anxiety with regard to their origin and nature. They were invariably overloaded with those fantastic details, and those forms borrowed from the common habits of life, with which children so often decorate the objects which they are obliged to picture to themselves by the aid of their imagination alone. Thus Tamburlaine appeared in his chariot drawn by the kings whom he had conquered, and complaining bitterly of the slow pace and miserable appearance of his team. On the other hand, Vice, the usual buffoon of dramatic compositions, performed, under the name of Ambidexter, the principal part in Preston’s tragedy of ‘‘Cambyses,” which was thus converted into a Morality which would have been intolerably tedious if the spectators had not had the gratification of seeing a prevaricating judge flayed alive upon the stage, by means of “a false skin,” as we are duly informed by the author. The performance, though almost entirely deficient in decorations and changes of scenery, was animated by material movement, and by the representation of sensible objects. When tragedies were performed, the stage was hung with black; and in an inventory of the properties of a troop of comedies, we find enumerated, “the Moor’s limbs, four Turks’ heads, old Mahomet’s head, one wheel and frame in the siege of London, one great horse with his legs, one dragon, one rock, one cage, one tomb, and one hell’s mouth.”[1] This is a curious specimen of the means of interest which it was then thought necessary to employ upon the stage.
And yet, at this period, Shakspeare had already appeared! and, before Shakspeare’s advent, the stage had constituted, not only the chief gratification of the multitude, but the favorite amusement of the most distinguish-
- ↑ Malone’s Shakspeare, vol. iii., p. 309–313 ed. 1821.