The Saint's Tragedy. Charles Kingsley

The Saint's Tragedy - Charles Kingsley


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       Charles Kingsley

      The Saint's Tragedy

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066229023

       PREFACE BY THE REV. F. D. MAURICE, M.A. (1848)

       INTRODUCTION

       CHARACTERS

       PROEM

       ACT I

       SCENE I. A.D. 1220

       SCENE II

       SCENE III

       SCENE IV

       ACT II

       SCENE I. A.D. 1221-27

       SCENE II

       SCENE III

       SCENE IV

       SCENE V

       SCENE VI

       SCENE VII

       SCENE VIII

       SCENE IX

       SCENE X

       ACT III

       SCENE I

       SCENE II

       SCENE III

       SCENE IV

       ACT IV

       SCENE I

       SCENE II

       SCENE III

       SCENE IV

       ACT V

       SCENE I. A.D. 1235.

       SCENE II

       SCENE III

       NOTES TO ACT 1

       NOTES TO ACT II

       NOTES TO ACT III.

       NOTES TO ACT IV

       Table of Contents

      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


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