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<h2> KIT MARLOWE AND JESUS CHRIST. * </h2>
<p>* December, 1888.<br/></p>
<p>Christopher Marlowe, whose "mighty line" was celebrated by Ben Jonson, is
one of the glories of English literature. He was the morning star of our
drama, which gives us the highest place in modern poetry. He definitively
made our blank verse, which it only remained for Shakespeare to improve
with his infinite variety; and although his daring, passionate genius was
extinguished at the early age of twenty-nine, it has reverent admirers
among the best and greatest critics of English literature. Many meaner
luminaries have had their monuments while Marlowe's claims have been
neglected; but there is now a project on foot to erect something in honor
of his memory, and the committee includes the names of Robert Browning and
Algernon Swinburne.</p>
<p>This project evokes a howl from an anonymous Christian in the columns of
the <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>. He protests against the "grotesque indecency
of such a scheme," and stigmatises Marlowe as "a disreputable scamp, who
lived a scandalous life and died a disgraceful death." That Marlowe was "a
scamp" we have on the authority of those who denounced his scepticism and
held him up as a frightful warning. His fellow poets, like Chapman and
Drayton, spoke of him with esteem. An anonymous eulogist called him "kynde
Kit Marlowe"; and Edward Blunt, his friend and publisher, said "the
impression of the man hath been dear unto us, living an after-life in our
memory." Assuredly Shakespeare's "dead shepherd" was no scamp. He
apparently sowed his wild oats, like hundreds of other young men who were
afterwards lauded by the orthodox. He was fond of a glass of wine in an
age when tea and coffee were unknown, and English ladies drank beer for
breakfast. And if he perished in a sudden brawl, it was at a time when
everyone wore arms, and swords and daggers were readily drawn in the
commonest quarrels. Nor should it be forgotten that he belonged to a
"vagabond" class, half-outlawed and denounced by the clergy; that the
drama was only then in its infancy; that it was difficult to earn bread by
writing even immortal plays; and that irregularity of life was natural in
a career whose penury was only diversified by haphazard successes. After
all is said, Marlowe was no man's enemy but his own; and it is simply
preposterous to judge him by the social customs of a more fastidious and,
let us add, a more hypocritical age.</p>
<p>Our Christian protestor is shocked at the suggestion that the Marlowe
memorial should be placed in Westminster Abbey, "an edifice which I
believe was originally built to the honor of Jesus Christ." "The
blasphemies of Voltaire," he says, "pale into insignificance when compared
with those of Marlowe;" he "deliberately accused Jesus Christ and his
personal followers of crimes which are justly considered unmentionable in
any civilised community," and "any monument which may be erected in honor
of Christopher Marlowe will be a deliberate insult to Christ."</p>
<p>Now those "blasphemies" are set forth in the accusation of an informer,
one Richard Bame, who was hanged at Tyburn the next year for some mortal
offence. Marlowe's death prevented his arrest, and it is somewhat
extravagant—not to give it a harsher epithet—to write as
though the accusation had been substantiated in a legal court. One of
Bame's statements about Marlowe's itch for coining is, upon the face of
it, absurd, and the whole document is open to the gravest suspicion. It is
highly probable however, that Marlowe, who was a notorious Freethinker,
was not very guarded in his private conversation; and we have no doubt
that in familiar intercourse, which a mercenary or malicious eavesdropper
might overhear, he indulged in what Christians regard as "blasphemy." Like
nine out of ten unbelievers, he very likely gave vent to pleasantries on
the subject of Christian dogmas. There is nothing incredible in his having
said that "Moses was but a juggler," that "the New Testament is filthily
written" (Mr. Swinburne calls it "canine Greek"), or that "all Protestants
are hypocritical asses." But whether he really did say that the women of
Samaria were no better than they should be, that Jesus's leaning on John's
bosom at the last supper was a questionable action, that Mary's honor was
doubtful and Jesus an illegitimate child—cannot be decided before
the Day of Judgment; though, in any case, we fail to see that such things
make "the blasphemies of Voltaire pale into insignificance."</p>
<p>We candidly admit, however, that a memorial to Marlowe would be
incongruous in Westminster Abbey if Darwin were not buried there; but
after admitting the high-priest of Evolution it seems paltry to shriek at
the admission of other unbelievers. It will not do to blink the fact of
Marlowe's Atheism, as is done by the two gentlemen who took up the cudgels
on his behalf in the <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>. Setting aside the
accusation of that precious informer, there is other evidence of Marlowe's
heresy. Greene reproached him for his scepticism, and every editor has
remarked that his plays are heathenish in spirit. Lamb not only calls
attention to the fact that "Marlowe is said to have been tainted with
Atheistical positions," but remarks that "Barabas the Jew, and Faustus the
Conjurer, are offsprings of a mind which at least delighted to dally with
interdicted subjects. They both talk a language which a believer would
have been tender of putting into the mouth of a character though but in
fiction." Dyce could not "resist the conviction" that Marlowe's impiety
was "confirmed and daring." His extreme Freethought is also noticed by Mr.
Bullen and Mr. Havelock Ellis. There is, indeed, no room for a rational
doubt on this point. Marlowe was an Atheist. But a sincere Christian, like
Robert Browning, is nevertheless ready to honor Marlowe's genius; quite as
ready, in fact, as Algernon Swinburne, whose impiety is no less "confirmed
and daring" than Marlowe's own. There is freemasonry among poets; their
opinions may differ, but they are all "sealed of the tribe." And surely we
may all admire genius as a natural and priceless distinction, apart from
all considerations of system and creed. What Atheist fails to reverence
the greatness of Milton? And why should not a Christian reverence the
greatness of Marlowe? If creed stands in the way, the Christian may keep
his Dante and his Milton, his Cowper and his Wordsworth; but he loses
Shakespeare, Byron, and Shelley; he loses Goethe and Victor Hugo; nay, he
loses Homer, AEschylus, Sophocles, Pindar, Lucretius, Virgil, Horace, and
all the splendid poets of Persia whose lyres have sounded under the
Mohammedan Crescent. The distinctively Christian poets, as the world goes,
are in a very decided minority; and it is a piece of grotesque impudence
to ban Christopher Marlowe because he declined to echo the conventional
praises of Jesus Christ.</p>
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