Doctor Faustus` Death
Faustus died a death that few could bear to imagine, much less
experience. After
knowing for many years when exactly he would die, he
reached the stroke of the
hour of his destiny in a cowardly, horrid demeanor.
Finally, when the devils
appeared at the stroke of midnight, tearing at his
flesh as they draw him into
his eternal torment, he screams for mercy without
a soul, not even God Himself,
to help him. However, what to consider Doctor
John Faustus from Christopher
Marlow's dramatic masterpiece The Tragical
History of the Life and Death of
Doctor Faustus is a very debatable
issue. For example, one can see that he threw
his life away for the sake of
knowledge, becoming obsessed with the knowledge
that he could possess. In
this case, he is unarguably a medieval tragic hero.
However, when
considering the fact that he died for the sake of gaining
knowledge, pushing
the limits of what is possible in spite of obvious
limitations and,
eventually, paying the ultimate penalty, he could be considered
a Renaissance
martyr. These two points of view have their obvious differences,
and
depending on from what time period one chooses to place this piece
of
literature varies the way that the play is viewed. However, the idea
of
considering him a martyr has many flaws, several of which are evident
when
considering who Faustus was before he turned to necromancy and what he
did once
he obtained the powers of the universe. Therefore, inevitably, the
audience in
this play should realize that Faustus was a great man who did
many great things,
but because of his hubris and his lack of vision, he died
the most tragic of
heroes. Christopher Marlowe was borne on February 6, 1564
(Discovering
Christopher Marlowe 2), in Canterbury, England, and baptized
at St. George's
Church on the 26th of the same month, exactly two months
before William
Shakespeare was baptized at Stratford-upon-Avon (Henderson
275). He was the
eldest son of John Marlowe of the Shoemaker's Guild and
Katherine Arthur, a
Dover girl of yeoman stock (Henderson 275). Upon
graduating King's School,
Canterbury, he received a six-year scholarship
to Cambridge upon the condition
that he studies for the church. He went to
Cambridge, but had to be reviewed by
the Privy Council before the university
could award him his M.A. degree because
of his supposed abandonment of going
to church. He was awarded his degree in
July of 1587 at the age of
twenty-three after the Privy Council had convinced
Cambridge authorities
that he had "behaved himself orderly and discreetly
whereby he had done Her
Majesty good service" (Henderson 276). After this,
he completed his education
from Cambridge over a period of six years. During
this time he wrote some
plays, including Hero and Leander, along with
translating others, such as
Ovid's Amores and Book I of Lucan's Pharsalia
(Henderson 276). During the
next five years he lived in London where he wrote
and produced some of his
plays and traveled a great deal on government
commissions, something that he
had done while trying to earn his M.A. degree. In
1589, however, he was
imprisoned for taking part in a street fight in which a
man was killed; later
he was discharged with a warning to keep the peace
(Henderson 276). He failed
to do so; three years later he was summoned to court
for assaulting two
Shoreditch constables, although there is no knowledge on
whether or not he
answered these charges (Henderson 276). Later Marlowe was
suspected of being
involved in the siege of Roven where troops were sent to
contain some
Protestants who were causing unrest in spite of the Catholic
League.
Then, after sharing a room with a fellow writer Thomas Kyd, he was
accused by
Kyd for having heretical papers which "denied the deity of Jesus
Christ"
(Discovering Christopher Marlowe 2). Finally, a certain Richard
Baines
accused him of being an atheist. Before he could answer any of these
charges,
however, he was violently stabbed above his right eye while in a
fight
Ingram Frizer (Discovering Christopher Marlowe 2). Doctor Faustus
could be
considered one of Marlowe's masterpieces of drama. It was his turn
from
politics, which he established himself in with his plays Edward II
and
Tamburlaine the Great, to principalities and power. In it he asks the
reader to
analyze what the limits are for human power and knowledge and
ponder what would
happen if one man tried to exceed those limits. The play
opens up with Faustus,
who is supposedly the most learned man in the world,
talking about how he has
mastered every field of knowledge known to man. He
is bored with theology,
finding that man is doomed no matter what happens,
and he has become a master
physician, curing a whole village of a plague. He
feels that there is nothing
left for him to learn, as is frustrated by this;
therefore, he decides to delve
into the realm of necromancy and magic. He
calls upon two other magicians,
Valdes and Cornelius, to teach him how to
conjure. He learns to do so, and upon
his first private experiment into the
black art, Mephistophilis appears to him
in the form of an ugly devil. This
repulses Faustus, so he tells this devil to
go away and return as a friar.
The devil does so, but then explains that it was
not his conjuring that
brought forth this devil, but the fact that he conjured
and, therefore,
cursed the trinity that made him appear. Faustus realizes the
amount of power
that he can gain from being a necromancer, so he tells
Mephistophilis to
return to hell and tell Satan that he will sell his soul to
him for
twenty-four years of absolute power. Satan agrees to this,
telling
Faustus to sign the bargain in blood. Faustus does so even after
a Good Angel
appears to him trying to convince him not to do so and several
omens appear
which warn him not to make the bond. For the next twenty-four
years Faustus,
with Mephistophilis as his servant, has absolute power.
However, in spite of
this, he spends his time going to several different
important places to display
his power in the form of petty tricks. In Rome,
Faustus turns himself invisible
and, along with Mephistophilis, pokes fun at
the Pope and some friars. He also
goes to the German court where he shows of
his power to Emperor Carolus by
conjuring the ghost of Alexander the Great.
When one knight is sarcastic with
Faustus' tricks, he places a set of
horns on his head. Later on, Faustus sells
his horse to a horse-courser on
the condition that he not take the horse into
water. Soon thereafter, the
horse-courser returns, furious that his horse turned
into a bundle of hay in
the middle of the lake. Finally, later on in the play,
Faustus conjures
up Helen of Troy for some fellow scholars for their viewing
pleasure. As the
play draws to its climax, Faustus begins to realize what he has
done and that
death, which he once thought didn't exist, is indeed his ultimate
destiny.
Several times he is given the hint that he should repent to God. For
example,
an old man enters towards the end of the play and informs Faustus that
it
isn't too late to repent because he himself was once a sinner but
repented.
Faustus still doesn't listen. Finally, as the clock strikes
twelve upon his hour
of destiny, many ugly devils appear and drag him off as
he finally screams for
mercy. After finishing reading or seeing this play,
one can argue that Faustus
was a Renaissance hero. In fact, some argue that
this play epitomizes the ideals
of the Renaissance: egocentrism and the
over-indulgence of knowledge. "The
lust for power that led to the excess of
the Renaissance-the slaughter of
Montezuma and countless American
Indians, the launching of the Armada, the very
creation of the English Church
out of Henry's spleen-is epitomized in Dr.
Faustus" (Shipley 404).
Because Faustus gave his life and soul to Satan
himself for the sake of
gaining a greater knowledge is proof that he is a
Renaissance hero. He
rebels against the limitations set forth by medieval ideals
and makes a
contract for knowledge and power. In essence, Faustus, like every
other
Renaissance man, tries to prove that man can rise above the current set
of
limitations. Faustus does go to extremes by chancing damnation in order to
gain
his knowledge; however, he is considered tragic and God himself is seen
as the
bad guy because He set forth limitations on knowledge and makes man
suffer
eternal damnation when trying to exceed those limitations. The comedy
then comes
out when one thinks that man was created by God and, therefore,
given his thirst
for knowledge by God. When he tries to gain knowledge, then,
he is damned
forever. This divine comedy is one of the ironies that one can
perceive in
Marlowe's play. However, this Renaissance view of Marlowe
being a martyr much
less realistic when considering Faustus to be a medieval
tragic hero. In fact,
for the very reasons that one can argue that Faustus is
martyr, one can give
strong evidence that he fell from grace and became a
tragic hero. First of all,
the Faustus claims that he is a master in all
fields of study. In medicine, his
"[prescriptions are] hung up like monuments
/ Whereby whole cities have
escaped the plague" (1.1.20-21). He is bored with
the study of law for
"this study fits a mercenary drudge / Who aims at
nothing but external
trash, / Too servile and illiberal to me" (1.1.34-36).
With theology,
Faustus claims that he is dumbfounded by the loose
translation of the quote from
Romans 6:23, "For the wages of sin is
death." This final area is where
the irony is greatly seen in the play.
Throughout the play, Faustus is given the
option to repent for these sins and
turn back towards God. When the Good Angel
and the Bad Angel appear to him
throughout the play, both sides try to persuade
Faustus that they are
right. The Bad Angel tells Faustus about how he should
delve into necromancy,
for this art is "wherein all nature's treasury is
contained" (1.1.75). The
Good Angel, on the other hand, warns that by
dealing with magic, he would ask
for "God's heavy wrath upon thy head"
(1.1.72). At first, Faustus is so eager
to gain this knowledge from Satan that
he ignores the Good Angel. Later, when
the Good Angel appears again and pleads
for him to think on heavenly things,
but again Faustus, either because he
doesn't want to or is afraid to, ignores
this angel. The irony comes from
Faustus' view on the statement from the
Book of Romans mentioned above. Faustus
only recalls the first half of the
verse; the entire verse states, "For the
wages of sin is death, but the gift
of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ
our Lord." His oversight of this
pivotal verse, which in itself is the
center for Christianity, is the
ultimate irony in his downfall. He refu
Secondly, Faustus originally asks
Mephistophilis and Satan for the power to do
anything, "be it to make the
moon drop from her sphere / Or the ocean to
overwhelm the world" (1.3.38-39).
He is even promised this power for
twenty-four years if he sells his soul to
Satan. However, when he is given his
extraordinary power, he resorts to using
it for petty tricks and tomfoolery.
Originally, Faustus gained this power
in order to learn more about the essential
nature of the universe. However,
when he travels to Rome, he doesn't try to use
his power in this way; he
becomes invisible, boxes the pope in the ear and
snatches cups away from the
pope's hands. He then causes fireworks to explode at
the feet of the
cardinals and the pope. Finally, he returns with Mephistophilis,
both dressed
as cardinals, and poses as two fathers returning from a mission.
All of
this is pure slapstick comedy to the audience; it is also comedy
against
Faustus. He is given great powers, and resorts to using them for
petty tricks.
He does the same thing later on, while at the German Court
and Emperor Carolus
the Fifth, where he makes the ghost of Alexander the
Great appear and where he
also makes the horns appear atop the head of the
knight, Benvolio. He then shows
how his one-time thirst for the secrets of
the universe become overshadowed by
his simple lustful fantasies when he
conjures up Helen of Troy and then, once he
is faced by the old man and his
warnings, exits with this legendary beauty. Not
only is he blinded so much by
his power that he resorts to simple tricks, but he
is reduced to the
indulgence of his simple pleasures. Through these displays of
his necromantic
powers Faustus shows the true tragedy of his character. Finally,
and probably
his most tragic flaw, is the fact that he tries to gain a knowledge
that is
completely forbidden to him. Although the Renaissance view says that
from the
search of such forbidden power one become mighty and truly great,
the
medieval view says that there are certain limits for man and he should
never try
to break those limits. In nature, each and every thing obeys a
certain order
that God Himself set. First there is God, then the angels, then
man, then
animals, and finally inanimate objects. If man tries to sink lower
into the
realm of the animal, which implies trying to succumb to man's
animalistic lusts
and tendencies, one is seen as succumbing to the "id"
personality, as
called by Sigmund Freud. Then, on the other end of the
spectrum, one can try to
become more become superhuman, attempting to break
the limits of man. Lucifer
was once of the most beautiful angels until he was
guilty of "aspiring
pride and insolence / For which God threw him from the
face of heaven"
(1.3.68-69). Faustus thinks that he can become like God by
gaining these great
powers; little does he know that he is damning himself to
eternal torment. Even
when his final seconds are approaching, he tries to
break the limitation that,
since time began, man has tried to circumvent:
time itself. Although he was
given all of the power of the universe, he was
ironically not given the power to
halt time, and as he is about to meet his
destiny, more time is all he can ask
for so that he can repent for his sins:
Stand still, you ever-moving spheres of
heaven, That time may cease and
midnight never come; Fair Nature's eye, rise,
rise again, and make Perpetual
day; or let this hour be but A year, a month, a
week, a natural day, That
Faustus may repent and save his soul! O lente lente
currite noctis equi
(5.3.133-139). This last line, meaning "Slowly, slowly
run, O horses of the
night," sums up Faustus' desperation and tragic nature
very thoroughly. Once
he didn't believe in death or in hell; sadly, now he
realizes that those two
things are the only reality he will have from then on.
Over time, this
play has received many critiques. In fact, there is question on
whether or
not Marlowe actually wrote this play in its entirety. One critic says
that
"this drama should be regarded as a skeletal structure of the play
written by
Marlowe, for the surviving manuscripts are so interspersed with comic
scenes
and the lines themselves are so often revised according to whims of
the
actors that the original writing must be culled out of the
surviving
version" ("Dr. Faustus" 261). This same author, when
thinking
along the same lines as the above quote, says, "the exploits of
Faustus are
frequently rendered pure low comedy" ("Dr. Faustus" 261).
From
this he concluded that these parts weren't written at all by Marlowe.
Although
this may be true, as the stylistic differences between the comical
and the
serious scenes is very broad, drawing this conclusion from the fact
that the
slapstick comedy that Faustus and Mephistophilis exhibit together is
of a much
different tone from the rest of the play is preposterous. In my
opinion, Marlowe
included these scenes and these obvious examples of comedy
to show the true
tragedy of Faustus. He begins the play as a great man who is
a master in every
field of knowledge known to man. The best way to represent
his truly dramatic
turn-around is to show Faustus becoming involved in petty
tricks and antics to
show of his incredible power. This true tragedy is, I
believe, a step that
Marlowe consciously took in order to show the
dramatic change in the character
of Faustus. I am not saying that someone
else besides Marlowe couldn't have
written these scenes. However, when
looking at the debate from this point of
view, it is very possible that
Marlowe did write them intentionally to show the
dramatic change in Doctor
Faustus. Faustus was indeed a tragic hero. Many
scholars and literary experts
may debate that, because this play was written in
the Renaissance,
Christopher Marlowe intended that Doctor Faustus be seen as a
martyr trying
to attain that which was forbidden to man in a time when doing so
was the
noble thing to do. This is not true, however. Doctor Faustus was a
tragic
hero through and through, and the way that he presents himself in the
play is
solid evidence for this. To begin with, he feels that he can justify
his
turning to witchcraft and necromancy by his gaining of all other
knowledges. The
irony here is that he never did, or he would have realized
that even after he
had committed blasphemy by conjuring spirits, he could
have turned back to God.
He also is a tragic hero because of his methods
of using his new power. Instead
of using it to attain the secrets of the
universe, he plays petty tricks and
tomfoolery on various important people
around the world, including the pope and
the German emperor. Finally, he
proved his tragic nature by trying to move above
and beyond the limitations
set by God himself. Faustus knew that he had to abide
by certain laws and
rules that God set aside for all of mankind. Faustus knew
his limitations,
and thus by trying to break those, he damned himself to eternal
torment.
Ironically, Faustus could have been the most incredible human being who
ever
lived. If he had repented, the world would have seen that God is
truly
merciful because he forgave such a blasphemous heathen as Faustus.
Faustus could
have become an example for all of mankind and proven that if he
could be
forgiven, then all could be forgiven. However, because he was
stubborn,
ignorant, and blind, he refused to see that he was never truly
damned until he
was drug by the devils into the heart of hell itself.