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SHAKSPEARE'S

DRAMATIC ART.

SKETCH OF THE HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH DRAMA, BEFORE SHAKSPEARE.

ALL art is in its rise connected with Religion: a proof of its divine origin as a mediate and secondary revelation. However strange the assertion may sound in the present state of dramatic art, it is not the less true, that the Church was the birth-place of the modern drama. If we overlook the pieces which, after the seventh century, were frequently represented in the nunneries, and the brief spectacles which, in the eighth and ninth centuries, were exhibited by monks and nuns at the funerals of their abbots and abbesses, and the Pantomimes and Mummings which in all ages princes and lords, as well as the common people, loved and practised on festive occasions, we must place the first beginnings of the modern drama in the so-called Mysteries or Miracle-plays The origin of these is very ancient, and is connected with the custom of the mediæval church, for a deacon to stand before the ambo during the reading of the Lessons, and to hold up a roll, which, on the side turned towards the congregation, displayed a figured representation of the particular portion of Scripture which was being read, in order that those who did not understand, or could not readily follow the words, might, by looking at the painting, be instructed in the contents of the lesson-be reminded of it, and so be

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religiously and morally improved*. A like cause led, in the fourth century, to the practice of adorning the walls of churches with mosaic representations of subjects drawn from the Old and New Testament, while, in answer to the objection to such practices as heathenish, it was urged that these paintings were designed to serve as "biblia pauperum," and thereby to bring the Holy Scriptures home to the hearts and minds of the poor and illiterate. But the practice did not stop here; and this pictorial instruction gave way gradually to symbolical representations by living persons, and ultimately to dramatic exhibitions in the proper sense; which, however, as pieces of art, were extremely rude. These scenic representations were given, from the very first, not only in the halls and chapels of cloisters, but also in churches, and occasionally also in the streets and other public places, by the clergy themselves. The favourite subjects were, the life of Christ, His nativity, passion, resurrection, and ascension; or such of the principal events of the Old Testament as were suited for exhibition, while the Apocrypha, and the later holy legends, furnished an abundant supply of equally favourite subjects.

In England there is direct evidence of the representation at Dunstable of the Life of St. Katherine, as early as in the reign of Henry I., and before the year 1110: it is therefore beyond doubt that Miracle-plays were common in that country in the eleventh century. To judge of their nature from what we know of them, they seem to have been little more than an embodying of the sacred histories, or rudely dramatised narratives, in which the scenes followed each other in the same order as the events of the original, and were accompanied, wherever possible, by the very words of Holy Writ. They were consequently wholly devoid of proper dramatic action, while a decidedly epic tone and colouring predominated throughout. The representation was generally

* This is the probable cause or occasion which gave rise to these spectacles in the early church. The composition of religious dramas, at so early a date that the Xplords waσxwv is ascribed—though wrongfully, in all probability—to Gregory Nazianzen, and the endeavour of the clergy of the middle ages by the exhibition of Miracle-plays, to withdraw the people from attending the profane spectacles of dancing, music, pantomimes, and mummings, to which Warton (History of Eng. Poetry, iii. 195), and Collier (History, ii. 126), are disposed to ascribe the origin of the Mysteries, are without doubt co-operating circumstances.

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