Edward II Was One of The Major Plays of Marlowe. The Date of The
Edward II Was One of The Major Plays of Marlowe. The Date of The
HISTORICAL TRAGEDY
EDWARD II
Edward II was one of the major plays of Marlowe. The date of the
qualities which are properly dramatic and are not to be found in any
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of Marlowe’s other plays. The subject of this play was the tragedy
materials for the play Edward II from a good many sources such as:
5. Polychronicon by R. Higden.
6. Chronicles by R. Holinshed.
John Stow.
interpreted as a story about the conflict between the personal and the
king but Edward II was young and inexperienced and lacked the
tried to regain their authority and get back their privileges as soon as
had ruled for thirty five years, was continuously at war. When he
dominate his life and actions throughout his life. He had the
autocratic king. The young Edward had the misfortune to lose his
mother when he was quite young and was thus deprived of the love
and care of his mother which too stunted his growth. He lacked both
maternal and paternal love and this made him seek for love
elsewhere. Hence, his infatuation for Gaveston was the only person
his head against the question of Mortimer ‘why should you love him
also 100,000 from the late king’s treasury. He was made Earl of
Cornwall on August 6, 1307, and all the belongings of the late Earl
ambitious, ostentatious and imprudent and his meteoric rise and his
the King.
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crown and kingdom than giving Gaveston up. The following lines, a
this truth:
Gaveston,
And therefore, the elation of Gaveston on hearing all that the king
presents from her father to Gaveston and ignored her for the sake of
operation of the barons for good and welfare of the kingdom, he will
to bear to see the excessive interest of the king in the love Gaveston
and arrogant manner towards the barons when they appose him for
his desire to keep Gaveston with him and allow Gaveston to spend
barons and keeping them in good manner offends them still further
Renaissance man.
EDWARD Well, Mortimer thee, I’ll make thee rue these words.
Actually he did not care about his future and what might happen. He
right to disobey, rebel and depose the king. This concept makes it
clear that the powers of the king hedged in by limitations and if the
In spite of the barons having many powers against the king to banish
his favourite, Edward had absolute power to face them very easily
the church and the people of his country who rebel against him as
the Lord High Chamberlain, the Chief Secretary to the State, the
least important of these titles could well suffice for a man of greater
Act II scene II ends with declaration of revolt against the king by the
peers. From this point onwards the civil war with the peers began to
happen, first for the removal of Gaveston and then for the removal
displays throughout in dealing with the barons his power, but also
shows his disregard even of the authority of the pope. It shows that
all those who are hostile against him must be ruined. This is the
In this connection, we may cite from Act III, scene III (at the time
the captured barons are taken away King Edward) what king himself
said:
interesting to note that the scene i.e., Act II, Scene IV, contains both
to share with him and the barons in the pursuit of Edward whom
they have defeated in battle, she declines, lest her ‘honour be called
soliloquy:
seen that by the second half of act IV, Isabella has been transformed
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throne. Edward hints at hypocrisy: “And yet she bears a face of love,
The reason why a change has now taken place in the Earl of
earlier become very intimate is that the Earl of Kent has come to
with the Queen Isabella. To justify this fact what the Earl of Kent
husband and also really devoted to him. But, due to the King’s
so tells the Young Mortimer that her husband, the king, does not
care for her but “dotes upon the love of Gaveston”. Henceforth, she
Marlowe’s plays because his heroes are all brave human souls
cool his thirst and to clear his body of foul excrements. His warders
offer him channel water and proceed to shear off his beard, to
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to us.
says that the hearts of Matrevis and Gurney have been “hewn from
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the cancasus”. But the king soon finds after a while, that Lightborn
in an over greater devil than those two men. And, of course, the king
hands of the Younger Mortimer and Queen Isabella doing it. Here,
It discloses that she does not mind how the Younger Mortimer deals
the Prince. Isabella is certainly a good mother of her son, Edward III
we cannot deny that the king had never shown any kindness or
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which power and suffering constitutes the leading theme of the play.
The assertion of power and authority and the exercise of power and
only.
with particular reference to his conflicts with the barons and with his
own Queen, leading to his downfall and death. This play is mere
(i) to the king’s friendship, first with Gaveston and then with the
two Spenser’s, and (ii) to his conflict first with a large group of the
barons and then with his own Queen helped by the only surviving
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Edward II; and Marlowe wrote this play to expose the inefficiency
effectively with the baron. An intelligent king would have given his
favourite his due, and he would at the same time have managed to
keep the barons in good humour by allowing them their due share in
centered, despotic, and arrogant. And he, therefore, incurs the wrath
of the barons. Not only that; the king alienates the church too by his
does not know to treat his wife who is herself a princess by birth. An
intelligent king would have managed to keep his wife contented and
whatever the nature of that relationship was. But this king incurs the
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tactfulness. On the other hand, at last the king is deposed, and then
murdered. Here the play could have ended. But Marlowe goes a
little further in pursuing his theme and depicts the two evil-doers
issues hardly arise. It’s true that there is a fair deal of talk about our
country’s good.
and episodes are closely inter-connected; and they all point in one
direction. All the events and episodes are intended to reveal the
character of the king, and to show how he deals first with the
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his own Queen and the only surviving members of a large group of
chronicles.
Actually, Marlowe has been able to build a skillfully knit tragic plot.
dramatic technique.
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prevent the initial situation from which the action of the play is to
worked out in the course of the play, and finally to highlight the
Edward for Gaveston and in the last Act, succeeds in delineating the
out at all in the play though there are many opportunities in the play
show a good deal of technical and dramatic skill which was rare
these episodes with great vividness as real actions carried out by the
dramatic technique conveyed too little of what the set speech had
earlier given us too much. He had not yet found for himself a
Reference
3. Ibid., p. 105.
103.
5. Ibid., p. 117.
7. Ibid., p. 107.
8. Ibid., p. 106.
9. Ibid., p. 116.
2003), p. 193.
128.