THE MYSTERY PLAY
(Continued)
As regards the aesthetic side of this drama,
modern standards should not be applied. This theatre does not even offer
unity of action, for the scenes are not derived from one another: they
succeed one another without any other unity than the interest which attaches
to the chief personage and the general idea of eternal salvation, whether
of a single man or of humanity, which constitutes the common foundation
of the picture. Moreover, side by side with pathetic and exalted scenes
are found others which savour of buffoonery. The plays used as many as
one, two, and even five hundred characters, not counting the chorus, and
they were so long that they could not be played on one occasion. This
is true at least of the mysteries dating from the middle of the fifteenth
century; on the other hand, the oldest of them and the miracles were rather
short.
Two faults have at every period characterized
this dramatic style--weakness and wordiness. The poets said things as
they occurred to them, without display of selection, gradation, or taste.
They had facility, but they abused it and never amended. Furthermore,
in the drawing of character there was no art whatever. The dramas of the
Middle Ages are simply grand and animated spectacles. Doubtless their
authors sometimes, though rarely, succeeded in fittingly depicting the
patience and meekness of the august Victim of the Passion. In this they
were assisted by recollections of the Gospel. More often they succeeded
in attractively interpreting the complex emotions experienced by the soul
of the Blessed Virgin, but as a definite object the analysis of the soul
did not occupy them at all.
A few words may be said as to the manner of
representation and technic. Places were indicated by vast scenery, rather
than really represented. Two or three trees, for example, represented
a forest, and although the action often changed from place to place the
scenery did not change, for it showed simultaneously all the various localities
where the characters successively appeared in the course of the drama,
and which were thus in close proximity, even though in reality they were
often far removed from each other. For the rest nothing was neglected
to attract the eye. If the scenery was immovable, it was very rich and
secrets of theoretical mechanism often produced surprising and fairy-like
effects. The actors were richly dressed, each defrayed the cost of his
own costume and looked more for beauty than for truth. The subject-matter
admitted of the marvelous and was borrowed from religion. For the rest
there was some difference between the miracles and the mysteries. The
miracles emphasized the supernatural intervention of a saint or the Blessed
Virgin the events might be infinitely varied, and this afforded the authors
a wide field of which, however, they did not take full advantage, though
they incidentally supply us a host of details regarding the manners of
the times which are not found elsewhere.
The mysteries, at least in the Old and New Testament
cycles, followed a previously traced out path from which they could with
difficulty depart since the foundation was borrowed from Holy Scripture.
The traditional doctrine and the august characters of the chief personages
had to be respected. But, to offset this handicap, what exalted, dramatic,
and affecting subjects were theirs! These poets recalled not only the
events of this world, but depicted before their audience the terrors and
the hopes of the next. They set forth at the same time heaven, earth,
and hell, and this enormous subject gave occasion for scenes of powerful
interest. The scenes of the Passion are surely the most wonderful the
most moving, and the most beautiful that can be enacted on earth. The
poet lacked art, but he was saved by his subject, as Sainte-Beuve himself
has observed, and from time to time he became sublime despite himself.
And what the spectator saw represented was not fiction, but the holy realities
which from his childhood he had learned to venerate. What was put before
his eyes was most calculated to affect him, the doctrines of his faith
the consolations it afforded in the sorrows of this life, and the immortal
joys it promised in the next. Hence the great success of these religious
performances.
The greatest celebration a city could indulge
in on a solemn occasion was to play the Passion. On this occasion the
entire populace crowded into the enormous theatre, the city was deserted,
and it was necessary to organize bands of armed citizens to protect the
deserted houses against robbery. This custom endured until 1548, when
the Parliament of Paris forbade the Confreres de la Passion to play thenceforth
"the Sacred mysteries". The prohibition was due to the opposition
of the Protestants against the mixing of comedy and fabulous traditions
with Biblical teachings. These attacks aroused the scruples of some Catholics,
and the judiciary considered it time to interfere. The mysteries perished;
for the example of Paris, where they were forbidden to be played, was
by degrees followed by the provinces Thus the religious drama of the Middle
Ages disappeared in France at the height of its success.
|
What's in a name. |
MEDIEVAL CHURCH PLAYS |
The Old, the New & the Saints |
Aesthetic Representation and Technic. |
Waylaid |
Mystery Plays in England. |
Coventry’s medieval mystery plays. |
Your in good company |
Chester Plays |
Towneley Mysteries |
Oberammergau passion play |
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