The writer of this play does not differ
with his countrymen generally, as to the nature and
requirements of a Drama. He has learnt from
our Great Masters that it should exhibit human beings
engaged in some earnest struggle, certain outward aspects
of which may possibly be a spectacle for the amusement
of idlers, but which in itself is for the study and
the sympathy of those who are struggling themselves.
A Drama, he feels, should not aim at the inculcation
of any definite maxim; the moral of it lies in the
action and the character. It must be drawn out
of them by the heart and experience of the reader,
not forced upon him by the author. The men and
women whom he presents are not to be his spokesmen;
they are to utter themselves freely in such language,
grave or mirthful, as best expresses what they feel
and what they are. The age to which they belong
is not to be contemplated as if it were apart from
us; neither is it to be measured by our rules; to be
held up as a model; to be condemned for its strangeness.
The passions which worked in it must be those which
are working in ourselves. To the same eternal
laws and principles are we, and it, amenable.
By beholding these a poet is to raise himself, and
may hope to raise his readers, above antiquarian tastes
and modern conventions. The unity of the play
cannot be conferred upon it by any artificial arrangements;
it must depend upon the relation of the different
persons and events to the central subject. No
nice adjustments of success and failure to right and
wrong must constitute its poetical justice; the conscience
of the readers must be satisfied in some deeper way
than this, that there is an order in the universe,
and that the poet has perceived and asserted it.
Long before these principles were
reduced into formal canons of orthodoxy, even while
they encountered the strong opposition of critics,
they were unconsciously recognised by Englishmen as
sound and national. Yet I question whether a
clergyman writing in conformity with them might not
have incurred censure in former times, and may not
incur it now. The privilege of expressing his
own thoughts, sufferings, sympathies, in any form of
verse is easily conceded to him; if he liked to use
a dialogue instead of a monologue, for the purpose
of enforcing a duty, or illustrating a doctrine, no
one would find fault with him; if he produced an actual
Drama for the purpose of defending or denouncing a
particular character, or period, or system of opinions,
the compliments of one party might console him for
the abuse or contempt of another.
But it seems to be supposed that he
is bound to keep in view one or other of these ends:
to divest himself of his own individuality that he
may enter into the working of other spirits; to lay
aside the authority which pronounces one opinion,
or one habit of mind, to be right and another wrong,
that he may exhibit them in their actual strife; to
deal with questions, not in an abstract shape, but
mixed up with the affections, passions, relations
of human creatures, is a course which must lead him,
it is thought, into a great forgetfulness of his office,
and of all that is involved in it.
No one can have less interest than
I have in claiming poetical privileges for the clergy;
and no one, I believe, is more thoroughly convinced
that the standard which society prescribes for us,
and to which we ordinarily conform ourselves, instead
of being too severe and lofty, is far too secular
and grovelling. But I apprehend the limitations
of this kind which are imposed upon us are themselves
exceedingly secular, betokening an entire misconception
of the nature of our work, proceeding from maxims
and habits which tend to make it utterly insignificant
and abortive. If a man confines himself to the
utterance of his own experiences, those experiences
are likely to become every day more narrow and less
real. If he confines himself to the defence
of certain propositions, he is sure gradually to lose
all sense of the connection between those propositions
and his own life, or the life of man. In either
case he becomes utterly ineffectual as a teacher.
Those whose education and character are different
from his own, whose processes of mind have therefore
been different, are utterly unintelligible to him.
Even a cordial desire for sympathy is not able to break
through the prickly hedge of habits, notions, and
technicalities which separates them. Oftentimes
the desire itself is extinguished in those who ought
to cherish it most, by the fear of meeting with something
portentous or dangerous. Nor can he defend a
dogma better than he communes with men; for he knows
not that which attacks it. He supposes it to
be a set of book arguments, whereas it is something
lying very deep in the heart of the disputant, into
which he has never penetrated.
Hence there is a general complaint
that we ’are ignorant of the thoughts and feelings
of our contemporaries’; most attribute this to
a fear of looking below the surface, lest we should
find hollowness within; many like to have it so, because
they have thus an excuse for despising us. But
surely such an ignorance is more inexcusable in us,
than in the priests of any nation: we, less than
any, are kept from the sun and air; our discipline
is less than any contrived merely to make us acquainted
with the commonplaces of divinity. We are enabled,
nay, obliged, from our youth upwards, to mix with
people of our own age, who are destined for all occupations
and modes of life; to share in their studies, their
enjoyments, their perplexities, their temptations.
Experience, often so dearly bought, is surely not
meant to be thrown away: whether it has been
obtained without the sacrifice of that which is most
precious, or whether the lost blessing has been restored
twofold, and good is understood, not only as the opposite
of evil, but as the deliverance from it, we cannot
be meant to forget all that we have been learning.
The teachers of other nations may reasonably mock
us, as having less of direct book-lore than themselves;
they should not be able to say, that we are without
the compensation of knowing a little more of living
creatures.
A clergyman, it seems to me, should
be better able than other men to cast aside that which
is merely accidental, either in his own character,
or in the character of the age to which he belongs,
and to apprehend that which is essential and eternal.
His acceptance of fixed creeds, which belong as much
to one generation as another, and which have survived
amid all changes and convulsions, should raise him
especially above the temptation to exalt the fashion
of his own time, or of any past one; above the affectation
of the obsolete, above slavery to the present, and
above that strange mixture of both which some display,
who weep because the beautiful visions of the Past
are departed, and admire themselves for being able
to weep over them and dispense with them.
His reverence for the Bible should make him feel
that we most realise our own personality when we most
connect it with that of our fellow-men; that acts are
not to be contemplated apart from the actor; that
more of what is acceptable to the God of Truth may
come forth in men striving with infinite confusion,
and often uttering words like the east-wind, than in
those who can discourse calmly and eloquently about
a righteousness and mercy, which they know only by
hearsay. The belief which a minister of God
has in the eternity of the distinction between right
and wrong should especially dispose him to recognise
that distinction apart from mere circumstance and
opinion. The confidence which he must have that
the life of each man, and the life of this world,
is a drama, in which a perfectly Good and True Being
is unveiling His own purposes, and carrying on a conflict
with evil, which must issue in complete victory, should
make him eager to discover in every portion of history,
in every biography, a divine ‘Morality’
and ’Mystery’ a morality, though
it deals with no abstract personages a
mystery, though the subject of it be the doings of
the most secular men.
The subject of this Play is certainly
a dangerous one, it suggests questions which are deeply
interesting at the present time. It involves
the whole character and spirit of the Middle Ages.
A person who had not an enthusiastic admiration for
the character of Elizabeth would not be worthy to
speak of her; it seems to me, that he would be still
less worthy, if he did not admire far more fervently
that ideal of the female character which God has established,
and not man which she imperfectly realised which
often exhibited itself in her in spite of her own more
confused, though apparently more lofty, ideal; which
may be manifested more simply, and therefore more
perfectly, in the England of the nineteenth century,
than in the Germany of the thirteenth. To enter
into the meaning of self-sacrifice to sympathise
with any one who aims at it not to be misled
by counterfeits of it not to be unjust
to the truth which may be mixed with those counterfeits is
a difficult task, but a necessary one for any one
who takes this work in hand. How far our author
has attained these ends, others must decide.
I am sure that he will not have failed from forgetting
them. He has, I believe, faithfully studied all
the documents of the period within his reach, making
little use of modern narratives; he has meditated
upon the past in its connection with the present;
has never allowed his reading to become dry by disconnecting
it with what he has seen and felt, or made his partial
experiences a measure for the acts which they help
him to understand. He has entered upon his work
at least in a true and faithful spirit, not regarding
it as an amusement for leisure hours, but as something
to be done seriously, if done at all; as if he was
as much ’under the Great Taskmaster’s
eye’ in this as in any other duty of his calling.
In certain passages and scenes he seemed to me to
have been a little too bold for the taste and temper
of this age. But having written them deliberately,
from a conviction that morality is in peril from fastidiousness,
and that it is not safe to look at questions which
are really agitating people’s hearts merely from
the outside he has, and I believe rightly,
retained what I should from cowardice have wished
him to exclude. I have no doubt, that any one
who wins a victory over the fear of opinion, and especially
over the opinion of the religious world, strengthens
his own moral character, and acquires a greater fitness
for his high service.
Whether Poetry is again to revive
among us, or whether the power is to be wholly stifled
by our accurate notions about the laws and conditions
under which it is to be exercised, is a question upon
which there is room for great differences of opinion.
Judging from the past, I should suppose that till
Poetry becomes less self-conscious, less self-concentrated,
more dramatical in spirit, if not in form,
it will not have the qualities which can powerfully
affect Englishmen. Not only were the Poets of
our most national age dramatists, but there seems
an evident dramatical tendency in those who wrote
what we are wont to call narrative, or epic, poems.
Take away the dramatic faculty from Chaucer, and
the Canterbury Tales become indeed, what they have
been most untruly called, mere versions of French
or Italian Fables. Milton may have been right
in changing the form of the Paradise Lost, we
are bound to believe that he was right; for what appeal
can there be against his genius? But he could
not destroy the essentially dramatic character of a
work which sets forth the battle between good and evil,
and the Will of Man at once the Theatre and the Prize
of the conflict. Is it not true, that there
is in the very substance of the English mind, that
which naturally predisposes us to sympathy with the
Drama, and this though we are perhaps the most untheatrical
of all people? The love of action, the impatience
of abstraction, the equity which leads us to desire
that every one may have a fair hearing, the reserve
which had rather detect personal experience than have
it announced tendencies all easily perverted
to evil, often leading to results the most contradictory,
yet capable of the noblest cultivation seem
to explain the fact, that writers of this kind should
have flourished so greatly among us, and that scarcely
any others should permanently interest us.
These remarks do not concern poetical
literature alone, or chiefly. Those habits of
mind, of which I have spoken, ought to make us the
best historians. If Germany has a right
to claim the whole realm of the abstract, if Frenchmen
understand the framework of society better than we
do, there is in the national dramas of Shakespeare
an historical secret, which neither the philosophy
of the one nor the acute observation of the other
can discover. Yet these dramas are almost the
only satisfactory expression of that historical faculty
which I believe is latent in us. The zeal of
our factions, a result of our national activity, has
made earnest history dishonest: our English
justice has fled to indifferent and sceptical writers
for the impartiality which it sought in vain elsewhere.
This resource has failed, the indifferentism
of Hume could not secure him against his Scotch prejudices,
or against gross unfairness when anything disagreeably
positive and vehement came in his way. Moreover,
a practical people demand movement and life, not mere
judging and balancing. For a time there was
a reaction in favour of party history, but it could
not last long; already we are glad to seek in Ranke
or Michelet that which seems denied us at home.
Much, no doubt, may be gained from such sources;
but I am convinced that this is not the produce
which we are meant generally to import; for this we
may trust to well-directed native industry. The
time is, I hope, at hand, when those who are most
in earnest will feel that therefore they are most
bound to be just when they will confess
the exceeding wickedness of the desire to distort or
suppress a fact, or misrepresent a character when
they will ask as solemnly to be delivered from the
temptation to this, as to any crime which is punished
by law.
The clergy ought especially to lead
the way in this reformation. They have erred
grievously in perverting history to their own purposes.
What was a sin in others was in them a blasphemy,
because they professed to acknowledge God as the Ruler
of the world, and hereby they showed that they valued
their own conclusions above the facts which reveal
His order. They owe, therefore, a great amende
to their country, and they should consider seriously
how they can make it most effectually. I look
upon this Play as an effort in this direction, which
I trust may be followed by many more. On this
ground alone, even if its poetical worth was less than
I believe it is, I should, as a clergyman, be thankful
for its publication.
F. D. M.