Massinger, in his grasp of stagecraft, his flexible metre, his desire in the sphere of ethics to exploit both vice and virtue, is typical of an age which had much culture, but which, without being exactly corrupt, lacked moral fibre.
Massinger: Can I call back yesterday, with all their aids That bow unto my sceptre? or restore My mind to that tranquillity and peace It then enjoyed? Shakespeare: Not poppy, nor mandragora, Nor all the drowsy syrops of the world Shall ever medecine thee to that sweet sleep Which thou owedst yesterday.
Massinger: Thou didst not borrow of Vice her indirect, Crooked, and abject means. Shakespeare: God knows, my son, By what by-paths and indirect crook'd ways I met this crown.
Massinger: And now, in the evening, When thou shoud'st pass with honour to thy rest, Wilt thou fall like a meteor? Shakespeare: I shall fall Like a bright exhalation in the evening, And no man see me more.
Massinger: What you deliver to me shall be lock'd up In a strong cabinet, of which you yourself Shall keep the key. Shakespeare: 'Tis in my memory locked, And you yourself shall keep the key of it.
Here he comes, His nose held up; he hath something in the wind,
as tann'd galley-slaves Pay such as do redeem them from the oar
Never did galley-slave shake off his chains, Or looked on his redemption from the oar....
...in her strong toil of grace
Does the silk worm expend her yellow labours?... Why does yon fellow falsify highways And lays his life between the judge's lips To refine such a one? keeps horse and men To beat their valours for her? Let the common sewer take it from distinction.... Lust and forgetfulness have been amongst us....
In the indefinable touches which make up the music of a verse [says Boyle], in the artistic distribution of pauses, and in the unerring choice and grouping of just those words which strike the ear as the perfection of harmony, there are, if we leave Cyril Tourneur's Atheist's Tragedy out of the question, only two masters in the drama, Shakespeare in his latest period and Massinger.
What though my father Writ man before he was so, and confirm'd it, By numbering that day no part of his life In which he did not service to his country; Was he to be free therefore from the laws And ceremonious form in your decrees? Or else because he did as much as man In those three memorable overthrows, At Granson, Morat, Nancy, where his master, The warlike Charalois, with whose misfortunes I bear his name, lost treasure, men, and life, To be excused from payment of those sums Which (his own patrimony spent) his zeal To serve his country forced him to take up!
Why, 'tis impossible thou canst be so wicked, To shelter such a cunning cruelty To make his death the murderer of my honour!
La vie est un dépouillement. Le but de l'activité propre de l'homme est de nettoyer sa personnalité, de la laver de toutes les souillures qu'y déposa l'éducation, de la dégager de toutes les empreintes qu'y laissèrent nos admirations adolescentes;
Flaubert incorporait toute sa sensibilité à ses oeuvres.... Hors de ses livres, où il se transvasait goutte à goutte, jusqu'à la lie, Flaubert est fort peu intéressant....
Nay, when my ears are pierced with widows' cries, And undone orphans wash with tears my threshold, I only think what 'tis to have my daughter Right honourable; and 'tis a powerful charm Makes me insensible of remorse, or pity, Or the least sting of conscience.
Thou art a fool; In being out of office, I am out of danger; Where, if I were a justice, besides the trouble, I might or out of wilfulness, or error, Run myself finely into a praemunire, And so become a prey to the informer, No, I'll have none of't; 'tis enough I keep Greedy at my devotion: so he serve My purposes, let him hang, or damn, I care not...