Marlowe's Mighty Line
Before Marlowe, blank verse had not been the accepted verse
form for drama. Many earlier plays had used rhymed verse; there are a few
examples, such as Gorboduc, which had used blank verse, but the poetry in
Gorboduc was stiff and formal. Marlowe was the first to free the drama from the
stiff traditions and prove that blank verse was an effective and expressive
vehicle for Elizabethan drama.
One of Marlowe's accomplishments was to capture in blank
verse the music inherent in the English language. When Faustus
sees Helen of Troy, he exclaims:
Oh, thou art fairer than the evening air
Clad in the beauty of a thousand stars!
Brighter art thou than flaming Jupiter
When he appeared to hapless Semele.
Clad in the beauty of a thousand stars!
Brighter art thou than flaming Jupiter
When he appeared to hapless Semele.
Earlier blank verse had been metrically precise and regular
which, in long passages, could become rhythmically boring. Marlowe alternated
the regular stresses and created a more varied, sincere, and beautiful verse.
Shakespeare was later to follow Marlowe's example and use the natural rhythm of
blank verse.
Ofttimes, instead of using a rhyme, Marlowe uses other
poetic techniques to give unity to a passage. As in the ending of the first two
lines of the above passage, the assonance of "air" and
"stars" imparts a controlled unity to the lines.
In one construction of his poetry, Marlowe did not end each
line with a heavy and distinct pause. He often varied the caesuras within a
line, and he also continued a thought from one line to another. Marlowe used
the run-on line so as to give continuity to the poetry. For example, observe
Faustus' opening speech.
Settle thy studies, Faustus, and begin
To sound the depth of that thou will profess.
To sound the depth of that thou will profess.
Frequently, Marlowe will use geographical names and
classical names merely for the resonant quality of the words themselves. In the
following lines,
More lovely than the monarch of the sky
In wanton Arethusa's azured arms,
In wanton Arethusa's azured arms,
note the use of the repetition of the "a" sound
and the "r" sound. The reference to Arethusa, who was embraced by
Jupiter, also has a more specific relationship to Faustus' desire to embrace
Helen of Troy. But basically, the name does carry heavy alliterative and
resonant qualities. Throughout the drama, the student should be aware of the
highly ornamental language that Marlowe uses. His speeches are rich in
allusions to classical myths. The style, however, has a musical quality about
it which appeals to the ear even when the listener does not know the exact
nature of the allusions.
The combination of the above qualities influenced the trend
of blank verse in Elizabethan drama and earned for Marlowe's verse the term
"Marlowe's Mighty Line".
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