Autobiographical note in Faustus
Introduction: A study of
Marlowe’s great tragedies cannot but convince us that Marlowe possessed the
power in its fullest degree of projecting himself into his chief characters.
The most important quality of his works is the subjective or autobiography
note. Here lies the greatest difference between Shakespeare and Marlowe as
dramatists. There is a complete effacement of Shakespeare’s personality in his
plays. We cannot say that this or that passage reveals Shakespeare’s
personality or mind. But Marlowe couldn’t but project his personality into the
chief characters of his plays – especially in his four great tragedies:
Tamburlaine, Doctor Faustus, The Jew of Malta and Edward II.
Marlowe’s Life and the Spirit of
Renaissance Before discussing the subjective note in his plays any
further, we should have a fair idea of Marlowe’s life, his career, the
influence of the Renaissance on him, and his ambitions.Marlowe came of parents
‘ base of stock’. He was the son of a shoe maker. But he was fortunate
enough to get school education and had a chance to go toCambridge to
specialize in theology and got Doctorate in Divinity. But his
abandoned his career in theology and joined the theatrical companies in London to
become a dramatist. But seeing a difference between himself as poor and his
companions as rich, though they were much inferior to him in intellect, Marlowe
rebelled against the established norms. This was also perhaps the main cause of
his rebellion against religion and its normal orders. He was much criticized
and branded as the Atheist. He also possessed a dual personality. He was a
dramatist and poet inLondon, but also had relations with the underworld.
However, Marlowe was a man of the Renaissance and an embodiment of the spirit of
his age. He was a saturated with the spirit of learning, exploring
and experimenting with its hankering after sensual pleasure of life and with
its inordinate ambition and supreme lust for power and pelf. He was profoundly
influenced by Machiavelli, the famous Italian social and political
writer, who discarded all conventional moral principles to achieve the end by
any means, fair or foul.
Reflection of Marlowe in his
tragic Heroes A close and critical study of works of Marlowe convinces us
that all his tragic heroes clearly reveal the chief characteristics and
temperament of the great dramatist. All his tragic heroes are absolutely
dominated by some uncontrollable passion. To achieve their end, they throw
overboard all established moral scruples or religious sanctions and never avoid
using horrible means, for example, his cruel and tyrant Tamburlaine with his
craze for limitless power defies all authorities on earth and in the heaven.
His stone-heated Barabas is dominated by a senseless craze for gold and doesn’t
shirk from committing the worst type of crimes to achieve his end, thus he
seems to be an embodiment of Machiavellism. To gain super human powers through
knowledge, his Doctor Faustus sells his soul to the Devil in pursuit of his
passion. His heroes have a scant regard for religion as Faustus says, “ I
count religion but a childish toy” another significant point is that all tragic
heroes of Marlowe are poets and convey their feelings and emotions to the
audience in the superb poetic language, but of all Faustus is a poet par excellence
just like Marlowe himself. His utterance about Helen is magical and
fascinating: Was this the face …. Towers of Illium? And Marlowe
himself was a great poet of passion.
Marlowe and Faustus-A Striking Parallelism: Of
all the tragic heroes of Marlowe, Faustus bears the most striking reflection of
Marlowe’s own self. We know that Marlowe was the second child of a Canterbury shoe-maker
and in the very beginning of the play, we are told of Faustus’ parentage as: Now
is he born, his parents base of stock. Harold Osborne has pointed out that
Marlowe like Faustus came of parents ‘base of stock’ and was destined for the
church but turned elsewhere. We should not press the analogies too far,
but we cannot ignore them as the parallelism is too obvious.
Personal Tragedy: Spiritual
Suffering: Doctor Faustus very powerfully expresses Marlowe’s innermost
thoughts and authentic experiences. So it can be regarded the spiritualhistory
of Marlowe himself. Marlowe’s inordinate ambition led him to revolt against
religion and society, to defy the laws of man and laws of God and such defiance
is bound to bring up acute mental conflict resulting in deep despair and
certain defeat. So, both Marlowe and Faustus experience terrible mental pangs
and agonies. Osborne has rightly observed:
The descriptions of Faustus’
repentance, despair and mental anguish are among the most vivid and poignant
parts of the play. It is, of course, possible to suppose that Marlowe had
passed through a stage of youthful skepticism in religion and that with a
sounder and deeper faith he had come to the knowledge of repentance.
Conclusion Doctor Faustus’
tragic death also has resemblance. After living twenty four years in sensual
activities, Faustus had to surrender his soul to the Devil. Marlowe’s Bohemian
and boisterous life, too came to a tragic sudden end in tavern brawl at the
hands of a shady character of the London Underworld at the age of
twenty nine. Marlowe lost himself into his works.
Doctor Faustus is strewn with
unmistakably autobiographical suggestions. Reading the play
we cannot refrain from concluding that it is the spontaneous expression of its
writer’s innermost thoughts and authentic experiences.
No comments:
Post a Comment