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Title: Marlowe


1
Marlowes Doctor FaustusDay One
  • ENGL 203
  • Dr. Fike

2
Comments on Response Papers
  • Do not leave your response papers until the last
    possible minute.
  • Focus Say more about less material.
  • Focus critical question doable paper.
  • Example of a good focus the Pardoner and the
    Host.
  • Example of a good critical question Why is the
    Host so angry at the Pardoner?
  • A thesis is just one sentence it contains and is
    about the focused topic.
  • Underline your thesis.
  • If something is in the thesis, the body of the
    paper must support it.
  • Do not underline or italicize your title.
  • Do not begin with all previous thought (Since
    the beginning of time).
  • Do not summarize the plot.
  • Do not start a paragraph with a fact about an
    event or with a quotation.
  • Do not use contractions.
  • Do not set off quotations that consist of 3 or
    fewer lines of poetry. Use / to mark line breaks
    instead. Be sure to put a space on either side
    of the /.
  • Write about literature in present tense.
  • Citations Give the least information that the
    reader needs to find the source of your material.
    For example, if the author and work are in a
    signal phrase, do not put them in the citation.
  • Works Cited lists have one and do it right.

3
W.C. List
  • Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales.
  • New York Penguin Putnam Inc, 2003.
  • What is wrong with this entry?

4
Correct Version
  • Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales.
  • Trans. Nevill Coghill. New York
  • Penguin, 2003. Print.

5
Arrange This Information into a Correct Entry
  • A poem called The Wanderer, which appears in
    Frank Kermode and John Hollanders The Oxford
    Anthology of English Literature.
  • The poem appears in the first of two volumes on
    pages 100-04.
  • The anthology was published in New York by Oxford
    University Press in 1973.

6
Correct Version
  • The Wanderer. The Oxford Anthology of
  • English Literature. Ed. Frank Kermode
  • and John Hollander. Vol. 1. New York
  • Oxford UP, 1973. 100-04. Print.

7
Review
  • What is the relationship between anti-feminist
    literature and the Wifes Prologue?
  • How does courtly love inform her Tale?
  • What aspects of medieval dogma does she overturn?
  • What sign systems does the Pardoner subvert? Key
    term?
  • How does he relate to the characters in his
    Tale?
  • What important aspect of periodicity relates to
    the setting of the Pardoners Tale?
  • Evaluate the claim that the Pardoner shows signs
    of a spiritual life.

8
Renaissance Handout
  • http//faculty.winthrop.edu/fikem/Courses/ENGL202
    03/20320Renaissance20Handout.htm
  • You may want to use this document instead of the
    next part of the slide show.
  • Todays slide show combines information on the
    Renaissance, key concepts, and an introduction to
    Marlowes play.

9
The Renaissance
  • Renaissance From rinascita (Italian rebirth). 
    Therefore, the Renaissance an _________
    rebirth. 
  • Also called the _________ Modern Period.
  • Dates
  • In Italy  1420-1600.
  • In England it arrived later
  • Either 1485-1660 (Henry VII-the accession of
    Charles II)
  • Or 1509-1660 (Henry VIII-Charles II)

10
Characteristics
  • Attempts to free the individual from two medieval
    institutions medieval habits of mind gave way to
    newer attitudes, beliefs, disciplines.
  • Feudalism
  • The Church
  • Medieval view  Life should be lived for the
    future.
  • Renaissance view  emphasis on the here and now
    openness to classical antiquity.

11
Cosmology  Ptolemy to Copernicus
  • Geocentric vs. heliocentric.
  • Donne's The First Anniversary." ?

12
Confusion Resulted
  • And new philosophy calls all in doubt
  • The element of fire is quite put out
  • The sun is lost, and th'earth, and no man's wit
  • Can well direct him where to look for it.
  • And freely men confess that this world's spent,
  • When in the planets, and the firmament
  • They seek so many new then see that this
  • Is crumbled out again to his atomies.            
              Tiny particles
  • 'Tis all in pieces, all coherence gone
  • All just supply, and all relation
  • Prince, subject, father, son, are things forgot,
  • For every man alone thinks he hath got
  • To be a phoenix, and that then can be
  • None of that kind, of which he is, but he.
  • --lines 107-20

13
The Protestant Reformation
  • Martin Luther published his 95 theses in 1517.
  • John Calvin published his Institutes of the
    Christian Religion in 1532.
  • The role of King Henry VIII in 1535 declared
    himself Supreme Head of the Church of England.
    In other words, he broke with the Roman Catholic
    Church.
  • Church of England, via media

14
Succession
  • King Edward VI (1547-1553)
  • Queen Mary (1553-1558) Bloody Mary
  • Queen Elizabeth (1558-1603)

15
Key Details
  • The Marian Persecution
  • John Foxes Acts and Monuments
  • 1588 Defeat of the Spanish Armada
  • Edmund Spensers The Faerie Queene, Book I
    anti-Catholicism Prince Arthurs defeat of the
    giant Orgoglio may echo the English navys defeat
    of the Armada.

16
Humanism
  • Definition the influence of Mediterranean
    learning on European thinkers.
  • Valued ancient texts for their own sake, not for
    their usefulness to Christianity.
  • Classical study, not religion, was now considered
    the highest expression of human values and the
    best way to develop a free and responsible
    individual.  Opposed the medieval tendency to
    denature ancient learningi.e., to treat it
    allegorically.

17
What Humanists Believe
  • Not the secular humanists whom we talk about
    today humanists were Christians.
  • They believed in optimism and anthropocentrism
  • Rejected the doctrine of original sin, stressing
    instead mans innate ethical sense and ability to
    improve himself.
  • Means of doing this
  • Education
  • Reason
  • Free inquiry
  • Greatest English humanist Thomas More, author
    of Utopia.

18
Qtd. from Wikipedia
  • The crisis of Renaissance humanism came with the
    trial of Galileo, which forced the choice between
    basing the authority of one's beliefs on one's
    observations, or upon religious teaching. The
    trial made the contradictions between humanism
    and traditional religion visibly apparent to all,
    and humanism was branded a dangerous doctrine.
  • Renaissance humanists believed that the liberal
    arts (music, art, grammar, rhetoric, oratory,
    history, poetry, using classical texts, and the
    studies of all of the above) should be practiced
    by all levels of wealth. They also approved of
    self, human worth and individual dignity.
  • Noteworthy humanists scholars from this period
    include the Dutch theologist Erasmus, the English
    author Thomas More, the French writer Francois
    Rabelais, and the Italian scholar Giovanni Pico
    della Mirandola.

19
Transition
  • Foxe The public side of the ars moriendi
    tradition.
  • Spenser and Marlowe The private side of the
    tradition.
  • Note The ars moriendi does not originate in the
    Renaissance.

20
The Ars Moriendi Tradition
  • In the late 15th to early 18th centuries many
    treatises were published in England on the
    subject of dying well.
  • The dying person, or moriens, is a central figure
    in a psychomachia (soul struggle)
  • Demons tempt him with unbelief, pride,
    impatience, avarice, and despair.
  • (Here avarice refers to an inappropriate
    attachment not only to things but also to
    people.)
  • But angels, saints, and good counselors tell him
    that Christ, who has saved far greater sinners,
    will save him too.

21
Psychomachia Soul Struggle
  • The contest for the dying persons soul centers
    on deeds in life
  • Demons remind him of his wicked deeds
  • Angels/saints/good counselors cite scripture and
    the Fathers to affirm Gods mercy and forgiveness.

22
Example from The Faerie Queene
  • I.ix.46
  • Why then doest thou, ô man of sin, desireTo
    draw thy dayes forth to their last degree?Is not
    the measure of thy sinfull hireHigh heaped vp
    with huge iniquitie,Against the day of wrath, to
    burden thee?Is not enough, that to this Ladie
    mildeThou falsed hast thy faith with
    periurie,And sold thy selfe to serue Duessa
    vilde,With whom in all abuse thou hast thy selfe
    defilde?

23
Other Facts
  • The moriens may see the crucified Christ on the
    cross.
  • Ars moriendi merged with ars vivendi in order
    to die well, you must live well the best
    preparation for a holy death is a righteous life.

24
Example
  • Live rightly, die, die I listened.
  • --Conrad, Heart of Darkness
  • What word does Kurtz not get to say?

25
Woodcuts from Ars Moriendi Book
  • The devils temptation to despair
    http//userpage.fu-berlin.de/aeimhof/am3.htm
  • The angels good inspiration against despair
    http//userpage.fu-berlin.de/aeimhof/am4.htm

26

27
Latin Scrolls
  • Behold your sins
  • Middle left Behold your sins
  • Middle you have perjured yourself
  • Upper right you have fornicated
  • Lower right you have lived avariciously
  • Lower middle you have killed.
  • The document in the upper left is a list of the
    dying mans sins.

28
                                                
                    lt agt

29
Latin Scrolls
  • Angel By no means despair.
  • Demon There is no victory for me.

30
Details
  • Re. Saul of Tarsus I reckon the Lord knew that
    the only way to make a Christian out of that one
    was to knock him off his horse (Flannery
    OConnor, The Habit of Being 354-55).
  • Today you will be with me in paradise (Luke
    23-43).
  • Mary Magdalen is frequently portrayed carrying a
    jar of precious spikenard oil for annointing the
    body of Christ (http//altreligion.about.com/libr
    ary/davinci/bl_davincicode2.htm). See Mark 143
    and John 123 and 5.

31
Magdalene
  • The mix-up was made official by Pope Gregory the
    Great in 591 She whom Luke calls the sinful
    woman, whom John calls Mary of Bethany, we
    believe to be the Mary from whom seven devils
    were ejected according to Mark, Gregory declared
    in a sermon. That position became church
    teaching, although it was not adopted by
    Orthodoxy or Protestantism when each later split
    from Catholicism.
  • Sourcehttp//www.danbrown.com/media/morenews/time
    .html

32
Deathbed Psychomachia
  • The demons say, Youre damned. The good guys
    say, Youre saved. And the presence of Saul,
    the thief, Peter, and Mary Magdalene (not a whore
    but declared to be one by Pope Gregory)four of
    the great pardoned sinners in the New
    Testamentreminds the moriens that if THEY can be
    saved, his own salvation is nothing to worry
    about. Thus the image depicts despair
    successfully resisted.

33
Application to Doctor Faustus
  • Group work Apply each of the deathbed
    temptations from the ars moriendi tradition to
    Doctor Faustuss situation. Do one per group
  • Unbelief
  • Pride
  • Impatience
  • Avarice
  • Despair

34
Possible Answers
  • Unbelief He believes in God but does not
    BELIEVE God.
  • Pride Academic pride F believes that he is
    too far gone to be saved. Hubris. Same quality
    as Lucifer and Icarus. Great Chain of Being
    (next slide).
  • Impatience F is impatient with conventional
    academic knowledge however, he wants time to
    slow down just before his death.
  • Avarice Guilty of both kinds F loves the
    things of the world and is improperly attached to
    the feminine.
  • Despair Loss of hope. Two kinds of hell pain
    the pain of the senses and the pain of damnation
    (despair). Hell is both a physical place and a
    state of mind.

35
Great Chain of Being
  • http//www.stanford.edu/class/engl174b/chain.html
  • Everything in creation is in a hierarchy (cf.
    Ulyssess speech in Shakespeares Troilus and
    Cressida)
  • God
  • Angels
  • Manrational soul (reason)
  • Animalssensitive soul (sensation, passion)
  • Plantsvegetable soul (growth, reproduction)
  • Rocks
  • Satan
  • Types of soul http//spider.georgetowncollege.ed
    u/english/allen/miltreas.htm
  • Note re. man, animals, plants man has sensitive
    and vegetable functions, but plants have only
    vegetable souls.

36
Other Connections
  • Consider the reference to the thief on the cross
    (page 886/386) from the ars moriendi tradition in
    relation to Faustus's certainty that he is
    damned  is he or isn't he?
  • See the Old Man's speech, especially the two
    lines beginning "Yet, yet" for a connection to
    the ars moriendi tradition (892/392).    

37
Further ApplicationDoctor Faustus Chart
  • http//faculty.winthrop.edu/fikem/Courses/ENGL202
    03/20320Marlowe20Chart.htm

38
Answers
  • Temptations
  • Unbelief vs. faith
  • Pride vs. humility
  • Impatience vs. patience
  • Avarice vs. charity
  • Despair vs. hope
  • Bad friends vs. faithful colleagues
  • Mephostophilis vs. Old Man
  • Bad Angel vs. Good Angel
  • Justice vs. grace, mercy, forgiveness
  • Vice, parlor tricks vs. virtue, good works
  • Terrible death vs. peaceful death
  • Eternal torment in hell vs. salvation in heaven
  • Lucifer vs. Christ

39
Questions for Next Time and Response Papers
  • What is Faustus saying in his opening speech?
  • What is the order of events?
  • What is the role of delight and/or of habit in
    Faustuss damnation?
  • What warnings does Faustus receive?
  • How is Faustus cheated? What point follows?
  • How do Faustuss achievements measure up to his
    intentions? What points follow?
  • Why did Marlowe include Wagner, Robin, and Dick?
    Is the middle of the play irrelevant?
  • Why does Marlowe include all the allusions to
    Helen of Troy?
  • What is up with Faustuss weird comment on page
    897/397?
  • Expect to spend our next class period discussing
    these questions in small groups and as a whole
    class. Today has been to lecture as next time
    will be to discussion/student participation.

40
What is Faustus saying in his opening speech?
  • He is going through a catalog of academic
    subjects, stating that each one no longer
    satisfies his thirst for knowledge.
  • Analytics
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Theology
  • He concludes that magic is the proper object of
    his study, for it will bring a world of profit
    and delight, / Of power, of honour, of
    omnipotence, as well as universal command, even
    power over nature.

41
Put these events in the correct order.
  • The disintegration of power
  • The challenge to religious power
  • The contract
  • The reckoning
  • The decision

42
What is the order of events?
  • Here is the proper order of events
  • The decision
  • The contract
  • The challenge to religious power
  • The disintegration of power
  • The reckoning

43
What is the role of delight and/or of habit in
Faustuss damnation?
  • Whenever Faustus waivers in his commitment to the
    contract with the devil, Mephostophilis brings
    him things that delight the senses.
  • Delight is thus a really negative thing in this
    play, versus the sort of positive delight that
    Sidney mentions (as we will see next time).
  • Best example The pageant of the seven deadly
    sins. However, the word delight repeats
    multiple times. Each time, it signals that M is
    using pleasure to keep F from thinking about
    salvation.

44
What warnings does Faustus receive?
  • These are the main ones
  • Good angel (851/351)
  • Jehovahs name anagrammatized (855/355).
  • Mephostophilis warns him about hell
    (856-57/356-57).
  • Fs blood congeals (860/360)
  • Consummatum est (860/369)
  • Homo fuge (860/369)
  • The Old Man cautions F about habit on 892/392
    If sin by custom grow not into nature.

45
How is Faustus cheated? What point follows?
  • Read the contract on 861/361. M does not hold up
    his end of the bargain
  • He denies Fs request for a wife, calling
    marriage a ceremonial toy (862/362). Liar
    marriage is an institution ordained by God.
    Instead, M provides courtesans (prostitutes).
  • Asked who made the world, M refuses to answer
    (865/365).
  • Points
  • The contract has been voided. No one is damned
    by contract anyway.
  • Therefore, Fs damnation is tragic, not just.
  • His reason lets him down (a critique of
    humanisms emphasis on reason?).
  • This is hamartia in the original sense of the
    term mistake or error in judgment.

46
How do Faustuss achievements measure up to his
intentions? What points follow?
  • His original intention is have M help him slay
    mine enemies and aid my friends (857/357).
  • Instead he plays tricks on people, which Wagner,
    Robin, and Dick parody.
  • He never kills anyone. He does survey the
    universe from a dragons back. He does entertain
    his friends. He is eloquent. He has a
    conscience. Is he thus worthy of our pity? Do
    we like him?
  • He has the resources to surpass Alexander the
    Great but does not therefore, conjuring
    Alexander is ironicit is a mere parlor trick.

47
Why did Marlowe include Wagner, Robin, and Dick?
Is the middle of the play irrelevant?
  • The first part shows Fs determination to make a
    pact with the devil. The middle part has F using
    his magic to perform nonsensical pranks. The
    final part finds him awaiting the end of his life
    when he will be carried off to eternal damnation.
    This three-part structure reflects that of the
    Faust Book (1587).
  • The middle part of the play charts Fs decline,
    his affirmation of bad habits of act and thought.
    It shows his moral deterioration. You dont get
    to heaven or hell by contract you have to
    deserve one or the other. Signing the contract
    is an error, not a fatal act. The plays middle
    section is necessary to justify Fs fate.
  • Being a moral clown becomes a habit for F, and
    all the pranks illustrate the dark side of
    paying it forward I screw you you screw
    someone else. Note that a pattern is observable
    Devil ? Meph ? Faustus ? Wagner ? Robin ? Dick
    each affects the character directly to his right.

48
Why does Marlowe include all the allusions to
Helen of Troy?
  • She will make him immortal in hell.
  • F is the modern Troy in terms of being sacked.
  • This is not Helen it is a demon made up to look
    like her. She/it sucks forth his spirit on
    893/393 (some kind of bodily intercourse with a
    demon) in much the same way as his 24-year run
    has debased him.
  • Her presence here signifies indulgence in
    appetiteanother example of delight. Fs
    dalliance is like going to a brothel right before
    you die rather than setting your spiritual house
    in orderincredibly inappropriate.
  • She is the final measure of Fs habitual action
    and state of mind. He is not damned until he
    ignores the Old Mans advice this signifies his
    inability to turn to God.

49
What is up with Faustuss weird comment on page
897/397?
  • Re lines 155ff. Right after F mentions that
    Christs blood streams in the firmament (it is
    available, he thinks, to everyone but him very
    prideful!), he sounds like a classical man
    espousing mere fate. And in a strange
    juxtaposition of thoughts, he appeals for
    salvation to the very fate that he says damned
    him in the first place (You stars that reigned
    at my nativity, / Whose influence hath allotted
    death and hell).
  • Clouds is the most interesting word here
    because it echoes Fs mention of them on 851/351
    (Nor can they raise the wind or rend the
    clouds) as well as the Choruss earlier remark
    on 868/368 (He views the clouds, the planets,
    and the stars). See also the Popes mention of
    clouds on 872/372. In other words, the natural
    world, which has been the object of his attention
    during the twenty-four years, is now his only
    hope of release from damnation.
  • So although the reference to the thief (886/386)
    suggests that grace may be embraced even at the
    last moment, a pattern of wrong living and
    particularly a state of despair render F unable
    to make the right choice when it really counts.
    Hell strives with grace for conquest in his
    breast (892/392), and hell wins.
    END
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