2nd Semester, Restoration Drama: tragedy and comedy


Write a note on Restoration tragedy or comedy or Restoration Drama.

Ans:
The Restoration period in the history of the English literature began in 1660. The Restoration of Monarchy with King Charles II replaced Oliver Cromwell’s Commonwealth and its puritan ethos and brought significant changes not only politically and socially but also in the sphere of literature. The theatre of Restoration was quite different from the theatre of Shakespeare as the audience was largely upper classes. There were licensed theatres in the Restoration period while the Elizabethan theatre was a much more thrilling institution. The really Restoration drama flourished with two well connected persons, with roots in the courtly and theatrical past. They were Sir William Davenant and Thomas Killigrew. In 1656, Sir William Davenant has managed to evade the government ban on theatre by staging an opera “The Siege of Rhodes”. Davenant’s theatre Lincoln’s Inn Fields and Dorset Garden and Killigrew’s “Druny Lane” were expensively designed, purpose-built and covered. The major different between the Elizabethan theatre and the Restoration theatre was that the Restoration theatrical performance introduced the female actor on stage instead of the Elizabethan tradition of training boys to play female rules.
                Restoration drama includes both tragedy and comedy. The tragedy is known as the heroic tragedy and the comedy is known as the Comedy of Manners.

Restoration Tragedy:
Restoration tragedy developed the heroic plays of the Restoration period. The Restoration tragedy is known as the ‘heroic tragedy’ which has been traced to French influence particularly the influence of heroic romances such as those of Madeline de Seudery. There is a travesty of the chivalric ideal in the love and honour motives which runs through such place. The main theme of the Restoration tragedy according to Andrew Sanders is foreign politics. The pre-occupation of much of Restoration Tragedy with politics draws its influence from Shakespeare. Unlike Elizabethan and Jacobean tragedy, Restoration tragedy was the tragedy of failure and not once of the over vaulting ambitions.

Heroic play of the Restoration Period:

Heroic play is a kind of baroque tragedy or tragicomedy which groused flourished and declined during 1660 to 1680. The heroic tragedy of the Restoration period is much less representative than the comedy of manners. A heroic play is like a heroic poem or an epic, which generally built around a larger than life heroic warrior who is a master both of words man sleep and strategy ratory. The hero is almost invariably a king, a prince or an army general and the plot of the play involves the fate of an empire. Gallantry, adventure, love and honour, motives are the usual themes of the heroic plays. The principal conflict faced by the hero is between love and honour. The writers of the heroic plays aimed at the effects of the intensity and sublimity and were keen to arouse the audience admiration more than the specie tragic motions of piety and honour. The diction and verse used by them in accordance with their aim. In a heroic play, heroes are always courageous and rebellious and heroines were flawlessly pure, while villains always malignant. The dialogues of the heroic plays were composed in rhyme heroic couplets. The characters always talked in hyperboles.

 The Tragedy or the heroic tragedy writer of the Restoration Period:-
The vague of the heroic play lasted throughout the reign of Charles II and the principal pratisoners were John Dryden, Elkanah Settle, Thomas Otway, Nathaniel Lee and John Crown. The heroic play of the Restoration is supposed to have beginning with Davenant’s “The Siege of Rhodes” and Robert Howards’ “Indian Queen”(1664).
                John Dryden was the greatest tragedy writer or the heroic playwright of the Restoration period. His fame as a heroic playwrights rest on: “Tyranie Love(1669), The conquest of Grananda (1670), Amboyana (1673) and Aurengzebe (1675):- except Tyranie Love none of them can be called as tragedies, with respect to its ending, but all of them are heroic plays, different from the later plays of Dryden life “All for Love” (1677), and Don Sebastian (1690 or 89), which used black verse rather than rhyme and which avoid the stereotypes of heroic drama. For subject, he chose that of Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopetra.
                After Dryden, Thomas Otway was the most successful tragedy writer of the Restoration period. He rearranged the elements of Romeo and Juliet in his heroine’s tragedy, “The History and Fall of Cains Marius” (1680). The other finer tragedies of Otway were--- Don Charlos,     Prince of Spain (1676), The Orphan or Unhappy Marriage (1680), Venice Preserv’d or Plot Discovered (1682), and “Alcibiades (1675). Vanice Preserv’d is his finest work.
                Nathaniel Lee, was another successful tragedy writer of the Restoration period. He wrote many tragedies some of which are--- Nero, Lucius, Junius Brutus, Soponisbha, The Rival Queens and Mithridates. He collaborated with Dryden in production of his two plays- ‘Oedipus’ and ‘The Duke of Guise’.
                Elkanah Settle as a writer of heroic drama is chiefly known for his tragedy, “The Empress of Morocco (1673).
                Nicholas Rowe is one of the notable tragedy writers of the Restoration period. His best known plays are – Tamerlane, the Fair Penitent and the Popular Jane Shore.
                John Crowne was another tragedy writer of the Restoration period whose tragedies are—Caligula, a heroic play and Thyestes, in blank verse.
The cult of heroic drama which lasted for about two decades after the Restoration was largely a product of the French influence. English heroic drama was extremely artificial both in content and style. The careers of heroic plays were soon replaced by more advanced Restoration tragedy.

Restoration Comedy:
The glory of the Restoration drama primarily rest on comedy. Restoration comedy is better known as the comedy of manners, as it deals with the externals of life in upper classes’ society, interested in the fashions of time, its manners, its speeches, its interest and for the scene drawing upon the parlors, coffee houses, streets, parks and gardens of London, and choosing the character chiefly the people fashion and for the theme mostly love intrigue developed by the clever dialogue, the subject matter of the Restoration comedy consisted of amorous themes like sexual attraction, intrigue and sexual conquest. The tone of the plays is known to be pre-judicial to morality. It is the result of a section against the Puritan sternness and fanaticism. These themes are represented in the comedies as reflecting the flavorous concern of the aristocrat who had recently recent from exile at the French Court. Though Restoration Comedy draws heavily from French Courtly culture, however, the French drama of the period exiles in its theme and reaches the zenith of achievement in the works of Racine and Molire. Moreover, the new comedy lakes any of the philosophical concerns found in Shakespeare’s earlier comedies and Behn Johnson’s comedies of humour. The women characters of the Restoration comedies are shown as young widows and older ladies still trying to be attracted to young man. In these plays, hero and heroin will be foppish. Immortality and licentiousness are the elements found on the character. It shows the fashionable of London and a person who came to London from village or country is insulted. The principal practitioners of the Restoration comedy were- William Congreve, William Wycherly, George Etheredge, Sir John Vanbrugh, George Farqunar and Thomas Shadwell.
                William Congreve (1670-1729) is by far the most significant dramatist of the Restoration period who achieved startling popular success with the play “The Old Bachelor (1693). And this was followed by “The Double Dealer” (1693), “Love for Love” (1695), and “The Way of the World” (1700). In these works, the comedy of manner reaches perfection. The way of the world ushered in a new area. The construction characterisation and dialogue of “The way of the World” are brilliant.
                William Wycherley was the most successful comedy writer of the Restoration period. He produced four perfect comedies- “Love in a wood” (1671-72), “The Gentle Man”, “Dancing Master” (1672), “The Country wife”, (1674), and “The Plain Dealer” (1676).
George Etherege was the remarkable comedy writer of the Restoration period. His three famous comedies are—“The comical Revenge or Love in Tub (1664), She would it she cou’d and Man of Mode or Sir Fopling Flutter (1676).
                Sir John Vanbrugh is one of the greatest comedy writers of the Restoration period. His best three comedies are--- The Relapse, The Provok’d wife and the confederacy. George Farqubon is another comedy writer who wrote seven plays and best of which are the cast two – The Recruiting officer and The Beaux Stratagen
Thomas Shadwell was the remarkable comedy writer of the Restoration period and his best comedies are--- The Sullen Lovers, The Squire of Alsatia and Bury Fair.

From the above discussion, we can say that Restoration drama was a mixture both of comedy and tragedy and the characteristics of the Restoration drama was quite different from Elizabethan drama.

Note: Dear students, here red symbol words are not being rechecked.
All the best, by Podmeswar