The Alchemist | Offensive Odors in The Alchemist

In this essay, the author discusses the allusions to odors—particularly offensive ones—that characterize the emotional content of a scene in The Alchemist.

In the spat between Face and Subtle, The Alchemist, that opens Jonson's play, Subtle is described as having been very much down on his luck before Face met him:

Piteously costive, with your pinch'd-horn-nose,
And your complexion of the Roman wash,
Stuck full of black and melancholic worms,
Like powder-corns shot at th' artillery-yard (11.28-31)

Glossing "Roman wash," Brooke and Paradise suggest "a wash of alum water," that is, an emetic. Face apparently returns to this odious metaphor when he calls Subtle "The vomit...




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