman, Marston and Jonson in turn, but remarkably coherent. Some of the jokes and puns are genuinely funny, not bad going for over four centuries.

The ending's a little drawn-out, but that bit was Ben's writing, so arguably only to be expected. Well worth the time.

Read while suffering the Dread Covid as part of the REP online readathon of the repertoire of the Jacobean Children's Companies.
Profile Image for James F.
1,701 reviews124 followers
February 2, 2025
Chapman, Jonson, and Marston are among the best playwrights of the late Elizabethan/Jacobean period, and this is one of the better plays of the period. A “city comedy”, the play has some witty dialogue but no real comic characters or scenes; it’s a fairly serious comedy about Touchstone, a London goldsmith, his two apprentices, Golding who is a model of industriousness and sobriety, and Quicksilver, who is a rake and associates with the dissolute and spendthrift knight, Sir Petronel Flash, and keeps a mistress named Sindefy. Touchstone has two daughters who are equally diverse; the older, Gertrude, dreams of becoming a “lady” and marries Sir Petronel, while the younger is a model daughter and bourgeois character who marries Golding. Other characters who play an important if secondary role are Touchstone’s wife, a usurer named Security, and Security’s young wife Winifred. The main point of the play is to set off the industrious and honest bourgeoisie against the decadent nobility; the authors were jailed for writing it. It ends with the “prodigal” daughter and apprentice being forgiven, with the appropriate moral speeches at the end.

This was in the Brooke and Paradise anthology, and I think I had read it before, but probably decades ago.
Profile Image for E.
21 reviews17 followers
October 11, 2017
Actual rating: 3.5

In general, this play was really entertaining and I enjoyed reading it. However, the end was a little too simple in my opinion.
Furthermore, it really stunned me how the content of this drama led to imprisonment of the authors soon after it was published. I didn't find anything that big of an offence in it. But I guess that is what makes literature that interesting and important: it tells of a past age and the change of ideals.
Profile Image for Arani.
19 reviews
January 29, 2025
3.5 stars, maybe I’ll consider 4 stars after the lecture. I did enjoy “Eastward Ho!” but I felt like Quicksilver and Petronel got off too easily…though with it being a play, I suppose there’s a time constraint on character development.

(sitting in eng335 rn) after further reflection, I'm bumping it up to 4 stars
Profile Image for Amanda.
148 reviews2 followers
December 3, 2017
A much more moral tale, with lots of references to The Spanish Tragedy, The Alchemist and various other late Elizabethan and early Jacobean plays.
Profile Image for Lawrence.
342 reviews2 followers
January 14, 2008
A friend who knew I was reading Marlowe's plays gave me this to read as a complement to my Elizabethan literature excursion. Enjoyed this play very much. It is a very funny farce. And I would love to see a really good production of the play. I imagine such a staging could make the audience roll with laughter. The characters' names alone are enough to make you laugh out loud. AL, thanks for sharing this one (and it's a perfect one for a cross country plane trip); now let's find a good production to see.
1 review
Read
December 25, 2010
very good
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Michael P..
Author 3 books73 followers
September 16, 2012
This is an absolutely brilliant comedy. This edition is just fine, but you can do better.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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