Marlowe’s
Contribution to the development of English Drama
Q. Write
a comprehensive note on Marlowe’s genius as a playwright (PU-2003)
Ans. Marlowe is considered to be the founder of
English tragedy. Before him the drama was merely an exercise of theological
disciplines. It was he, who gave the proper dignity and grandeur of a tragedy
to the English plays swinbume says:
“Before him,
there was neither genuine blank verse nor genuine tragedy in our language.
After his arrival, the way was prepared; the paths were made straight for
Shakespeare.”
Marlowe made his tragedy significant due
to its newness, renaissance influence, Machiavillian morality, powerful and
passionate expression, element of tragic inner conflict, tragic hero, popular
literary type, high seriousness, bombastic language and the use of blank verse.
Marlowe, under the influence of great Italian tragedies of Seneca, introduced
the senecan characteristics such as long sententious speeches, lack of action, talkative
ghosts and horrible scenes of gruesome murders.
One of the greatest contribution of
Marlowe is the introduction of a new kind of tragic hero. Marlowe broke away
from the medieval conception of tragedy and evolved a real tragic hero. Unlike
medieval princely or a conspicuous hero, Marlovian heroes are common person
with humble parentage but they are endowed with great heroic qualities. He
picks up day to-day themes and in accordance to these themes, he selects
commonplace persons as his heroes. However, these persons are distinct in their
respected groups because of their special qualities. As Barabas is an ordinary
moneylender, Tamburlaine is a shepherd, while Dr. Faustus is an ordinary
scholar in divinity. Hence, Marlowe makes his tragedies the story of everyone.
Marlowe’s heroes struggle against the hostile forces. As a critic says:
“Marlowe’s heroes reflect the
struggle of a brave soul.”
His protagonists have a towering
personality, who play the most dominant role, rising head and shoulders high above
all the minor characters and attain a titanic stature of a superman size. They
are like Gulliver amongst Lilliputians.
Another great contribution of
Marlowe is that he introduced the element of powerful passion and ambition in
his heroes. Marlovian heroes are ambitious and passionate men with their great
but limited capabilities. They want to fly high above the sky, as Marlowe says
about Faustus:
“His Waxen wings did mount above his
reach”.
And
again he says:
“All things that move between the
quiet poles shall be at my command.”
Their passions urge them to
undertake mighty actions; even they violate all the accepted and established
moral codes. They are terribly inclined to their passion and ambition. As Dr.
Faustus wants to attain the highest power of Omnipotence. He says:
“Divinity
adieu:
These
metaphysics of magicians and necromantic books are heavenly.
Again
he says:
A
sound magician is a mighty God:
Here
Faustus tire thy brain to gain a deity.”
Another great contribution of
Marlowe is that he interiorized the drama and introduced the element of inner
conflict in his heroes. Greek tragedies and pre-Elizabethan dramas focus at the
outer conflict of the protagonists, fighting against the nature or destiny. But
Marlowe introduced both inner as well as the outer conflict in his heroes. The
minds of his heoes are generally tom off between two extremes. In “The Jew of
Malta” and “Tamburlaine” the conflict is mainly external, but in Dr. Faustus,
it is, most of the time internal. The object of the playwright is to delineate
the prick of mind of Dr. Faustus. He says:
Ay,
Faustus will turn to God again,
To God?
He loves thee not.
Another great contribution of Marlowe was
the introduction of the popular literary type and the use of blank verse and
bombastic language with mighty lines suited to the subject, theme and the hero.
Thus a new spirit of poetry was breathed into the artificial and monotonous
verse of medieval plays and this gave a new poetic grandeur to the Renaissance
drama.
Marlowe also discarded the Medieval
morality plays which aimed at inculcating some moral lesson by showing the fall
of the hero into adversity. Whereas Marlovian heroes are Machiavellian.
A very notable feature of Marlovian
tragedy is its high seriousness and the lack of humour and the absence of
female characters and his sole interest in the main hero with his towering
personality. And probably because of these limitations, Morlowe could not
succeed in reaching the disered loftiest summits of the tragic art. But he was
the pioneer, pathfinder and the ‘morning star of Elizabethian drama’ and the
real grandeur of English tragedy. He proved to be ‘the Columbus of the new
literary world’. According to the illuminating remarks of Schelling:
“Marlow gave the
drama passion and poetry; and poetry was his most precious gift. Shakespeare would not have been Shakespeare had Marlowe never written or lived. He might not have been altogether
the Shakespeare we know”.
Points to remember:
1.
Marlowe
is considered to be the founder of English tragedy.
2.
Marlowe
introduced a new kind of tragic hero.
3.
Marlovian
heroes have titanic stature.
4.
Marlovian
heroes have strong passions and powerful ambition.
5.
Marlowe
introduced inner conflict.
6.
Marlowe
used a new kind of blank verse in drama.
7.
Marlowe
also has some limitations.
8.
He is
a the pioneer and the path finder of English drama.
******
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