Friday, August 28, 2009

The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus

Kit Marlowe was the Brian Wilson of Elizabethan drama. Doctor Faustus features scads of demons, pyrotechnics, a painstakingly detailed cosmology, a would-be pope crossing continents on flying horseback, Helen of Troy rising from the grave, and plenty of gore and erudite ambition, but I couldn't find a single captivating, sexy or sympathetic character in the entire play. Unless, of course, you count Marlowe himself: Cambridge graduate, dramaturgist, poet, member of the School of Night, secret agent, tavern brawler, sodomite, and rabid tobacco enthusiast.

Ah, dead shepherd, they don't make 'em like they used to.

RATING: Better than I'll ever be, but still no Shakespeare%

(Image from www.history.neu.edu.)

6 comments:

DCP said...

Being stabbed to death in the eye is as good a literary death as any.

I also like Virginia Woolf filling her pockets with stones and walking into the river and Wilfred Owen being killed in trench warfare.

John said...

Plath: head in the oven. Shakespeare: a surfeit of wine.
David Foster Wallace: auto-erotic asphyxiation(?)
Glenn: ??
Viking Andrew: ??

Internet Robyn said...

I wish that pope was my grandfather.

Walter Benjamin and the Mechanical Reproductions (the band) said...

my fav lit death was stephen king who died of being run over by a car

Walter Benjamin and the Mechanical Reproductions (the band) said...

(hes also the only writer i know beside glen)

shoppista said...

R Kelley is my favorite mystery commenter.