Dr. Faustus: A Renaissance Man of Conflict
The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus, commonly referred to simply Doctor Faustus, is an Elizabethan Drama, based on German stories about the title character ‘Faust’. It was probably written in 1592 or 1593, shortly before Marlowe’s death. This drama entails and surrounds the protagonist’s tragic transformation after his major downfall as a tragic hero because he was blinded by the greediness of learning more to achieve the pleasures of wealth and power. The man of scholar has been incapable to have a scholarly vision towards his mischievous course of action.
Conflict is an essential part of a tragedy or a drama as it heightens the effect of the surrounding plot of a drama. Marlowe’s Dr. Faustus represents the conflict between the internal and external and as well the conflict between the Renaissance and the Reformation. Dr. Faustus is the consummation of morality and tragedy and hence, the play portrays the conflict which is pulled by the forces of good and evil. Marlowe is a dramatist of fiery poetic imagination where the characters were personified abstractions of vice or virtues.
In the play, Dr. Faustus, the conflicting status of the protagonist compels him to struggle between hell and grace for conquest in his breast. He is a split character: his conscious self represents the spirit of the Renaissance while his subconscious clings to the principles of the Reformation, that is, the old Christian principles. As a Renaissance man, the passionate desire to learn more and enlighten has deviated his mind towards the study of necromancy, which has been responsible or the sole cause of the tragedy in his life. Magic has ravished his mind as it provides him the omnipotent power to be the super lordship of the world.
From the initial pages of the story, there is an introduction to conflict as symbolized through the constant appearance of Good Angel and Bad Angel. The Bargaining scene is also significant for the conflicts as the blood was congealed during the divine deal between hell and mortal beings. As soon as the pact has been signed and Mephistophilis has become his serviceman, the Renaissance fervor in Faustus declines and the element of Reformation becomes active. Thus, the conflicting mind of Dr. Faustus revolves in and around evil and good, right and wrong, and the hard realities of his realization that he has put himself in the doomed space as a trapped soul. His greed for more knowledge and power has brought in his life a tragic end to his desires and scholarly existence. His soul has been sold to receive supernatural pleasures; however, this pleasure has been experienced at the cost of his tragic end which he realized and repented too late at the end. He remembers God and Christ but Devil twists his tongue, he would weep tears of blood but Devil turns him back. He would revolt against the Devils too late but Mephistophilis threatens to tear him to pieces if he fails to honor the pledge made to Lucifer.
Dr. Faustus struggles to find a moral space due to his immoral decisions and he desperately tries to avoid the snares of death and damnation. The greed and power came at the expense of his sacrifice which couldn’t notice with his excited mind. This conflicting status of his mind is a psychological or spiritual conflict as he was going through the dilemma of damnation and salvation, struggling between his will and conscience. This has been symbolized by Good Angel and Bad Angel. In Act II, Scene 1, there are some instances of his repentance which are as the prick of conscience, a tussle between will and conscience, good and evil, heaven and hell:
Now, Faustus, must thou need be damned.
And canst thou not be saved.
What boots it, then, to think of God or heaven?
Away with such vain fancies, and despair.
Despair in God, and trust in Belzebub.
Nay, go not backward, no Faustus be resolute:
O, something soundeth in mine ears.
“Abjure this magic, turn to God against?”
As the act V starts and where old man appears as a symbol of good and divine in him, bursts out before him and an acute mental tension is revealed:
“Where art thou Faustus, wretch
what hast thou done.
Damnd art thou, Faustus, damn’d;
despair and die!”
“Sweet Helen, make me immortal
with a kiss.
Her lips suck forth my soul: see
where it flies!
Come, Helen, come, give me my soul
again:
Here will I dwell, for heaven is
in those lips.
And all is dross that is not
Helena.”
“Stand still, you every moving
spheres of heaven.
That time may cease, and mid night
never come.
Fair nature’s eye, rise
again.
Mountains and hills, come, come
and fall on me.
Ugly hell, gape not; come not,
Lucifer!
I’ll burn my books! Ah,
Mephistophilis!
It's really noteworthy, and helped me a lot!
ReplyDelete