08 - Chapter 4
08 - Chapter 4
08 - Chapter 4
Leaving behind the Parnassian heights of The Greek Tragic Vision, aiid the
summits and the belveders of Elizabethan tragedy with specific reference to
Shakespeare, when we enter Neo-Classic or Restoration tragedy whose
practitioners are few and far between, we come down to the slopes and enter
rather a pedestrian world. For example, Dryden's^/Z/'ar Love or The World
Well Lost, the other well-deserved title given to the play, does not have the
magnitude and panorama of Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra from
which it is derived, it actually becomes more of a domestic tragedy propelled
by the motive of jeiilousy for Antony's legal wife. The analysis of All for
Love or The World Well Lost, will, therefore, be followed by an analysis of
Antony and Cleopatra to highlight the difference in weltonschauung (world-
view).
This ch^ter on Restoration tragedy and the tragic vision therein, sets
out to explore and exajnine the mind-boggling deep sorrow that lays heavy
on Marc Antony- the protagonist, the Roman generd who fell as per
Dryden's vieiv of sociai-cirni-societal morahly i.e. moral excellency. Yet it is
not actually a moral indictment but probes deep into the psyche and
psychology of the characters, rendering Dryden's tragic vision to
be one of a colossal order. All for Love is a far more moral and
psychological play than Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra.
Surfacially, it has an Aristotehan mould insofar as Uie tragedy is of a
high and mighty personage, but the difference- the chief difference- is
found in the fact Uiat the fall has idready occurred at tlie outset and,
therefore, the focus spothglits motivations and psychological morasses,
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imveiiing inner compulsion quite similar to drug addiction. As such,
Dryden's vision transcends mere loftiness, creating a work wherein the tragic
vision anticipates, to a certain extent, the modem one, thereby making it a
work that has stood and will stand the test of time, still having great
relevance today and, hopefully, in the future as well. As such, it is more of a
tragedy of an individual as well as of those who revolve in his orbit. John
A. Vance rightly contends that the play is one in which "Qeopatra's and
Antony's outbursts, marked by insecurity and contia^ction, indicate... a
highly agitated passiveness... that is quite amazingly an inaction resulting
from an intensely active passion."'
t55
Though Dryden's All For Love (the earhest known peifoimance in
December 1677) has generally been considered as an 'imitation' of
Shakespeare's yl72/ow>' and Cleopatra, "the success of the former on the stage
appears to have been moderate, but long-lasting, for it was performed in
preference to Shakespeare's play into the latter half of the next century.'"
comments John Conaghan.
156
The chief difference between the Bard and Dryden is one of separate
ages (though hnked but yet standing apart). The biggest compliment we can
pay to Dryden is that he imbibes the spirit of hterary modernism much before
his time. Shakespeare's version has an abundance of characters, whereas
Dryden's has only eleven, not counting Antony's servants and other
messengers, these being less pivotal.
The play's scenes shift from Alexandria to Rome, with Octavius Caesar
holding almost all the cards. In the course of the drama; we learn that Antony
ignobly and dishonorably fled from the sea-battle at Actium when Cleopatra's
royal barge turned tail. An act which later makes him feel- when not
intoxticated by love- an eternal sense of shame, dishonour and guilt. In actual
fact- as per martial duty- he should have continuously led from the front.
M the opening a soothsayer predicts the fall of the power, glory and
prestige of Egypt. However, this is brushed off as fanciful by Charmion, Iras
and .\lexas—a poetic device used to foreshadow the impending events.
Shortly, after a message from Rome, Antony decides to break away from
Cleopatra and resume the hfe of a warrior. Manipulation to thwart this
ensues throughout. Ventidius, Antony's right hand, urges him to regain his
honour. The general agrees. It turns out that they are victorious, though
heavily outnumbered, in a battle. But they have only stemmed the tide. At the
end, Cleopatra, to escape Antony's wrath (that of a jilted lover) "fakes"
suicide. Antony tries the same clumsily. But he dies in her arms. Caesar
captures Cleopatra, but she kills herself with a self-inflicted asp bite . Caeser
pays homage to Antony and thus does the play end.
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Dryden has drawn a crucial difference- the tragedy has aheady begun at the
very opening and only culminates in the course of the drama. The sombre,
ominous note is evident throughout- foreshadowing is employed right at the
beginning with the lines spoken by the soothsayer, no matter the fact that
they are "brushed off' as nonsense by the queen's coterie. So, the foundation
of the tragedy reaching its peak, isfirmlylaid. Also, the lines are beautifully
ensconced in embellished expression to achieve and effect monumental
impact on the reader/spectator. Each line is well thought-out with near
perfect timing, and, of course, there is much serious artisitic omamentry,
though this is not strictly in the Aristotelian mould. But» in this particular
play, it is certainly and evidently close enough. Case in point- evolution is
obvious. Insofar as the action is concerned a contrast, headly tempo is
maintained, climaxing at the end with the suicides almost like an unspoken
earthly pact to defy the heavens~an excellent dramatic device effecting
colossal poetic result and impacting deeply upon the psyche, making us
reflect and causing inward catharsis (more on this particular point
afterwards).
Its (the play's) failure to raise a warning finger on behalf of reason and
sexual morahty ceases to be a symptom of Dryden's confusion of
thought or of his divided intent. If the play is to be reduced to a moral at
all, it must be one of some such order as this: the lovers perish as all those
must who stake their all on passion rather than on reason. But their fall
effects a purgation of emotion in audience, and this effect is achieved
precisely because Dryden abandons the simple moral scheme of the heroic
play for the complex multiple truth of mature tragedy.'
In the critic's view, it was not that Dryden failed to follow "the neo-
classical moral maxim," but that he was moving on to another set of theories
of tragedy, one that was morally more complex and mysterious to
comprehend than "the simple moral scheme" of heroic tragic drama Bruce
King another critic joins Reinert that I>ryden was gradiially revising and
readjusting his notions on tragedy.™
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The tragedy had undergone a m^or evolutionary ascent by
Shakespeare's era. The double suicide climax does show blood and gore on
stage. Yet this is tastefully rendered and there are no agonizing death scenes
as in Webster, hke The Duchess ofMa^. The climactic scene is not out of
place. It fits quite aesthetically like the final piece of a jigsaw- and is the
crowning point of the play. The climax is, indeed, the jewel in the crown.
In this hglil (of the two giants), Antony's quest has basically been
reduced to siu-vdval- though as references make clear, he was a colossus who
strode the earth (in both plays being critically examined, more so in the case
of Antony and Cleopatra). Sh^espeare's tragedy shows that Antony is a
regressed quester (hero). The same is true of the male protagonist in All for
Love.
In the second stage i.e. 'Initiation' , Antony got plucked midway and
invited his tragic end by committing a cowardly act of suicide. Antony in
AUfor Love as seen in or from the Aurobindonian critical caimon, is the
protagonist whose physical life level was so strong that he became a great
Roman warrior who successfully fought in earUer youthful hfe. Later, his
physical was overshadowed by the vital- the emotional vital wherein one is
in the strong grip of heart commands. Due to his love for Cleopatra, Antony
hid himself in Egypt; ignored the war-call of his first wife Fulvia and let her
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die in the war; left hi^ sec(md l i ^ wijfe Octm^ fought
the battle (the one he lost) at Actinm not by land as he desired but at sea as
desdred by Qeopatra; she fled the war and he f(dlbwed her and lost the war,
lost Dolabella- a very brave general due to Cleopatra All these examples are
proof enough that he was in the aU destructive grip of his beloved.
Again when Ventidius urges him to leave Egypt and go to lead his
army to defeat Ceasar, Antony-a love slave reacts:
But when Cleopalia invokes the magic spell of her charms and
eloquence, his vital darts up and makes him plummet into the arms of his
beloved. A warrior turned lover made sacrifices-uncalled for and reduced
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himself to a poor lover who committed a clwnsy suicide in the 1^ of a
beloved.
173
Comparative study of the two plays i.e. Dryden' AUfor Love and
^\i2k&s^^2ii€ s Antony and Cleopatra shows Shakespeare's version has much
more grandeur and spectacle, pomp and pageantry. But Dryden's is more
weighty (with respect to the inner turmoil) and has greater spiritual gravity. It
dso has one greater heroic figure- Ventidius at the end, Eros is less heroic,
though Shakespeare's Antony is more of a hero in d e ^ than in Dryden's
work. In both plays anagnorisis does occur but it is not well-weighted. So
for us modems, Dryden's hero and work is more ai>pealing i.e. from a
psychological point of view.
174
"[as a] literary artist Dryden is more concerned with manipulating
language to demonstrate the individual's quest for balance and wholeness and
the subversion of that goal by an implacable universe.""
175
Footnotes
^Ibid
"/i/(/., p.430.
"//>/•(/.. p.417.
177
man is as important as some high personage. O'Neill, on the other
hand, still invokes Fate, the god of psychological forces. Some of his
characters correspond to the Greek furies. So, the paranormal or
unstoppable other-worldly forces, hacve a definite part to play. In
Miller, these are absent, but the competitive race in the materiahstic
world of today comes out to be the chief well-spring. However,
Miller cannot be dismissed as a superficial tragedian, although it is
pertinent and important to point out that he lacks the ^e-defying depth
of O'Neill. O'Neill is much more psychologically existential, but Miller
is materially more comprehensiable and affirmative as he does not
beheve in "Armageddon" and its bearer- the Fifth Horseman. Taken
together, the two playwrights offer a vision which is intensely tragic,
examining the phght i.e. psycho-social state of mankind within the
generations that inhabit contemporary civilization. Both have a piercing
tendency to penetrate the Weltonschauung of human impulses which
dethrone man.
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Mourning Becomes Ekctra is a trilogy (which comprises
"Homecoming" "The Himted", and "The Haunted") that makes use of a Greek
myth and its various renderings by the Greek tragedy writer, Aeschylus a
predecessor of Sophocles. O'Neill has dwelt more upon the Freudian
concept, especially the Oedipus Complex, and the Electra complex to
expostulate his tragic vision and show how these complexes become
an impediment in the normal and natural growth of an individual.
That Lavinia also happens to love Brant and feels her mother has
cheated h^. Lavinia's love turned into jealousy complicates the situation
fiirther. She, bent on revenging her father and punishing her mother, extracts
a promise from Christine that she will not have any link with Brant again. But
Christine does not keep her promise and joins Brant in the murder of Ezra
instead. Ezra reaches home only to be told by his wife Christine that she is
in love with Adam Brant. He is shocked and suffers a heart attack. His wife
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as already planned adimnisters poison instead of medicine. Lavinia learns
the awful truth and swears vengeance.
After the death of Ezra Mannon, a great deal h^pens. Orin, the son,
returns home from the war. Lavinia tries to simulate and wean him away
from his m<?ther. Christine suspects Lavinia's intentions but is unable to stop
her. Lavinia becomes successful in playing up Orin's Oedipus Complex
alongwith his jealousy of Brant. Lavinia tells Orin not only about their
mother's adultery with Brant but also about the murder of their father.
Christine's attempt to hide the truUi from him isfruitless;once Orin has been
convinced that mother is guilty, the murder of Brant follows. Christine
shoots herself on learning about Brant's murder by Orin. Orin is distraught
with grief and remorse. Lavinia grimly accepts it as her revenge.
The action of this play occurs after a year. Only two Mannons are left-
Lavinia and Orin. They come back after hohdaying for some months
from the East and the South Sea Islands. They have changed roles in a very
striking way. Lavinia has become very attractive and voluptuous like
her mother: we learn she has felt carnal love on the Blessed Isles with Peter
and his sister Hazel. On the other hand, Orin looks sickly and obsessed. The
past haunts him, keeping him guilt ridden. Lavinia's resemblance to his
mother's physicahty and sensuality gives birth to incestuous love on
Orin's part. He proposes that he and Lavinia, partners in crime, bed each
other- another crime of pure incest. Filled with horror, she calls him vile
and says he is not fit to hve. Hearing this response and provocation, Orin
commits suicide. Lavinia going into her Puritanic shell, renounces Peter-
her lover- and decides to expiate her sins, to spend the rest of her hfe in the
house with all shutters nailed shut, away from human beings- in total
isolation.
!8J
Since O'Neill based Mourning Becomes Elecira on the model of The
Oresteia, he had to render due place to the conventions of Greek tragedy.
Undeniably, Mourning Becomes Elecira is not a rehgions play, yet it is not
Tvithout rehgious overtones either. Puritanism broods over the play heavily,
the entire tragedy stemming from the distorting effects of fear and hfe-
denying sacrifices. The deep moral issues dramatised are almost Bibhcal. The
sms of the father especially of ancestors, are visited upon the children.
O'Neill used the details that enrich the rehgious coimotations of the play.
The Mannon house is made to look like a pagan temple, and is constantly
referred to as 'a love without sin', and 'beauty without guilt'. The play's
preoccupation with sin, guilt and expiation links it to the concerns of all great
religions. Sophoc.'es' Oedipus also goes through the same process of guilt,
suffering, knowledge and redemption. Shakespeare's Lear does admit that
the fihal ingratitude of his evil daughters i.e. Goneril and Regan is his
own sin visiting upon him. The "holy water* in CordeHa's eyes (IV, iii, 30) has
ecclesiiistical overtones. O'Neill himself pointed out the relevance and
signific ance of rehgion in an essay: "the playwright today must dig at the
roots of the sickness of today as he feels it- the death of the old God and the
failure of science and materiaUsm to give any satisfying new one for the
surviving primitive religious instinct to find a meaning for hfe.'tiS
Greek tragedy never showed any violent action on the stage, though
the plot often revolved round some highly violent deeds. But O'Neill has
handled the violent theme with considerable refinement and restraint. Of the
four deaths in the play, two are managed offstage. He has chosen to abide by
the spirit of Greek tragedy but has not adhered to the latter. This canon of
Greek drama of showing violent deeds off stage, has not been completely
observed by Shakespeare in King Lear as tlie blinding of Gloucester takes
place on stage.
O'Neill's use of masks in this play, can also be traced to the Greek
convention. He, in fact, modified the spirit of the use of masks. Instead of
masks, O'Neill hit upon the idea of a mask-like look on all the Mannons, a
detail to which attention is repeatedly drawn. Ames, one of the Chorus of the
first play, comments on the mask-like look which the Mannons have and
which 'they grow on their wives too'. The idea of such a striking facial
resemblance was a very effective theatncal device to stress the relationships
184
between the varioiis characters and to suggest the idea of something hke fate
running through the whole family.
The reluctance to come forth shows a lack of real feeling for his home;
his mask-like face conceals his realself which is repressed, his lack of
emotion shows a dehberate attempt to dehumanize himself Such an
mipression on the audience would drive out the feehng on sympathy over his
death when it comes. O'Neill adopts the same method of dissociating
sympathy which Aeschylus adopts towards .Agamemnon or Shakespeare
towards Juhus Caeser. The idea which has already been instilled in the minds
of the audience that he was in some way responsible for Marie Brantome's
death interferes in the same way as the idea that Agameimon was responsible
for his daughter Iphigenia's death and for the devastation at Tory. But
O'Neill goes beyond this technique of dissociation. He resorts to the process
of immasking and brings out another self of Ezra. The unmasking by Ezra
evokes the rquisite sympathy in the mind of reader or spectator and makes
for a complex reaction.
185
in fact, O'Neill has injected the suspicion motive created by Lavinia's
letter which makes Ezra's behaviour stohd and frigid, and he has also given
the idea of the puritanic background of the Mannons which makes them
callous and unfeeling. Despite all this, he is a changed person and has a new
feeling when he speakes to Christine about his war experience:
The motivations employed for the tragic intensity and dramatic effect
m The Oresieia by the divine and the social codes are replaced in Mourning
Becomes Eleclra by Freudian and Jungjan psychology. Through a blend of
naturdistic and symbohstic techniques, O'Neill creates a successful
modem tragedy along the hnes of the Greek legend. As has been
mentioned earher, since O'Neill was greatly influenced by Ibsen and
Strindberg, it was but natural for him to incorporate naturahstic elements in
his plays. The modem equivalent to the Greek fate is obviously attributable
to his intimate and deep knowledge of naturahsm. Though Ibsen and
Strindberg influenced him, his handling of the n^urahstic elements is at
variance with theirs. Ibsen's naturahsm was more concerned with heredity
and environment, Strindberg's was dominated by 'Social Darwinism', but
O'Neill's is predominantly concerned with the psychological forces of
Freudiamsm and Jungianism. According to R.S.Singh, "Under the influence
of Freud and Jung and his own experience, he had learnt to see unknown
interests clashing and shaping the behaviour and language of man."" Unlike
Ibsen and Strindberg, there is no mention of the inheritance of the deadly
disease as in Ghosts: and there is no hint of class-struggle, i.e. social
Darwinism, as in Miss Juke, O'Neill has mainly banked upon the use of
psychological forces in apposition to the Puritan ethos.
188
O'Neill's main purpose of writing this tragedy was to mirror the
'sickness of society- the problem of the twentieth century. He did away with
the Aeschylean rehgious or moral pre-occupation, and concentrated on the
himian psychological relationships of love and hate and the resulting morbid
complexities and tragic abnormahties. The three parts of the trilogy were
progressively modified: so that it is the Homecoming which is nearest to
Agamemnon while ihe Himied and ihe Haunted diverge increasingly from
the Choephoroe and the Eumenides. The divergence in the later two parts
was essential to render the play relevant to the modem society.
"In his detailed" Working Notes and Extracts from a fragmentary work
Diary", O'Neill outhnes his purpose and method in Mourning Becomes
Electra, emphasizing repeatedly his equation of the complexes with destiny.
They are "a modem tra^c interpretation of classic fate without benefit of
Gods— for it (the play) must, before everything, remain (a) modem
psychological play- fate springing out of the family.""
Part of the family doom does indeed stem from O'Neill's particular
treatment of these Freudian concepts. Oedipus and Electra complexes, in
Jungian terminology- archetypal complexes not only determine the actions of
the characters, but are identified and discussed by the characters themselves.
Christine, for instance, accuses her daughter Lavinia thus:
Then he says;
"And I'll never leave you again now.
I don't want Hazel or any One
You are my only girl." (MBE p. 141)
190
It is a clear-cut warning to those who are inchned to think that by
chnging on to mother, they can go to heaven and hve a peaceful hfe. In this
context of one's being unable to detach oneself from the lunbihcal chord, a
humanistic, existentid psychologist Rollo May has the following to say:
" the conflict is between every hunitm being's need to struggle toward
enlarged self-awareness, maturity, freedom imd responsibihty, and his
tendencey to remain a child and cling to protection of parents or parental
substitutes.""
Qrin and Lavinia being the victims of such complexe&/ conflicts are
unable to grow into mature and rationed human beings. They are misfits
hvmg m the Jungian 'shadow* part of their uncosciousness. The two are the
counterfeits of Peter and Hazel who lead quite a normal, peaceful and healthy
hfe. The other strongly naturahstic touch in the play concerns itself with the
striking physical resemblances with one another. Ezra Maimon, Capt. Adam
Brant and Orin physically resemble one another. Similar is the case with
Christine, Marie Brantome and Lavinia, especially in the case of their 'hair*.
191
Like Ibsen and Stiindbreg, O'Neill also uses the naturalistic method
of invoking the past gradually. The crime is perpetrated in the past:
when Brant's mother and father were expelled and starved
to death. The effect of the past evil is tangibly felt in the present. Stage-
setting props and the number of characters are also kept to the minimum- a
naturalistic stage-setting.
The inherited family curse because of the crimes committed in tiie past
casts its shadow in the garb of a death-wish on the Mannon family members
through an overwhelming, unrelenting sense of imminence of death. To the
town-people, the mannon-house becomes a symbol of death. The events of
the plot- murders, suicides and self-immurement- objectify this sense as does
the sepulchral facade of the Mannon house. "The murders and suicides in
Mourning Becomes Electa owe part of Uieir causation to the pmitanical
distortion of love"" ^ays Alexander. Death, as it seems, is the goal of
O'Neill's hero Ezra Mannon; he meditates on it, he walks in its shadow and
he hves for it. For instance, Mannon says:
A similar type of wish is also expressed by Qrin towards the end of the
play and he ultimately shoots himself to death. Unlike the death in Greek
tragedy, O'Neill's modifications, however, result in a hopeless reiteration that
death is final. This speaks of his pessimism, conforming to the views
expressed by Parks: "the man who was always a httle in love with death was
assuredly not an optimist when he dealt with hfe."^' In this case, the epiphany
(that is rebirth in The Oresteia) ultimately sHps into the vision of death.
Death-wish seems to be a Mannon-brand. In a world, wherein man's desire is
to drive away death, how come such a family like the Mannons exists!
.After Lavinia and Oiin return from the Islands, Qru, experiences a
desire to possess Lavinia physically upon infatuation ^vith her blossoming
mother hke attractiveness. The climax is reached with Orin's incestuous
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proposal. Shelley remarks, "Of all tragic motives, incest is the most powerful
since it brings the passions most violently into play."^ Furthermore,
according to the Pmitan ethos, incest is the confirmation of their mutual
damnation. In Oedipus Rex, it was incest that damned Oedipus completely.
According to some critics, king Lear's testing the degree of love amongst his
three daughters indicates his incestuous desire lying deep down in his heart,
and this invited his tragedy.
The tragedy of the Mannons becomes all the more powerful due to
their inabihty to confess their guilt pubhcly as they are 'elect'. Hence there is
no possibihty for purgation as in the Puritan ethos there is no such
possibihty. This is an essential ingredient of tragedy because in the opinion
of Steiner, "Tragedy is irreparable. It can't lead to just and material
compensation for past suffering.^ Insofar as the tragic trauma Antony,
Timon, Lear and Oedipus fall in, they could never extricate themselves. The
fall of the Mannons is unavoidable because they cannot confess their crimes
in pubHc. For instance, Christine tells Lavinia:
195
of passions consumes Jocasta and Oedipus* eyes. In Shakespearean tragedy,
it is true of Lear, Hamlet, Macbeth and Othello.
Now the play is briefly examined to see its continuous contraction. The
Mannon family is viciously doomed to isolation and introversion due to their
curse and guilt, similar to the curse of the house of Atreus reflected in the
tightening and shortening circle of relationships among the members of the
Mannon family. The process of contraction not only affects the relationships,
but also in the physical hquidation of the family members. The following
circle shortening as the family members go one after the other speaks
volumes of the tragic t r ^ round the family neck.
^Brant
Christine
The first to face the brunt of fate (i.e. curse) is Ezra Mannon (i) whose
death evokes pity, especially as he is now a regenerate man hke
Oedipus,Tunon and Lear who desperately yearn for a new hfe of love and
understanding. This regeneration, which is something like the anagnorisis of
Greek tragic heroes, is explained as having taken place during the war, and
brings home to the audience a sense of waste of the good in him. The
revenging arrows fired at Ezra by Brant and Christine him at the conflict
between the hbertarian voluptuousness and sensuahty, and the puritanical
repression, which ultimately proves to be the starting point of tragedy. The
second shortened cricle (ii) shows Lavinia's actions- motivated by revenge
for the murder of her father by C^t. Brant and Cluistme, and also to repay
Adam for rejecting her. Further more, Qrin is mainly singled out by the
Oedipal jealousy as Brant ^engaged in sexual relations Avith mother. So the
next to face arrow of Death is Brant. Then he is killed. AJfter Adam Brant's
murder, the brutal death tempo is maintained by suicides. Christine coDapses
under the strain of extreme nervous tension caused by her strong sense of
guilt(iti). Moreover to her, hfe has lost meaning with Adam's death, and
suicide is the only recourse out of the seething torment within. She accepts
death hke a tragic heroine. Her son is indeed the indirect cause. Had Orin not
boasted about his murdering deed to his mother, and if Brant's murder had
been attributed to suicide, she would not have collq)sed. According to R.S.
Singh, "On the whole, woman is brought to sorrow in O'Neill's world by
whisky or by men wJio may be sons, husbands or lovers."^ The next to
undergo the anguish is Orin (iv). Only two family members are left not to
embrace hfe but to hug death and hnmurement. Though both Oiin and
Lavinia undergo a sea-change, the fonnefs is a fiightening one. For example,
Orin's incestuous proposal to his sister- Lavinia is the most j&ightening
aspect of the play. Orin's writing the record of the family history is not to
purge the Mannon sins, but to only blackmail Lavinia into staying with him.
Thus, the idea that Orin must die takes shape in Lavinia's mind, though she
attempts to reject it. When Oiin is about to commit suicide, Lavinia does not
deter him. The next and the last to suffer is Lavinia- Electra of Mourning
Becomes Electra, who says, "I am the last of the Mannons", (v). As death
becomes Mannons, mourning becomes Lavinia (Electra). Towards the end,
she realises with stuiming clarity that the dead will always come between
herself and h^piness. Released from all hopes of esc^e, Lavinia shps into a
deep cabn, the cabn of acceptance. She outrighUy shares Edgar's observation
in the last hnes of King Lear that "The weight of this sad time we must
obey."^(V.iii.323) R.S. Singh's comme.its rightly fit here that "Generally, the
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woman is a wounded creature who is found left alone at the end of the dark
tunnel of the journey of life to grieve at what time had done to her, her past
or her present."^' She sends Peter away, realising that the Mannon curse
being her lot will destory him if he is involved with her. Before undertaking
the self-imposed punishment of self-immurement, she tells Seth :
Then towards the end when she is likely to cross the threshold of the
Mannon temple of hving death, she orders Seth;
"You go now and close the shutters and nail them tight."(MBE p.280)
The family curse, i.e. fate, uitimstfely reduces the family to a single
member who embraces a sort of death in life, which is the worst kind of
punishment. By not surrendering to the onslaughts of psychological fate, her
stature as a tragic heroine is exalted. Moreover, tragic effect is created, says
Gassener "if the protagonist looms humanly large among his fellow creatures
of the play and if his values, however deplorable in their particular results,
magnify", rather than diminish him as human beings."^
In the juxtfq)osition of end parts of the two trilogies- The Oresteia and
Mourning Becomes Eiectra ,we find that while in the case of the former, the
end is deeply drenched in an atmosphere of happiness, in the latter
{Mourning Becomes Ekctra), the end is gloomy and vitriolic. According to
Frenz and Mueller, "Critics commonly contrast the Tiappy end' of The
198
Oresieia with the grim pessimism of Mourning Becomes Ekctra, and then
either condemn O'Neill for his extreme pessimism or -as Roger Asselineau
has done recently- "praise liim for the deeper insight of greater daring with
which he earned the story to its bitter end."*' The last scene oi Mourning
Becomes Ekctra becomes q?pallingly tragic when Lavinia- after undergoning
a long ordeal of irrevocable guilt and ghastly murders- is made to lead a hfe
of self-immurement, nothing short of a perpetual hell.
To sum up, the tragic vison of O'Neill hes in the Aristotehan 'hamartia'
which is abundantly present not in one member of the family but in the
200
whole family that suffers from the puritanic hubris; the camion of naturahsm
fixes it on the heredity of the Mannon fjmuly that started from the grand-
father and moved on to crush the grandson and the grand-daughter, in the
Jungian interpretation, it holds the archetypal- universal hfe-negating
fixations; in the Freudian terminology- the Oedipal and Electra complexes
which keep the characters away from the rational bent of mind; and in the
Aurobindonian context, it hes in the lack of appropriate and suitable
synchronization of life-levels. O'Neill's tragic vision as analysed above would
surely help us comprehend the otherwise mysterious vision of life.
201
the fall-out of hijnartia as he is completely braiiiwashed by the system, yet
can not effectively deal with it.
His eldest son. Biff, 34 years old is still unemployed. Willy is deeply
dis^pointed in Biff, but he deludes himself that Biff has the personahty to
succeed. A tension lurks between the two, the father unable to imderstand.
But Biff has also not lived up to Willy's expectations. Willy dwells on how
people in the past used to follow him. But now, he states, he is being
contradicted. In actuahty, the elusive American dream of materiahstic
success has s^ped his soul. He recalls the connectedness of rural hving-the
^ a r i a n society which is just without the cut-throat competition. This desire
shows his inability to compete and succeed in the highly
competitive,industrial society. He as an individual, did not grow but the outer
202
world ass\imed gigantic proportions. Hence he became useless, outdated,
obsolete and decrepit. His dieamy and imaginative world is all still,
unproductive and regressive in the eyes of Howard- his present employer.
His two sons, quite old, are still caught in the vicious web of his microcosm -
his personalised world which proves dl illusive, delusive, false, stagnant as
opposed to the macrocosm- the dynamic world.
His yoimger son, H^py, is concerned about his father's state of mind.
Actually both Biff and Happy are not psychologically potent enough to help
lum. Both of them are Don Juans always talking of girls. They add to Willy's
miseries. His own failure and his sons' failure weigh heavily on his mind. As
a father he failed in moulding them properly to face the competitive world
boldly.
"I have had twenty or tliirty different kinds o^ job since I left
house before the wai, and it always turns out the same".^^
He laments his failure and feels powerless to extricate himself from the
morass.
Biff is unable to see his future and has lost his sense of direction.
Happy also has not much hope except for waiting for his manager to die.
Both of them need their own apartment, a car, and plenty of women, but they
do not think of doing anything on their own. Biff plans to buy a ranch, raise
203
cattle and use his muscle. But all lliis is empty desire. Happy is frustrated.
The whole burden falls on Willy. He has been selling not the things but
"himself' all these years without giving time to his sons. Willy has been an
uninspiring paradigm for his sons. For H^py, it is his boss. He says about
his boss th^ "when he walks into the store, the waves part before him. That's
fifty thousand dollars a year coming through the revolving doors, and I got
more in my pinky finger than he's got in his head" p. 18 So, the play hinges
and operates on the delusions of three characters Willy, Biff and Happy.
Willy Loman creates a false aura aroimd himself and tells Biff that
some day he will own his business. He doesn't tike leaving home anymore.
He wants to be among his own people. The idea of being liked' haunts him.
H^py is oflen proud of his father when he talks of big things. Willy portrays
himself as bigger than Charile, a very rich neighbour. He boasts of meeting
powerful people. He dwells on better days ahead.
204
effect, not a positive one. They develop a false notion ^ o u t their father and
about themselves.
WiUy is proud of his big brother Ben, a very successful and rich man.
He is attracted by the idea of success but he does not realize that for real
success in hfe, one has to struggle through the 'Jimgle'. He actually does not
find a way to have access to it. But there are moments when he cries: "The
woods are burning. I can't drive a car." p.32 Charhe tries to tell him the truth,
but Willy does not accept his advice. He boasts before a man who knows him
thoroughly. He overlooks Biff's stealing, dismissing it as adventurousness.
Inspite of Willy's sinking from aU sides, his wife Linda still cares.
Linda teUs Biff, "If you don't have feelijigs for him, then you can't have any
feelings for me." She adds "I know he is not easy to get along with- nobody
knows that better than me." p.43
Biff quite gradually develops a notion that his father is a 'fake'. He says
he has "no character." p.44 All but Linda accuse him and reduce him to a
tragic figure. Linda asks Biff to pay attention to Willy. The playwright
castigates American society through Linda- a world wherein the common
man is languishing and starving in the land of plenty.
2or
Willy is suicidal, making many attempts almost fully, but holding
back at thefinalmoment. The failure on the economic level in the family has
broken Linda too. She is worried day in and day out over the payment of
bills. No one shares her worries, not even Willy, who remains lost in day
dreams. She is the one who acts as a bridge between Willy and sons.
The second act begins with a silver-lining in sight. Willy plans to buy
seeds and grow some vegetables and raise a few chickens. He hopes to marry
Biff and Happy and build a guest house for them. But, again, as luck would
have it, he shps back into the world of self-piPy and inferiority. He becomes
nervously conscious of the incompleteness of his personahty. As a result, he
cannot bear the sight of Linda with her torn stockings.
Howard, Willy's present employer, disappoints him for not holding out
any promise of a job. He is a shattered individual as he is about to be
rendered disfunctional in society terms. He fails to understand that he hves
in a market oriented culture where man has no value if he is incs5)able and
inefficient and is just not able to earn anything.
206
Ai the graveyard, the scene is deserted. His funeral is attended by very
few persons hke Charley, Biff, Happy and Linda. The funeral is in no way
large and massive. Incidentally, the last payment of the house is paid on that
day (of Willy's funeral) but he is not there to live in it.
Miller says that he thinks the tragic feelings are evoked in us when
we are in the presence of a character who is ready to lay down his life if need
be to secure one thing- his sense of personal dignity. Moreover, in today's
democratic world, a common man is as important as some high personage. It
is this "sense of personal dignity" that raises a common man to the stature of
a tragic hero. There are different views about Willy being a tragic hero.
Different critics oppose that Willy is merely a "Common Man", "a low man",
"a victim of the society" or "a poor,flashingself-deceiving man". Such views
are based upon the Aristotehan concept of the rank of the t r ^ c hero
in a society. For Aristotle, a tragic hero has a high rank in the society, he is
either a king or a prince. But kings and princes don't exist today. Today there
are common people, "low-men", strugghng to preserve their image in the
modem commercialized world. Hence, for Miller, it is the degree of the
207
struggle even the suiTeiing involved in that, and not the rank in the society
that raises one to the stature of a tragic hero. He says: "The play was always
heroic to me, and in later years the academy's charge that Willy lacked the
"stature" for the tragic hero seemed incredible to me. I had not understood
that these matters are measured by Greco-Ehzabethan paragr^hs which hold
no mention of insurance payments, front porches, refrigerator fan belts ,
steering kunckles, chevrolets, and visions seen not through the portals of
Delphi but in the blueflameof the hot-water heater."^
Apart form suffering as a small man m a big world, Willy also suffers
as a guilt-ridden father. In the heart of his hearts, he knows that he has given
Biff wrong education. Another thing that is always pecking at his heart is the
problem of restoring his lost image in the eyes of his son. How much of a
big man WiUy is, is revealed to Biff in the Aston Hotel, where he finds a
naked woman in Willy's room. WiUy also reacts sharply to Bernard when the
latter sums up Biffs failure in just one question: "What happened in Boston,
WiUy? p.74 This question too is a threat to his dignity and the only answer he
finds to questions he faces as a father is m committing suicide and making
for the loss with the msurance money. The suicide does not render him
cowardly, but exalts him to the stature of a tragic hero because this he does
in order to retain his "dignity", his "rightful status". W^illy's suicide may also
be seen m the context of Japanese concept of hara kiri. In hara kiri ,
209
one does away with oneself in full consciousness because one feels one has
fallen short of a higher perceived value. The value may be social, cultural
pertaimng to the enshrined codes; the value may be famihal. In fact, the
concept of self-immolation is widely disseminated cross-cultural idea, the
Romans did away with themselves in the event of failure e.g. Brutus
stabbed himself, Antony and Ventidius killed themselves with their own
swords. Drona Acharya, in Mahabharat gave up his life yogjcally when he
heard that his son hau died in the Mahabharat battle. Oedipus blinded
himself when he came to know about his incestuous marriage with his
mother. Willy' self-knowledge about his total failure on all fronts made him
commit suicide.
In his clash with the society, Willy emerges as a tragic hero. He is not
merely a victim of the society. Though the business world is callous, cold,
but as a matter-of-fact, it is not entirely the business world that is responsible
for Willy's failures. The fault hes with his ownself too, he is no less culpable,
reprehensible. Moreover, tlie whole business world is not alike. If Howard is
a stone-hearted, unemotional person, Charile is plain, honest and kind. He
has sympathy and concern for Willy whom he knows through and through.
He offers him a job, but Willy the so-called big man declines to accept that
even though he has to resort to sophisticated begging. All this he does again,
to retain his image of being Ijig' that he always cherishes though foolishly.
A tragic hero's problem is that he can not simply walk away from the
facts of hfe. Bernard suggests Willy, "But sometimes, WiUy, it is better for a
man just to walk away",p.75 But Willy does not. He sticks to a committed
course of action. If he could "walk away", he would not be a tragic hero.
Oedipus could never leave his enquiry midway. He just can not sit back and
accept that he is 'a dime a dozen' this is a threat to his image.
210
He desperately asserts: "V am not a dime a dozen! I am Willy Loman
...."p. 105Like all Millefs heroes, Willy sacrifies everything-even his
life for the right to be recognized as an individual on this earth.
211
Erich FTonun especially underlines his view of Willy's ego, the
attribution to oneself of fictitious traits. Miller uses the following
phrases to reveal Willy's fictitious character, 'his mercurial nature', 'his
massive dreams' and 'the turbulent longings within him.' Because of all
this, he loses touch with reahty . Consequently, he becomes a victim
of society and a victimizer of himself and family. These false
attributes do a lot in compensating for the lacks and deficiencies.
Sometimes this tendency of developing lictitious self or fi^ontal self
creates a false facade (inflated image) of having latent or unrealized
potentials- but to achieve these, hard work is very essential. In the
absence of such hard-work or commitment to one's growth and
development, a fictitious attribution comes to seem more real to
oneself than actuahty. This fictitious self of Willy Loman becomes a
part of his personahty. To speak in precise clinical psychological terms
Willy Loman is sufferingfiromwhat is called neurosis. In neurossis,one has a
view of oneself which is not being endorsed or verified by others. In fact, the
verification that one gets from others is totally at variance with one's self-
view. So progressively, one gets cut off from the meaningful human fellow-
ship and withdraws himself into fear, unease, anxiety and obsessions. The
view imderlined above is captured in the following poem:
Neurosis is vanity,
its root is conceit. ***
213
ego. It is, therefore, constantly acting on mind to biuld for it a mental
structure of apparent self that will serve those purposes; our mind is
persuaded to preseiU to us and to others a partly fictitious
representative figure of ourselves which supports our self-affirmation,
justifies our desires and actions, nourishes our ego. n42
He loses touch with ground reahties, not only outside the family
but witliin liis family also. He should know that his sons are going astray and
they have not found a regular job. Keeping his dignity intact, he wants to
become financially rich. His process of life is relational, but not a
calculating one. The relational principle for him is very difficult to
214
execute in the metropolitan city society as Willy desires of it or
fantasizes about it. In such a society, there is no concern for his
emotional values. In such a marketing society, there is a concern only
for commercial values. Willy being a misfit and a complete failure is
rendered a lost man', a nervous old man with no confidence . On many
occasions he is seen talking to himself. Instead of action, he talks.
Why does a person talk to himself, is explained by Dr. Suresh Rattan,
a modem gerontologjst; "Even as adults, Y s need to talk to ourselves
fi^om time to time to regain confidence, to overcome nervousness, and
to regain faith hi ourselves and our surroundings. Private speech has
pubhc role."** Willy, as a hero of the tragedy will be remembered by
the ^ e s to come; not as a grand, towering personality like Oedipus,
Lear or Timon but as everyman's hero. He represents faith or intuition
of everyone. He has immortalised the common man of twentieth
century caught in jaws of juggernaut.
Apart from making his sons feel big, Willy gives an inflated
image of himself to his sons. Biff and Hi^ppy have a feeling that
their father is a big and influential man who has friends like the
Mayor of Providence. Willy names big people very casually and tells
his sons," I can park my car in any street in New England, and the
cops protect it like their own".p.24 These are big hes but innocent
Biff develops a hero-worshipping attitude towards his father. His
illusion about his father breaks in the Boston hotel where he goes to
see his father after he has flunked math. He goes with a hope that
216 < •
his father is a big man and the professor will give him the needed
grade points if Willy asked him. But after the Boston incident of finding
his father with a naked woman, his whole faith is shattered. He teUs
Willy that the teacher won't obhge liim. It is from here that Biffs
tragedy begins. The image of his father is destroyed in his mind.
Willy who was an ideal hero in Biffs eyes is reduced to "ahar" or
'a fake', p.95 Willy was the anchor for Biff in the vast ocean of the
modem commercial world. The anchor is gone and Biff is left alone
with nothingness around.
The wrong education and the loss of faith in this education are
always in clash with Biffs essential temperament. He tries his luck in
all kinds of jobs in different states but is unable to make the mark
even at the age of thirty-four. He doesn't directly blame his father but
says to H^py: I'm mixed up very bad" p. 17 He has found that he is
unfit for town job which for him is "ajueasily manner of existence."
p. 16 He, actu^y, is man with love for nature. To him "there is
nothing more inspiring or beautiful than the sight of a mare or new-
colt". p. 16 He is a free soul who feels choked in the restraints of the
world. He says : "... We don't belong in this nutshell of a city ! We
should be mixing cement on some open plain, or - or carpenters. A
carpenter is allowed to whistle.''p.48 But we see that Biff fails to settle
even in the farm life and he comes back home from Texas. This is
because Biffs natural self has not grown into maturity and is just unable to
break the umbihcal tjiord. To explain Biffs unsettling and coming
back home, a humanistic psychologist Rollo May has the following to
say: "... the confhct is between every human being's need to struggle
toward enlarged self-awareness, maturity, freedom and responsibility;
and his tendency to remain a child and cling to protection of parents
217
or parental substitutes.*' Unlike Charlie, Willy has beheved in training
his sons. If he had not imposed his training on Ms son, Biff might
have naturally grown just as Bernard does and might have made a
success. It is evident that Biff grows into a lopsided personality
because his father actively interfered with his natural growth but his
mother remained a passive spectator.
219
Biif may also be looked upon as the seed that Willy plants, but
he plants it in a wrong soil. With the result. Biff matures into a
thutless tree. The fault is not with the seed but with the environment,
^^^th the planter. And Willy, seeing his efforts wasted, wonders:
"Nothing planted!"
220
.^^meiican culture in particular and Western culture in general demands
that boys should attain antonomy in high school in the relative sense- in the
sense that they should do small jobs to earn pocket money and also to defray
other expenses involved in their own past times, parties and other self-
fulfilling pursuits. Biff and H85)py violate this central code of American
culture. Against the American culture, Biff has prolonged his adolescence
Linda and Willy are also at fault from the cultural perspective in giving him
shelter in between his twenty odd jobs. To enc^sulate clinically, Biffs
problem is that he is a passive puer who idolizes mother but negates father.
He can hold provisional jobs only.
She counts ins hlc-linie hcird labour not only tor the hunily but
lor the tinn iilso. She strongly protests and reacts when BilT
downgrades Willy but upgrades Charhe as far their success m hfe is
concerned. Lmda's reaction is:
"Then make Charlie you father, Biff. ....Willy Loman made a lot
of money. His name was never in the paper. He's not the finest
character that ever lived. But he's a human being, and a terrible thing
IS happening to him. So attention must be paid. He's not to be
allowed to fall into his grave like an old dog."p.44
Willy does deserve all the sympathy not from his wife only but
from ail those who are likely to be the victims of the capitahst
society. Miller made Willy a representative victim. With the advent of
industriahsm in America, capitahsm with all its materialism began to
show Its fangs. Human aspect was altogether ignored. How callous,
stohd, unfeeling and selfish the American society had become, Miller
has made Linda- the victim's wife act like chorus and say the following
words:
225
Footnotes
^Mexander, p.927.
^^Parks, p.99.
"Alexander, p.929.
"Alexander, p.929.
227
^'^Quoted by Stark Youiig in ''Eugene O'Neill's NewPlay
(MourningBecomesElectraT Tmntielh Century Vie^vs: O'NeillQ^. John
Gassner (Engelwood Cliffs, N.J.; Prentice Hail Inc., 1964), p.86.
^R.S. Singh, p. 5.
''Ibid.s, p.6.
^Sri Aurobindo, The H/e DiMne, Book I and II, Vol. 18, Pait-I of
BCL (Pondicherry: Sri Aurobindo Ashrain Trust Press, 1982), p.532.
37
Thomas E. Sanders, The Discovery of Drama {\\hnois: Scott,
Foresman and Company, 1968), p.247.
-JO
''Ibid
228
'*^Sri Aurobindo, The Life Dhine, Book I &II Vol. 18, part-I of
B.C.L.(PondicherTy; Sri Aurobindo Ashram Trust Press, 1982), pp.532-33.
'*^RolloMayp.l93.
229