The Italian Mask and the English Mirror
How a Small Island Borrowed Venice to Invent Its Soul, Then Sold It to the World Between 1590 and 1865, England underwent a psychological metamorphosis more radical than any political revolution. First, it gazed at Renaissance Italy with envy and horror—borrowing its settings, its plots, and its villains to stage plays too dangerous for London. Shakespeare never visited Italy, yet he set a third of his plays there, using Venice as a mirror for English anxieties about usury, race, and justice. Two centuries later, England had become what it once feared: the world's financial engine, inventing paper money, national debt, and limited liability. The "Jewish" sin of usury became the Christian engine of empire. Dickens's Our Mutual Friend captured the hollow aftermath—a society where nothing held intrinsic value anymore. This article traces that arc from Shylock's pound of flesh to the Veneerings' worthless paper, arguing that England's greatest literary achie...