a critic, he points out the futility and the unreasonableness
of those antiquated conventions. Even Mr. Bailey,
who, curiously enough, believes that Racine ’stumbled,
as it were, half by accident into great advantages’
by using them, speaks of the ‘discredit’
into which ’the once famous unities’ have
now fallen, and declares that ’the unities of
time and place are of no importance in themselves.’
So far as critics are concerned this may be true;
but critics are apt to forget that plays can exist
somewhere else than in books, and a very small acquaintance
with contemporary drama is enough to show that, upon
the stage at any rate, the unities, so far from having
fallen into discredit, are now in effect triumphant.
For what is the principle which underlies and justifies
the unities of time and place? Surely it is not,
as Mr. Bailey would have us believe, that of the ‘unity
of action or interest,’ for it is clear that
every good drama, whatever its plan of construction,
must possess a single dominating interest, and that
it may happen—as in Antony and Cleopatra,
for instance—that the very essence of this
interest lies in the accumulation of an immense variety
of local activities and the representation of long
epochs of time. The true justification for the
unities of time and place is to be found in the conception
of drama as the history of a spiritual crisis—the
vision, thrown up, as it were, by a bull’s-eye
lantern, of the final catastrophic phases of a long
series of events. Very different were the views
of the Elizabethan tragedians, who aimed at representing
not only the catastrophe, but the whole development
of circumstances of which it was the effect; they
traced, with elaborate and abounding detail, the rise,
the growth, the decline, and the ruin of great causes
and great persons; and the result was a series of
masterpieces unparalleled in the literature of the
world. But, for good or evil, these methods have
become obsolete, and to-day our drama seems to be developing
along totally different lines. It is playing
the part, more and more consistently, of the bull’s-eye
lantern; it is concerned with the crisis, and nothing
but the crisis; and, in proportion as its field is
narrowed and its vision intensified, the unities of
time and place come more and more completely into
play. Thus, from the point of view of form, it
is true to say that it has been the drama of Racine
rather than that of Shakespeare that has survived.
Plays of the type of Macbeth have been superseded
by plays of the type of Britannicus. Britannicus,
no less than Macbeth, is the tragedy of a criminal;
but it shows us, instead of the gradual history of
the temptation and the fall, followed by the fatal
march of consequences, nothing but the precise psychological
moment in which the first irrevocable step is taken,
and the criminal is made. The method of Macbeth
has been, as it were, absorbed by that of the modern
novel; the method of Britannicus still rules