CHARACTERISTICS OF MARLOWE - AS A DRAMATIST - NEOEnglish
CHARACTERISTICS OF MARLOWE - AS A DRAMATIST - NEOEnglish
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CHARACTERISTICS OF MARLOWE: AS
A DRAMATIST
Introduction
The balance-sheet of Marlowe’s merits and demerits as a dramatist cannot be correctly
understood and justly estimated without an idea of the condition of English drama at the
time that he arrived in London as a literary adventurer.
The origins of drama have always and everywhere been deeply rooted in simple piety and
religious instinct. In England too, the cradle of the drama rested on the altar of the Church.
In the very ritual of the Church, in the Mass itself and in the festivities of Christmas, Easter
and Michaelmas, were inherent occasions and themes for dramatic development. The
clergy who were obliged to find some method of teaching and explaining to the ignorant
and illiterate masses the doctrinal truths of religion, took advantage of the gospel stories
which they illustrated by a series of living pictures, generally called pageants or dumb-
shows. These early church entertainments which were spiritual and not secular yielded
place in course of time to humanistic development. In this second stage, the scope of the
dramatic productions gradually extended in respect of subject-matter, accommodation and
participants. The actors spoke as well as acted and Mysteries (stories taken from the
Scriptures) and Miracle plays (dealing with incidents in the lives of saints and martyrs)
became common. In the third stage, the serious and light elements which were interwoven
in the earlier period were bifurcated and Moralities and Interludes supplanted the
Mysteries and Miracle Plays. The Moralities were didactic, abstract, serious, allegorical,
whereas the Interludes were light entertainments, full of gaiety and humour. In the fourth
stage of development which was reached by the middle of the 16th century, Tragedy and
Comedy established themselves as definite and separate branches of drama. Gorboduc
(1561) by Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton has the distinction of being the first
regular English Tragedy, while in the field of comedy the honour goes to Ralph Roister
Doister (1541) by Nicholas Udall.
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At the time that Marlowe unfurled the banner of his dramatic career, the theatrical
repertory consisted of tragedies on the model of Seneca, comedies like those of Plautus and
Terence, historical plays, romances, court comedies and dramatised episodes of private life.
English drama, thus, was in a somewhat chaotic condition, struggling between a well-
formed chill and a structureless enthusiasm. ‘The classicists had form, but no fire; the
popular dramatists had interest, but little sense of form.’ J.A. Symonds observes: “There
was plenty of productive energy, plenty of enthusiasm and activity. Theatres continued to
spring up and acting came to rank among the recognised professions. But this activity was
still chaotic. None could say where or whether the gem of a great national art
existed…..Scholars despised the shows of mingled bloodshed and buffoonery in which the
populace delighted. The people had no taste for dry and formal disquisitions in the style of
Gorboduc. The blank verse of Sackville and Hughes rang hollow: the prose of Lyly was
affected; the rhyming couplets of the popular theatre interfered with dialogue and free
development of character. The public itself was divided in its tastes and instincts; the mob
inclining to mere drolleries and merriment upon the stage, the better vulgar to formalities
and studied imitations. A powerful body of sober citizens, by no means wholly composed of
Puritans and ascetics, regarded all forms of dramatic art with undisguised hostility.
Meanwhile, no really great poet had arisen to stamp the tendencies of either court or town
with the authentic seal of genius. There seemed a danger lest the fortunes of the stage in
England should be lost between the prejudices of a literary class, the puerile and lifeless
pastime of the multitude, and the disfavour of conservative moralists.” It was at such a
critical time that Marlowe arrived on the scene with his poetry and his passion, his
intellectual vigour and his academical training. It was as though Marlowe was specially
destined to save English drama from a perilous landslide by discerning in the existing
chaotic and conflicting elements the real and vital seed of art, and set its flowering beyond
all risks of accident by his singular and significant achievement.
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Thus he announces that he will break the conventions in two important directions:
“With the jigging veins of rhymesters are contrasted the Scythian’s ‘high astounding terms’,
while his heroic exploits are similarly set off against the mere ‘conceits of clownage.’ These
bold reforms, in simple language, are in the direction of versification and subject-matter.
He boldly adopted for use in the popular drama the blank verse, so long used by his
contemporaries only for dramas on the classical model. He was the first to feel rightly that
for adequate dramatic expression in serious subjects the vehicle of rhymed lines and
stanzas was ridiculously inadequate. Some of his contemporaries had indeed used the
blank verse in their tragedies of the Senecan school; but these dramas were meant for
scholars only and courtly audiences. “To dissever it from these associations/and submit it
on the boards of the public theaters to the rough-and ready verdict of the groundlings,
might well have seemed a hazardous experiment. Yet it received instant success. Similarly,
in subject- matter the almost farcical, or weakly sentimental themes which went by the
name of comedy were replaced by themes which almost burst with passion and high
feelings. It is true that Marlowe could contribute almost nothing to the genuinely comic
side of the drama, nor to the grace and loveliness of prose dialogue. But he gave strength,
force and vigour to the drama which once for all turned its career for both greatness and
stability. He lifted the drama into the sphere of high literature. The English stage in his
time was in great need of intensity. Grace, sentiment, wit, fancy had been communicated to
the English drama by various talents of the age, communicated with reckless and very often
ridiculous excess; but the vigour, dash and animation which only can make a drama as a
whole a living, pulsating expression of life were the gifts of Marlowe alone. The wits of the
age, even some of his close collaborators might mock at his ‘spacious volubility of a
drumming decasyllable’ or at his ‘bragging blank verse’; serious, critical-minded dramatic
talents might find fault with his extravagant one-man show, but all the same they all had to
fall in line with him to give their own productions life and vigour.”
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playwrights writing for the Court, or the Inns of Court, or the Universities. These neo-
classicists insisted on form, decorum and dignity even with artificiality and rigidity. On the
other hand, there were popular playwrights holding to the native tradition of formlessness
but giving much of vivacity and vigour to the presentation. Senecan models in tragedy and
imitations of Terence and Plautus in comedy, both in the courtly dramas and those for the
public stage, confused the issue. As medium of expression, rhymed lines and stanzas of
various sorts still held their away, though the first blank verse tragedy had been produced
as early as 1562 and prose had occasionally been used in some comedies. “The age,
however”, as Nicoll remarks, “obviously wished for no trammels upon the theatre.
Freedom, action, passion, the audiences desired, and these they found in the work of the
romantic playwrights.” And Marlowe, when he first appeared on the stage more than
fulfilled this popular desire for “freedom, action, passion.” His successive dramas were
wonderful, almost overwhelming, embodiments of the spirit of Renaissance. All the four
plays from his pen were indeed exemplary of the tragic art in dramatic poetry. But they
were enough to give a permanence and stability to the drama. The comedic art was being
perfected by other masters of the age, particularly by Greene and Lyly. It was passion,
vigour and poetry that the populace thirsted for and these were exactly the gifts that
Marlowe brought to the drama.
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a poet of passion. Tamburlaine’s raptures over the beauty of his wife Zenocrate at her dying
moments, Faustus’s rhapsody over Helen’s beauty, Edward’s passionately pathetic self-
pity-all these gave to the English dramatic verse the passion and emotion which go with
high poetry. In this connection, Schelling’s remark is worth quoting: “Marlowe gave the
drama passion and not poetry; and poetry was his most precious gift. Shakespeare would
have never been Shakespeare had Marlowe never written or lived. He might not have been
altogether the Shakespeare we know.
One important result of this insistence upon virtue must be noted. Call it what we
please, virtue, ambition, will, tends to overlook class, and accordingly the dramas of
Marlowe break away slightly from the more ancient medieval plan. For the Middle Ages
tragedy was a thing of princes only; for Marlowe it was a thing of individual heroes. Thus
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his Tamburlaine, King though he may be by the end of the drama, is born a peasant. The
Jew is but a Mediterranean money-lender, and Faustus an ordinary German doctor and an
alchemist. The medieval conception of the royalty of tragedy is here supplanted by the
Renaissance ideal of individual worth. It is the union of the two which gives us the majesty
of Macbeth and Lear. This is one of Marlowe’s most outstanding contributions to the
development of a truly august type of English tragedy. His main conception of serious
drama—Renaissance virtue battling on to success and then falling unconquered before fate
—is at the root of all the great seventeenth century tragic activity; only Shakespeare made
his figures more human and stressed more on the fatal flaw in the greatness of their
characters.
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Marlowe is undoubtedly the poet of passion par excellence. It is passion that heaves in
his poetry at every turn. Yet it has other striking characteristics too, especially three
marked ones—pictorial quality, ecstatic quality and vitalising energy. The pictorial richness
of Marlowe’s poetry reminds us of the intense and quivering colour effects that we come
across in the poetry of Keats. Lines like these:
which are powdered over, as it were, with glittering silver and gold and scarlet, are akin to
the rich-hued and picturesque veined passages in The Eve of St. Agnes. As Frederick Boas
observes: “Never again, till the coming of Keats, did the sensuous imagination that glories
in the lust of the eye and the pride of life speak in tones so full and rich.” The ecstatic
quality is well exemplified in Faustus’s apostrophe—
O my girl,
My gold, my fortune, my felicity,
Strength to my soul, death to mine enemy;
Welcome the first beginner of my bliss;
O Abigail, Abigail, that I had thee here too
Then my desires were fully satisfied;
But I will practise thy enlargement thence;
O girl: O gold: O beauty; O my bliss;
The ecstatic quality of Marlowe’s poetry reveals his easily excitable moods which are
moved to exuberant expression by certain appeals to the imagination such as the appeal to
beauty. Marlowe, the wistful visionary that always followed the trail of adventure in life as
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well as in literature, lived in a self-wrought world of beauty and wonder. The vitalising
energy of Marlowe’s poetry is evident in all his four great tragedies—Tamburlaine, Dr.
Faustus. The Jew of Malta and Edward II. It is this pervading energy that redeems these
plays from many an absurdity and endows them with compelling beauty and elevating
power. Not satisfied with vague descriptions, Marlowe often actualises his theme—as in the
pageant of the ‘Seven Deadly Sins’ in Dr. Faustus. Such a thing is native to Marlowe’s
genius and is the out flowing of a virile and vital imagination. It is this vitalising energy that
imparts to the young poet’s eloquence a vibrant music that compels the reader’s
admiration.
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