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"Arden lay murdered in that plot of ground": surveying, land and Arden of Faversham.

ELH

| June 22, 1994 | Sullivan, Garrett A., Jr. | COPYRIGHT 1994 Johns Hopkins University Press. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Without the habit of conceptualising space, a traveller going to war or work could not link his separate impressions to the nature of his route as a whole . . . [A] man could not visualise the country to which he belonged; a landowner, unable to "see" his properties as a whole was not concerned to concentrate his scattered holdings by sale or exchanges.(1)

According to its epilogue, Arden of Faversham tells us "the truth of Arden's death."(2) That "truth" refers not only to the homicidal machinations that lead up to the murder of Arden, but also to a certain relationship between the killing and the land: "Arden lay murdered in that plot of ground / Which he by force and violence held from Reede; / And in the grass his body's print was seen / Two years and more after the deed was done" (AF, Epilogue, 10-13). The murderous actions taken against Arden mirror the "force and violence" with which he withheld the "plot of ground," and the bloody print seen in the grass attests to the indignation of both Reede, who earlier cursed his landlord, and the land itself. The epilogue reminds us that in the late sixteenth century land is not solely thought of in terms of its utility or its fungibility, its status as a commodity; here the land speaks an ethics of ownership that has its origins in feudalism. What I shall argue, though, is that in Elizabethan England, thanks to changes in a variety of social and material practices, and to technological innovations such as those that revolutionize estate surveying, the meaning of the land begins to undergo a profound transformation. Arden of Faversham takes sides in an Elizabethan struggle over the cultural function of land, a struggle in which older conceptions of property as social office are troubled by emergent ideologies and technologies that imply a radically different view of what it means to be a landowner.

I

Let us begin with that "plot of ground." Returning from Shorlow, Arden is met by the ocean-bound Dick Reede, who confronts him as follows:

My coming to you was about the plot of ground Which wrongfully you detain from me. Although the rent of it be very small, Yet will it help my wife and children, Which here I leave in Faversham, God knows, Needy and bare.

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