Halleck's New English Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 629 pages of information about Halleck's New English Literature.

Halleck's New English Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 629 pages of information about Halleck's New English Literature.

Critics do not agree about the precise way in which the Morality is related to the Miracle play.  It is certain that the Miracle play had already introduced some abstractions.

In one very important respect, the Morality marks an advance, by giving more scope to the imagination.  The Miracle plays had their general treatment absolutely predetermined by the Scriptural version of the action or by the legends of the lives of saints, although diverting incidents could be introduced, as we have seen.  In the Morality, the events could take any turn which the author chose to give.

[Illustration:  AIR-BAG FLAPPER.  Stage properties of the Vice and Fool.]

In spite of this advantage, the Morality is in general a synonym for what is uninteresting.  The characters born of abstractions are too often bloodless, like their parents.  The Morality under a changed name was current a few years ago in the average Sunday-school book.  Incompetent writers of fiction today often adopt the Morality principle in making their characters unnaturally good or bad, mere puppets who do not develop along the line of their own emotional prompting, but are moved by machinery in the author’s hands.

[Illustration:  LATH DAGGER.  Stage properties of the Vice and Fool.]

A new character, the Vice, was added as an adjunct to the Devil, to increase the interest of the audience in the Morality play.  The Vice represented the leading spirit of evil in any particular play, sometimes Fraud, Covetousness, Pride, Iniquity, or Hypocrisy.  It was the business of the Vice to annoy the Virtues and to be constantly playing pranks.  The Vice was the predecessor of the clown and the fool upon the stage.  The Vice also amused the audience by tormenting the Devil, belaboring him with a sword of lath, sticking thorns into him, and making him roar with pain.  Sometimes the Devil would be kicked down Hell Mouth by the offended Virtues; but he would soon reappear with saucily curled tail, and at the end of the play he would delight the spectators by plunging into Hell Mouth with the Vice on his back.

[Illustration:  FOOL OF THE OLD PLAY.]

Court Plays.—­In the first part of the sixteenth century, the court and the nobility especially encouraged the production of plays whose main object was to entertain.  The influence of the court in shaping the drama became much more powerful than that of the church.  Wallace says of the new materials which his researches have disclosed in the twentieth century:—­

“They throw into the lime-light a brilliant development of this new drama through the Chapel Royal, a development that took place primarily under the direction of the great musicians who served as masters of the children of the Chapel and as court entertainers, the first true poets-laureate, through the reigns of Henry VIII., Edward VI., Mary, and Elizabeth."[11]

In 1509 Henry VIII. appointed William Cornish (died

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Halleck's New English Literature from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.