When Molière and Racine were writing and staging their plays in France, Shakespeare was long dead—the English stage was then dominated by Dryden. This play was first performed in 1673, the same year as Racine’s Mithridate and Molière’s The Hypochondriac/ The Imaginary Invalid.
This is my first Dryden play, and first encounter with Restoration drama.
1/ Marriage à-la-Mode begins with a rather cynical song about marriage:
“Why should a foolish marriage vow
Which long ago was made,
Oblige us to each other now
When passion is decayed?
We loved and we loved, as long as we could,
Till our love was loved out in us both:
But our marriage is dead, when the pleasure is fled:
’Twas pleasure first made it an oath.”
(Act 1 scene 1)
The song is sung by Doralice, who then meets and coyly flirts with a man named Palamede. But then Palamede meets his old friend and Doralice’s husband Rhodophil, and it turns out that Rhodophil and Doralice have only been married over two years. Um?
2/ I read that Dryden was influenced by French neoclassical theatre and had more respect for the classical unities than Shakespeare and the Elizabethans did, but that’s not quite true in this case. Marriage à-la-Mode has two storylines: a comic plot in prose and a serious plot in verse.
In the comic plot, Palamede returns from abroad and falls in love with Doralice, who is unhappily married to Rhodophile, who has an affair with Melantha, who is betrothed to Palamede. They’re even more entangled than in a Racine play!
“RHODOPHIL: (aside) The devil’s in me, that I must love this woman.
PALAMEDE: (aside) The devil’s in me, that I must marry this woman.”
(Act 2 scene 1)
The kind of comedy in Marriage à-la-Mode (satire, comedy of errors, etc.) is quite similar to the comedy of Molière.
In the serious plot, Polydamas, having usurped the throne and been left by his pregnant wife, is to find the child he has lost—I will not go into details—and the plot revolves around the star-crossed lovers, Leonidas and Palmyra. Dryden gives us some sweet scenes:
“LEONIDAS When love did of my heart possession take,
I was so young, my soul was scarce awake.
I cannot tell when first I thought you fair,
But sucked in love insensibly as air.”
(ibid.)
I like that.
Dryden also gives us some very good scenes, such as:
“LEONIDAS Sir, ask the stars,
Which have imposed love on us, like a fate,
Why minds are bent to one, and fly another?
Ask why all beauties cannot move all hearts.
For though there may
Be made a rule for colour, or for feature;
There can be none for liking.
POLYDAMAS Leonidas, you owe me more
Than to oppose your liking to my pleasure.
LEONIDAS I owe you all things, Sir; but something too
I owe myself.
POLYDAMAS You shall dispute no more; I am a king,
And I will be obeyed.
LEONIDAS You are a king, Sir; but you are no god;
Or if you were, you could not force my will.”
(ibid.)
That’s very good. Reminds me of The Winter’s Tale.
“LEONIDAS Love either finds equality, or makes it.
Like death, he knows no difference in degrees,
But planes and levels all.”
(Act 3 scene 1)
There are also two young women and two young men in the serious plot, though Leonidas and Almyra love each other, Amalthea has unrequited love for Leonidas, and her brother Argaleon has unrequited love for Almyra. There’s an arranged, or forced, marriage in both strands of the play—it is of course more serious in the serious plot, but Dryden doesn’t go for extremes and incongruence as Shakespeare does in The Winter’s Tale—even when there’s a threat of death or violence, there’s a light touch, an awareness that this is a comedy and we will get a happy ending.
3/ There are many good lines, many witty lines in the play.
“LEONIDAS E’er since you left me,
I have been wandering in a maze of fate,
Led by false fires of a fantastic glory,
And the vain lustre of imagine crowns…”
(Act 4 scene 1)
That’s good. I like the alliteration.
And as a Shakespeare fan, I obviously have to note the Shakespeare reference:
“PALAMEDE: […] Fall on, Macduff,
And cursed be he that first cries: hold, enough.”
(Act 5 scene 1)
4/ Through 8 characters—to leave aside the other characters in the play—Dryden covers nicely different kinds of love and relationships.
Marriage à-la-Mode begins with a rather cynical song about marriage and Palamede and Rhodophil are twats, but it’s not a cynical play. Doralice for example has self-respect:
“DORALICE I declare I will have no gallant; but if I would, he should never be a married man. […] For a man to come to me that smells of the wife! ’Slife, I would as soon wear her own gown after her as her husband.”
(Act 5 scene 1)
She’s love-starved, she’s cheated on, but she rejects Palamede.
In the serious plot, Dryden not only gives us some sweet and romantic scenes between Leonidas and Almyra—a lovely couple that remind me of both Florizel and Perdita in The Winter’s Tale, and Romeo and Juliet—Dryden also gives us the generous and selfless love of Amalthea. That adds a melancholic note to the ending.
Enjoyable play.