The word mystery refers
to the spiritual mystery of Christ's redemption of humankind, and
mystery plays are dramatizations of incidents of the Old Testament,
which foretells that redemption, and of the New, which recounts it.
The English mystery
plays can be divided into:
<I> Plays
of the Fall: "The Fall of the Angels"; "The Fall of Man"; "Cain and
Abel"
<II> Types and Prophecies of the Redemption: "Noah";
"Abraham and Isaac"; "Moses and the Prophets"
<III> Nativity Plays I: "Caesar Augustus"; "The Early
Life of the Virgin"; "Joseph's Doubts"; "The Visit to Elizabeth";
"The Trail of Joseph and Mary"; "The Nativity"
<IV> Nativity Plays II: "The Adoration of the Shepherds";
"The Adoration of the Magi"; "The Purification"; "The Massacre of
the Innocents"
<V>The Life of Christ between the Nativity and the Passion:
"The Doctors in the Temple"; "The Plays of the Ministry"; "The Entry
into Jerusalem"; "The Last Supper"; "The Agony in the Garden"
<VI>The Passion: "The Trial before Annas and Caiaphas";
"The Trials before Pilate and Herod"; "The Buffeting and Scourging";
"The Crucifixion and Burial"
<VII>Triumph and Eschatological Plays: "The Harrowing
of Hell"; "The Resurrection and Resurrection Appearances";
"The Ascension"; "The Coming of the Holy Ghost"; "The Death and Assumption
of the Virgin"; "The Antichrist"; "The Last Judgment"
Examples:
<II> Types and Prophecies of the Redemption: "Noah"; "Abraham
and Isaac"
"Noah's Flood":
the biblical story of the Flood shows a continuation of the Fall with
the world become so wicked that God repents that He has made man
Imagine the spectacle in "Noah's Flood." (The imaginative
reconstruction of the story) Building of the ark (the ark was
assembled from prepared sections rather than brought on to the stage
complete); the embarkation animals; the waters of the flood (simulated
by a painted cloth waved in front of the ark) around the ark; the
"corpses of the drowned", both men and animals the exigencies of stage
performance.
Noah's building the ark:
their use of technical terms--having practical function of serving
to cover the time required for the assembling of the ark in front
of the audience.
* Noah: a type of Christ;
the ark a type of the Cross and more importantly of the church; occasionally
in Noah's wife, a type of the Virgin (in this interpretation conflict
b/w virtue and vice is absent; the story-->sorely a foreshadowing
of the Redemption.
* Noah's obedience to
God's will: Noah's being instructed to his own advantage
and in a way that he could readily see to be to his own advantage,
and since obedience seems scarcely meritorious, one may pass too lightly
over the explicit profession of obedience to God's will which Noah
makes in all the plays.
We should bear in mind
that God's command did not seem immediately attractive:
1) the flood was not an apparent danger 2) the building of the ark
was a long and burdensome duty 3) in some versions of the tale
in which N's wife and one of his sons mock for building a ship when
living far inland.
Ex. The Wakefield Master
has skillfully indicated that God's command was not an easy one for
an old man to execute (p 107 (30)). Whereas in the Towneley paly the
idea that the building of the ark will be a back-breaking labour is
introduced only when Noah is at work.( retrospective light upon his
earlier obedience).
Speeches: Noah's opening prayers: do God's will-->echoed by Noah's
wife à Noah's three sons and their wives, each having an individual
quatrain. Balancing this set passage is similar series of speeches
spoken by Noah and his family in the ark, in which they mourn the
sin that led to the destruction of the flood and thank God for saving
them.-->play ends in triumphant gratitude-->after the crow and
the dove have been sent forth, the dove (Holy Ghost) returns.
* Noah's wife: shrewish
and obstinate--contrast with Noah's obedience. In the medieval
period, that women are greedy, deceiving, disobedient, angry and evil-tongued
is a proposition well exemplified by Noah's wife. Also the miseries
of marriage; the subject of the malicious, shrewish wife and the suffering
husband…
She does not wish to be
in the ark when the flood comes-->represents the recalcitrant
sinner, perhaps even the sinner on his deathbed, who refuses to
repent and enter the church. But in fact the moment on board
she becomes meek and submissive both to Noah and to God's will: a
psychologically unmotivated change of heart signals the allegorical
meaning.
In York play she
wants to go back to collect her belongings and she insists that her
friends and relations must come too; in Chester she wants to
stay drinking with her "gossips"; in Towneley she wants to
finish her spinning. These excuses are on a par with those in the
parable suggesting all worldly concerns. ["Gossips" of Noah's
wife (Uxor: wife in Latin) who appear fleetingly in the Chester
play are introduced to suggest the worldly pleasure which Noah's
wife refuses to forsake rather than the wickedness of the world which
led to the Flood.]
In Chester
play, when Noah calls to his family for help after hearing God's
command , his wife with the others co-operates benevolently in the
labor. But when a little later the ark is built and Noah summons his
family in, Noah's wife has turned into the perverse shrew (p 40, l.
99 Cawley) and (p 43, line 197 Cawley).
The Wakefield Master
shows Noah's fear [p 104, (21)] when learning God's command. Abuse
and brawling continue for two hundred lines except for the stylized
inset of the des. of the building of the ark. The Wakefield Master
developed the character pattern of Noah's wife at the cost of obscuring
the allegorical significance of Noah. Three battles: before the building
of the ark; Noah's wife will not enter; either at the door or inside
it [p 111, (42)] In the plays of the Flood: the pattern was
flawed by the disobedience of Noah's wife.
<IV> Nativity Plays
II: The Second Shepherds' Play
In The Second Shepherds' Play, by linking the comic subplot of Mak
and Gill with the solemn story of Christ's nativity, the Wakefield
Master has produced a dramatic parable of what the Nativity means
in Christian history and in Christian hearts.