Doctor Faustus – a Psychological
tragedy
Spiritual Combat: Tragedy is
regarded as the highest aspect of the dramatic art as in it our emotions are
more profoundly stirred than in comedy thereby rendering it more universal
in it appeal. And conflict is the essence of or soul of tragedy. All
previous dramas includingTamburlaine had dealt with single-minded
individuals. If a struggle in the heart of the hero was introduced, it was like
that of Morality plays.
It was external as in the Jew of
Malta because it was between the hero and his adversaries. Doctor Faustus
attempted something different. It is a drama of spiritual combat within the soul
of man. This struggle is certainly somewhat primitive in its expression but it
is a foretaste of those inner characteristics towards which a drama in its
development inevitably trends. Faustus in this respect is
unquestionably the greatest tragic figure in sixteenth century outside the work
of Shakespeare. It is also a modern tragedy because Marlowe broke away from the
old Aristotelian concept of tragic hero as being a royal figure of some
very lofty stature. He introduced Faustus who is not a prince or a king but a
common learned man whose parents are base of stock.
Tragic Flaw – cause of his
tragedy According to Aristotle, the tragic hero must have some inherent
weakness – a tragic flaw which he referred to as Hamartia. He should be
neither totally vicious nor good. As per Doctor Faustus, he is puffed with
pride and his wisdom. He has studied all branches of knowledge and wants to get
infinite knowledge. The boundless mastery of all sciences. So, he acquires
necromancy in order to gain the ultimate. He says,
A sound magician is a mighty god:
Here, Faustus, tire thy brains to
gain a deity.
Despite all his scholarly
personality and his learning, we witness how he surrenders his soul to the
Devil for a span of twenty four years and instead of gaining the deity and
mastering and commandeering all the elements, he stands doomed and cursed.
Internal Tragic Conflict: Marlowe’s
contribution to the English or Elizabethan drama was great and many fold. One
of his contributions was the introduction of internal tragic conflict in the
mind of the tragic hero. Nicoll has rightly observed: “All previous dramas
including Tamburlaine had dealt with single-minded individuals. If a struggle
in the heart of the hero was introduced, it was like that of Morality plays. In
Doctor Faustus, Marlowe attempted something new – the delineation of
struggle in the mind of the hero. This struggle is certainly somewhat primitive
in its expression but it is a foretaste of those inner characteristics towards
which a drama in its development inevitably trends. Faustus in this
respect is unquestionably the greatest tragic figure in sixteenth century
outside the work of Shakespeare.”
So in
Doctor Faustus, we find the conflict or the psychological struggle raging in
the heart and soul of the hero. In fact, there’s hardly any external action.
The delineation of a psychological struggle or spiritual conflict in the mind
of the hero is the chief thing. Then why is this struggle and to what is it
due? Generally, the inner conflict takes places when man is faced with
two alternatives, one of which he must have to choose, but he finds
himself pulled in opposite directions. Now Faustus is inspired by the
spirit of the Renaissance, by dreams of gaining limitless knowledge and
super-human powers. These he can attain only by resorting to necromancy, discarding
religious dogmas and abjuring the Trinity and denouncing the established
religious norms. Doctor Faustus may reject all these intellectually, but he is
very much emotionally attached to them. He may be acting like an atheist, but
his flesh and blood is saturated with Christianity. Here the conflict
starts between will and conscience externalized by the Good and Bad Angel. We
can follow this conflict in the play at three stages: The First Stage: we
see how pride and ambition lead Faustus into the vicious bargain with the
Devil. He convinces himself that: A sound magician is a mighty god. He
also says with perfect faith in Mephistopheles, “Had I as many souls as there
are stars, I would give them all for Mephistopheles, By him I will great
emperor of the world” Nicholas Brooke says: Faustus wants to satisfy the
demands of his nature as God has made him. He wants to be the Deity. For this,
he must deny Christianity as did Lucifer, but Faustus’ attachment to
religion is too deep to be rooted out. Throughout the play we find Faustus
pricked by his conscience, we find him in tussle between will and conscience in
the form of Good and Bad Angel. The Second Stage: At this stage, we see
Faustus struggling hard to break away from the impeding doom and he turns to
repentance.
When I behold the heavens, then I
repent
And curse thee, wicked
Mephistophilis,
Because thou hast depriv’d me of
those joys
The two angles appear again. One
advises him to return to repentance and the other tells him that he is a spirit
and God will not help him now and that he will tear his body to pieces if he
repents. He has to submit to the will of Lucifer and refresh his bond with him.
The show of Seven Deadly Sins and the best of all the
apparition of Helen temporarily soothe his damned soul.The Third and Final
Scene: In the closing scene, we find the climax culminating into a horrible
catastrophe. Faustus knows that he is eternally doomed; but his poignant
soliloquy and appeal for redemption is pathetic and pitiable. His last minute
frantic appeal, to the ever moving spheres of heaven to stand still or to the
sun to rise again to make perpetual day, stirs the readers’ soul and refresh in
him the spirit of religious faith. Later, his soul is taken away by
the devils leaving a short visual scene repeating itself in the reader’s
mind. The show of Seven Deadly Sins is presented to please
Doctor Faustus and remove his internal conflict between the good and the bad.
So the seven sins – Pride, Covetousness, Wrath, Envy, Gluttony, Sloth and
Lechery. Some critics are of the view that the show is meant for comic relief for
the audience. But this is hardly to accept. In fact the show is not meant for a
comic relief, but is really meant for bringing back Faustus to the path to hell
when he was much irritated by Mephistopheles for not telling him the right
answers. In fact, the sins already abide in Doctor Faustus’ soul; the show
merely symbolizes or externalizes them.
Disintegration: Doctor Faustus is
thus the tragedy of a man who in striving boundlessly, misdirects great gifts
of mind and spirit and hence progressively loses his soul by
disintegration. Progressive disintegration in Faustus brings low comedy into
the tragedy. In the last act, Faustus repents, then despairs and is about to
commit suicide. But his distressed soul is comforted by the Old Man. The
feeling cannot exist, however, without the support of the Old Man’s presence;
as soon as he goes Faustus exclaims: I do repent; and yet I do despair.Mephistophilis
forces him to sign another bond to strengthen the contract.
Psychological tragedy: Thus
we find that in Doctor Faustus, Marlowe reveals for the first time in English
drama the full possibilities of psychological tragedy, the anguish of a mind at
war with itself. The play depicts the tragedy of the human soul, and in the
closing scene it achieves end with a strength and intensity as yet
unknown in English drama. We conclude with the words of Una Ellis Fermor: In
Marlowe’s great tragic fragment the conflict is not between man and man for the
domination of one character over another or in the interaction of a group of
characters. Thus and in such terms is staged the greatest conflict that drama
has ever undertaken to the present.
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