"Eleaz. Mendoza sweats to wear Spain's diadem, Philip hath sworn confusion to this realm, They both are up in arms; war's flames do shine Look well on Eleazar!—Value me, Not by my sun-burnt cheeks, nor by my birth, Which I have sacrific'd in Spain's defence. Then look on Philip and the Cardinal!— Cries likewise 'Fire and blood!'-I'll quench those Rod. Lay by these ambages! What seeks the Moor? The reader will be reminded of Coriolanus' sovereign contempt of "the tag," in perusing Eleazar's proud vaunt of the divinity of a hero. "Eleaz. to Queen. Are these your fears? Thus blow I rush'd amongst the thickest of their crowds, * Monsters would be better both for sense and rhythm. And by the magic of true eloquence In a very spirited style is likewise the whole of the first scene *, Act V. Faustus is well censured by Hazlitt, who esteems it, on the whole, as Marlow's greatest work. "Faustus himself is a rude sketch, but it is a gigantic one. As the outline of the character is grand and daring, the execution is abrupt and fearful. The thoughts are vast and irregular, and the style halts and staggers under them with uneasy steps." Milton may have had in his eye the following passages : "Faustus to the Damon. Where are you damn'd? Mephistophiles. In Hell. Faust. How comes it then that thou art out of Hell? Mephis. Why this is hell, nor am I out of it.Think'st thou that I who saw the face of God, And tasted the eternal joys of Heaven, * Most ludicrously divided into three by the editor of " Old English Plays," 6 vols. 8vo. 1814. Am not tormented by a thousand Hells Hell hath no limits, nor is circumscrib'd These are noble lines-Lord Byron's obligations to them in his “Manfred” have been noted. — The last hour of Faustus' life is spent in such mental torture, as "thicks the" reader's "blood with cold."-" It is indeed an agony and fearful colluctation." " (The clock strikes eleven.) The stars move still-time runs the clock will strikeThe devil will come, and Faustus must be damned.Oh! I'll leap up to Heaven! - Who pulls me down? (Distractly) See where Christ's blood streams in the firmament! One drop of blood will save me.-Oh! my Christ- Rend not my heart for naming of my Christ! Mountains and hills! come, come and fall on me, (The clock chimes the half hour.) Oh! half the hour is past, 'twill all be past anon.- % Curs'd be the parents that engendered me- (The clock strikes twelve.) It strikes! it strikes!-Now, body! turn to air, (Thunder.) Enter DÆMONS. Oh! mercy, Heaven! look not so fierce on me! (Rolling thunder.) [They all disappear. The foregoing horrible picture demands such a relief as will gently lead the shaken mind to a calmer region, and hush it into a meek-eyed * In these extracts I have ventured on one or two trifling emendations, which were much needed. A tolerably correct edition of the plays of Marlow, Thomas Heywood, Chapman, Decker, &c. &c. would be a real blessing. It is not possible to exceed the blunders committed or disregarded in the "Old English Plays," on which work an acute critique appeared in the Monthly Review, N. S. vol. lxxv. p. 225. |