The
Greeks, from the rudest beginnings, and by the aid of their
incomparable instinct for form, brought to perfection a lofty
type of tragedy and an original kind of comedy. The Latins,
who had at least the germ of a comic drama of their own, were
proud to borrow the comedy of the Greeks, although in their
hands it could not but be sadly sterile. In the stalwart days
of the Roman commonwealth the drama seems to have had scant
encouragement in the capital, either from the men of culture
or from the coarser populace. When at last the empire solidified
itself upon the ruins of the republic, and the eagles of Rome
were borne almost to the confines of the world, the cosmopolitan
inhabitants of this immense realm were never educated to appreciate
the calm pleasures of theater. They were encouraged to prefer
the fierce joy of the chariot-race, the brutal delight of
the arena, and the poignant ecstasy of gladiatorial combat.
The sole vestiges of the true drama were the vulgar farces
of the rustics that lingered in odd corners of Italy, and
the obscene and cruel pantomimes which were devised to gratify
the relish of the mob for lewdness and to glut its liking
for gore. Neither the rough comic plays of the peasants nor
the abominable pantomimes of the court had any relation to
literature.
After
the conversion of Constantine, the lustful and bloody spectacles
were accurst by the church. It was to be expected that the
Fathers should condemn the theater absolutely, since it was--in
the sole aspect in which they had occasion to behold it--unspeakably
vile. With the triumph of Christianity theatrical performances
were abolished; and it must have seemed as though the drama
was destroyed forever. It is true that in some obscure nooks
rural farces might linger, forgotten links in the chain that
was to stretch from the Atellan fables to the late Italian
comedy-of-masks. But this doubtful survival seems to have
little significance, and apparently the break in the tradition
of the theater was final and irreparable. When Constantinople
supplanted Rome as the capital of civilization, dramatic literature,
which had been a chief glory of Athens, ceased from off the
earth. For a thousand years and more the history of the drama
is all darkness and vacancy; and we have not a single name
recorded of any author writing plays to be performed by actors,
in a theater, before an audience.
The
desire for the drama, which seems to be instinctive in human
nature the wide world over, from the Aleutian Islanders to
the Bushmen of Australia, the impulse to personate and to
take pleasure in beholding a story set forth in action,--this
may have been dormant during the long centuries, or it may
have found some means of gratifying itself unrecorded in the
correspondence of the time or by the chroniclers. Acrobats
there were, and wandering minstrels; and now and again we
catch glimpses of singers of comic songs and of roving amusers
who entertained with feats of sleight-of-hand, or who exhibited
trained animals. These performers, always popular with the
public at large, were also called in upon occasion to enliven
the solid feasts of the rulers. Gibbon records that at the
supper-table of Theodoric, in the middle of the fifth century,
buffoons and performers of pantomimes were "sometimes
introduced to divert, not do offend, the company by their
ridiculous wit." And Froissart records that when he was
a guest at the court of Gaston Phébus, toward the end
of the fourteenth century, strolling jesters sometimes presented
a little play during the repast, or acrobats went through
their daring performances. The entertainments described by
Gibbons and by Froissart, however long the interval between
them, bear an obvious likeness to our latter-day "vaudeville
suppers."
But
none the less dramatic literature, which had flourished so
gloriously in Greece, and which had tried to establish itself
in Italy, was dead at last; and even the memory of it seems
to have departed, for, in so far as the works of the Attic
tragedians and of the Roman comedians were known at all, they
were thought of rather as poetry to be read than as plays
that had been acted. The art of acting was a lost art, and
the theaters themselves fell into ruin. So it was that when
the prejudice against the drama wore itself out in time, and
when the inherent demand for the pleasure which only the theater
can give became at last insistent, there was to be seen the
spontaneous evolution of a new form, fitted specially to satisfy
the needs of the people under the new circumstances. This
new drama of the middle ages sprang into being wholly uninfluenced
by the drama of the Greeks; it was, indeed, as free a growth
as the Attic drama itself had been.
In
its origin again, the medieval drama was not unlike the drama
of the Greeks,--in that the germ or it was religious, and
that it was slowly elaborated from what was at first only
a casual accompaniment of public worship. The new form had
its birth actually at the base of the altar and at the foot
of the pulpit; and it was fostered by the Christian church,
the very organization that had cursed the old form when that
was decadent and corrupted. Coming into being as an illustrative
incident of the service on certain special days of the ecclesiastical
year, the drama grew sturdily within the walls of the church
until it was strong enough to support itself; and when at
last it ventured outside, it remained for a long while religious
in intent. The history of its development is very much the
same throughout Europe; and the religious drama of England
is very like that of France (from which, indeed, it is in
some measure derived), just as the religious drama of Italy
is like that of Spain, although neither of these had any appreciable
influence on the other.
The reason
for this uniformity is obvious enough. It was due to the double
unity of the medieval world,--that which resulted from possession
of the same religion and that which was caused by the consciousness
of a former union under the rule of Rome. All the peoples
of western Europe had inherited the same customs and the same
traditions, because they had all been included in the Roman
Empire, which had stretched itself from the Black Sea to the
Atlantic. When, at last, the vigor of the Roman government
was relaxed, the barbarians of the north had broken in and
had swept through southern Europe into Africa and into Asia.
The Franks had taken Gaul for their own, the Goths had repopulated
Italy, and the Vandals had traversed Spain; and as they had
all of them accepted Christianity, sooner or later, the most
distant lands had once more come under the sway of Rome.
This is
why it is that we find in the middle ages a unity of western
and southern Europe closer than ever before or ever since.
Just before the Renaissance, the peoples of these varied stocks,
however much they might differ individually, were bound together
by the common use of the Latin language and by the common
dominion of the Roman law; they held the same beliefs and
they yielded to the same superstitions; they revered the same
ideals, they acted on the same theories, and they had very
much the same habits. As yet the idea of nationality had not
been born; and the solidarity of those speaking each of the
modern languages had not been suggested. Europe was a unit
because, although it was segregated into towns and even into
small provinces, these had not yet been compacted into distinct
nations. Towns and provinces and kingdoms were all in accord
in accepting the supremacy of the pontiff of Rome and in yielding
a doubtful allegiance to the head of the shadowy monarchy
which was still called the Holy Roman Empire.
|
|