THE SPANISH TRAGEDY -THOMAS KYD
THE SPANISH TRAGEDY
-THOMAS KYD
SUMMARY
OF THE PLAY:
The
Spanish Tragedy begins with the ghost of Don Andrea, a
Spanish nobleman killed in a recent battle with Portugal. Accompanied by the
spirit of Revenge, he tells the story of his death; he was killed in
hand-to-hand combat with the Portuguese prince Balthazar, after falling in love
with the beautiful Bel-Imperia and having a secret affair with her. When he
faces the judges who are supposed to assign him to his place in the underworld,
they are unable to reach a decision and instead send him to the palace of Pluto
and Proserpine, King and Queen of the Underworld. Proserpine decides that
Revenge should accompany him back to the world of the living, and, after
passing through the gates of horn, this is where he finds himself. The spirit
of Revenge promises that by the play's end, Don Andrea will see his
revenge.
Andrea
returns to the scene of the battle where he died, to find that the Spanish have
won. Balthazar was taken prisoner shortly after Andrea's death, by the Andrea's
good friend Horatio, son of Hieronimo, the Knight Marshal of Spain. But a
dispute ensues between Horatio and Lorenzo, the son of the Duke of Castile and
brother of Bel-Imperia, as to who actually captured the prince. The King of
Spain decides to compromise between the two, letting Horatio have the ransom money
to be paid for Balthazar and Lorenzo keep the captured prince at his home. Back
in Portugal, the Viceroy (ruler) is mad with grief, for he believes his son to
be dead, and is tricked by Villuppo into arresting an innocent noble,
Alexandro, for Balthazar's murder. Diplomatic negotiations then begin between
the Portuguese ambassador and the Spanish King, to ensure Balthazar's return
and a lasting peace between Spain and Portugal.
Upon being taken back to Spain,
Balthazar soon falls in love with Bel-Imperia himself. But, as her servant
Pedringano reveals to him, Bel-Imperia is in love with Horatio, who returns her
affections. The slight against him, which is somewhat intentional on
Bel-Imperia's part, enrages Balthazar. Horatio also incurs the hatred of
Lorenzo, because of the fight over Balthazar's capture and the fact that the
lower-born Horatio (the son of a civil servant) now consorts with Lorenzo's
sister. So the two nobles decide to kill Horatio, which they successfully do
with the aid of Pedringano and Balthazar's servant Serberine, during an evening
rende-vous between the two lovers. Bel-Imperia is then taken away before
Hieronimo stumbles on to the scene to discover his dead son. He is soon joined
in uncontrollable grief by his wife, Isabella.
In Portugal, Alexandro escapes death
when the Portuguese ambassador returns from Spain with news that Balthazar
still lives; Villuppo is then sentenced to death. In Spain, Hieronimo is almost
driven insane by his inability to find justice for his son. Hieronimo receives
a bloody letter in Bel-Imperia's hand, identifying the murderers as Lorenzo and
Balthazar, but he is uncertain whether or not to believe it. While Hieronimo is
racked with grief, Lorenzo grows worried by Hieronimo's erratic behavior and
acts in a Machiavellian manner to eliminate all evidence surrounding his crime.
He tells Pedringano to kill Serberine for gold but arranges it so that
Pedringano is immediately arrested after the crime. He then leads Pedringano to
believe that a pardon for his crime is hidden in a box brought to the execution
by a messenger boy, a belief that prevents Pedringano from exposing Lorenzo
before he is hanged. Negotiations continue between Spain and Portugal, now
centering on a diplomatic marriage between Balthazar and Bel-Imperia to unite
the royal lines of the two countries. Ironically, a letter is found on
Pedringano's body that confirms Hieronimo's suspicion over Lorenzo and
Balthazar, but Lorenzo is able to deny Hieronimo access to the king, thus
making royal justice unavailable to the distressed father. Hieronimo then vows
to revenge himself privately on the two killers, using deception and a false
show of friendship to keep Lorenzo off his guard.
The marriage between Bel-Imperia and
Balthazar is set, and the Viceroy travels to Spain to attend the ceremony.
Hieronimo is given responsibility over the entertainment for the marriage
ceremony, and he uses it to exact his revenge. He devises a play, a tragedy, to
be performed at the ceremonies, and convinces Lorenzo and Balthazar to act in
it. Bel-Imperia, by now a confederate in Hieronimo's plot for revenge, also
acts in the play. Just before the play is acted, Isabella, insane with grief,
kills herself.
The plot of the tragedy mirrors the
plot of the play as a whole (a sultan is driven to murder a noble friend
through jealousy over a woman). Hieronimo casts himself in the role of the
hired murderer. During the action of the play, Hieronimo's character stabs
Lorenzo's character and Bel-Imperia's character stabs Balthazar's character,
before killing herself. But after the play is over, Hieronimo reveals to the
horrified wedding guests (while standing over the corpse of his own son) that
all the stabbings in the play were done with real knives, and that Lorenzo,
Balthazar, and Bel-Imperia are now all dead. He then tries to kill himself, but
the King and Viceroy and Duke of Castile stop him. In order to keep himself
from talking, he bites out his own tongue. Tricking the Duke into giving him a
knife, he then stabs the Duke and himself and then dies.
Revenge and Andrea then have the final
words of the play. Andrea assigns each of the play's "good"
characters (Hieronimo, Bel-Imperia, Horatio, and Isabella) to happy eternities.
The rest of the characters are assigned to the various tortures and punishments
of Hell.
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