Leading persons in second main action the moral
agents in resolving complication of first main action.
Personages of underplot the physical agents.
Tristram has brought his friend Launcelot to
Elaine's to be cured, and visits him there.
Insanity of Launcelot at beginning of play.
When silence and absence had bred in my soul the
thought of the possibility that you had ceased to love
me, I have cried out in horrified imagination, “False,
false!” Then, more just, moaned to myself, “All's
not lost yet. I love her still. Who was I that she
ever should have loved me?”
NOTES ON ASTOLAT
The story in this play was to be the reunion of
the lovers after the experiment of renunciation of
self had failed, also the reunion after the discord
of the Elaine episode. As “The Marriage of Guenevere”
embodies his thought about the influence of
parents over the marriage of their children, and
“The Birth of Galahad” shows the deeper experiences
of mother and wife in what he calls “The
True Family”; as Taliesin deals with art and the
Graal with the problem of renunciation and chivalry,
so “Astolat” was to show forth the intricacy of
personal experience. It was a late addition to the
series and was planned for the purpose of touching
the psychology of the discords in a love.
The greater the love the better the environment
required to keep it in that growth which is its only
life. The great difficulty of adjusting love to its
environment, however, must not hide the possibility
of destruction from within, the danger treated in
“Astolat.” Until two lovers are perfect humans
every love has dangers from within. For love is
harmony, and love is at every point dependent upon
every point of the lover's love and every quality of
the lover's character.
Love is at once the ultimate desire and ultimate
gift of the lover. Doubt of the entire gift or the
entire desire is the foundation of jealousy, and this
does not of necessity need a third person to be the
object of envy or hatred. But the third party externalizes
the situation and is dramatically valuable,
especially in a poem intended for the theater, as was
“Astolat.”
To a women like Guenevere, to whom love represented
the inevitableness of the nature of things, a
real jealousy would have meant destruction of all
she had experienced of the harmonies of life, and
have brought about, not temper like the jewel scene
of Tennyson's Guenevere, for example, but tragic
deeds. Destruction doubtless, perhaps of Launcelot,
perhaps of the network of relations between them;
possibly of the small and helpless Elaine, who would
have had to be put out of the possibility of harming
a great love like theirs, as one might dismiss any intrusive,
unrelated thing from a great presence.
Guenevere was too sure of Launcelot's love to envy
any tenderness he seemed to give Elaine or any
other, but her anger, that, in the face of feelings
of such mystic might, there should be any moment
of a lesser emotion, any cause for fear of a discord
in the harmony, was natural; and such a nature as
Launcelot's would in all loyalty have been beautifully
tender and sympathetic to the lovelorn Elaine,
giving thus more than provocation to any half understanding
of his character in Guenevere.
An inherent element of jealousy comes from the
wound to personal dignity, a thing it is one of the
chief objects of life to attain. Personal worth represents
the sum of living. It is the stewardship of
the soul, the measure of the deeds of a life. Proud
natures suffer most in jealousy. The poignancy of
pain is for loss of self-respect as well as for loss of
love. When personal dignity is lessened, resentment
is natural.
The greater, or rather the more complex and mystic
and miraculous, the nature of a love, the greater
is its value. Thus is it worthy of a greater care.
But of more importance still is the seldom considered
truth that the greater is its need of protection.
In another play, “The Lady of the Sonnets,” the
author had planned to show what happened in a
Shakespeare's heart when faith died. “Astolat”
was to show what was requisite to obliterate jealousy
from the life of a Launcelot and Guenevere.
Up to a certain point the elaboration of a structure,
be it man, animal, or the intricately knit up
relations of two souls, strengthens the unit. But
there is, still beyond, a degree of harmony, which
becomes a kind of specialization of function and
ministers to life in its highest phases, yet is less
self-preservative than forms in the earlier stages of
evolution, and thus it is with great loves. The long
continuance of a love then is not, as popularly considered,
the test of the greatness of the love. The
character of a love, the joy it gives, the inspiration
it is to either lover, the beautiful births it leads to,
in offspring or in the two personalities, measure its
worth. These things show its quality. Time can
only increase its number of opportunities.
The common use of the word jealousy covers many
shades of meaning. Confusion sometimes arises as
to the dividing line between envy and jealousy.
One is jealous of a thing he considers his own and
wishes to keep. One is envious of that which he
wishes to have for his own, although he admits it
to be another's. One who is envious is a would-be
thief, one who is jealous is only selfish. The selfishness
may even degenerate into greed. So far as
the one he loves is concerned it is pure selfishness
unrelieved by those magnanimous, generous and loving
attitudes in which he would be willing to let the
loved one have the small liberties of kindness and
sympathy toward others, or to receive the gift of
the love of others. These are the exacting ones
about the payment of that which was originally a
free gift. It would seem that the sense of ownership
should be held loose enough to give personal
liberty, and the possibility of continual giving without
demand. Jealousy becomes more ignoble in proportion
as it contains envy. The ignoble elements in
jealousy are suspicion, selfishness, the meagre faith,
all implying doubt of the loyalty of the loved one,
also doubt of self-worth, the last degradation possible,
and the last insult to one who has loved us.
A lesser love is proven and a greater insulted by
jealousy.
There is but one cure for jealousy—love. Love
for the intruder, or such love of the loved one as
gives gladness of his delight even at personal loss.
How a wise and generous person's ability to conquer
the passion by rousing through great love some
overmastering kindly emotion; how love of the offending
rival may drown jealousy; how generosity,
pity even, and all the kindly passions furnish the
means of conquering jealousy; were sure to have
been embodied in “Astolat,” where Launcelot's obligation
of gratitude and friendship to Elaine were
to cause Guenevere's jealousy. The all-conquering
love that breeds a faith that has no fear, that submerges
even pride and arms against scorn and ridicule,
was the type of love exampled by Launcelot
and Guenevere in the culmination of their lives in
the “Poem in Dramas.” How jealousy may be
prevented by clear sight of one's worth in the eye
of the beloved object, by consciousness of the gift
one gives, of its suitability to the need of the other,
by unswerving continued gift, even under circumstances
that might cause fear of loss, was part of the
theme of “Astolat.”
Psychological jealousy demands mental perception
of value and enthusiasm or emotional force in enjoying
the perception. A character is also capable
of guarding jealously a loved thing in proportion
to its capacity for appreciation. All human passions
admit of evolution into more and more exalted
phases, according to the great admixture of qualities
in the persons or the complexity of environing
events, and jealousy is not an exception. In considering
jealousy as a lower passion, it might be
suggested that even love would seem so if only its
commonest phases were considered. All the poets
have written of love at its loveliest development. But
jealousy has been thus far chiefly described in its
simplest and most brutal conditions. One might say
that jealousy is as yet unwritten by the poets. The
contending reindeer drives off the other male to win
his doe. The jealous man of little moral and intellectual
growth kills his rival to have a clear path
to his love. Othello, grandest of jealous heroes in
English poetry, goes a step higher, paying Desdemona
the compliment of blaming her, and also the
compliment of not being willing to live when she is
dead and proven innocent. This is jealousy at its
worst, producing all the destruction possible—death
to both Othello and Desdemona.
The passions may be considered as destructive or
productive. Jealousy, if mainly destructive, is also
preservative of that exclusive unity of relation which
is doubtless beneficial to the magnetic conditions, in
the exclusion of inharmonious magnetisms so important
to the sensitive states of motherhood.
The reason then why we require all the attentions
of a lover is an instinct resulting from racial experience
and through social necessity.
No passion wholly painful, and so largely destructive,
could have reached the present development
of jealousy as a human attribute had it not
some inherent necessity for being.
As with other bad passions, is not jealousy the excessive
development of a good one?
This purity of relationship, mystic and magnetic
as well as emotional, seems to have lain in the
author's mind as an ultimate attainment for which
no sacrifice was too great a price to pay;—the
empire, the church, friendship, and loyalty to a royal
friend, all being here set over against the preservation
of the true family.
Since the marriage of Guenevere made the attainment
of this condition more difficult than in the
usual family, jealousy adds another element to the
tragedy.
Here in the merest sketch of the theme are a few
of the many facets Richard Hovey would have reflected
the light from in “Astolat.”