Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 3).pdf/52

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a grove (IV. iii. 160), and is called a 'caban' (IV. iii. 111). Somewhere also in the open space is, in Act V, the aspen-tree, into which Dipsas has turned Bagoa and from which she is delivered (V. iii. 283). But III. ii and IV. i are at the door of 'the Castle in the Deserte' (III. i. 41; ii. 1) and III. iv is also in the desert (cf. V. iii. 35), before a fountain. This fountain was, however, 'hard by' the lunary bank (IV. ii. 67), and probably the desert was no farther off than the end of the stage.[1] In Midas the convention of foreshortening becomes inadequate, and we are faced with a definite change of locality. The greater part of the play is at the Court of Midas, presumably in Lydia rather than in Phrygia, although an Elizabethan audience is not likely to have been punctilious about Anatolian geography. Some scenes require as background a palace, to which it is possible to go 'in' (I. i. 117; II. ii. 83; III. iii. 104). A temple of Bacchus may also have been represented, but is not essential. Other scenes are in a neighbouring spot, where the speaking reeds grow. There is a hunting scene (IV. i) on 'the hill Tmolus' (cf. V. iii. 44). So far Lyly's canons of foreshortening are not exceeded. But the last scene (V. iii) is out of the picture altogether. The opening words are 'This is Delphos', and we are overseas, before the temple of Apollo. In Galathea and in Love's Metamorphosis, on the other hand, unity is fully achieved. The whole of Galathea may well proceed in a single spot, on the edge of a wood, before a tree sacred to Neptune, and in Lincolnshire (I. iv. 12). The sea is hard by, but need not be seen. The action of Love's Metamorphosis is rather more diffuse, but an all-over pastoral setting, such as we see in Serlio's scena satirica, with scattered domus in different glades, would serve it. Or, as the management of the Hôtel de Bourgogne would have put it, the stage is tout en pastoralle. There are a tree of Ceres and a temple of Cupid. These are used successively in the same scene (II. i). Somewhat apart, on the sea-shore, but close to the wood, dwells Erisichthon. There is a rock for the Siren, and Erisichthon's house may also have been shown.[2] Finally, Mother Bombie is an extreme

  • [Footnote: may only refer to a stage door. Nor do I think that the 'solitarie cell'

spoken of by Endymion (II. i. 41) was staged.]

  1. Yet Eumenides, who was sent to Thessaly in III. i, has only reached the fountain twenty years later (III. iii. 17), although he is believed at Court to be dead (IV. iii. 54). The time of the play cannot be reduced to consistency; cf. Bond, iii. 14.
  2. In IV. ii. 96 Protea, in a scene before the rock, says to Petulius, 'Follow me at this doore, and out at the other'. During the transit she is metamorphosed, but the device is rather clumsy. The doors do not prove that a domus of Erisichthon was visible; they may be merely stage-doors.