No passage in “The Poetics” with the exception of
the Catharsis phrase has attracted so much critical attention as his ideal of
the tragic hero.
The function of a tragedy is to arouse the emotions
of pity and fear and Aristotle deduces the qualities of his hero from this
function. He should be good, but not perfect, for the fall of a perfect man
from happiness into misery, would be unfair and repellent and will not arouse
pity. Similarly, an utterly wicked person passing from happiness to misery may
satisfy our moral sense, but will lack proper tragic qualities. His fall will
be well-deserved and according to ‘justice’. It excites neither pity nor fear.
Thus entirely good and utterly wicked persons are not suitable to be tragic
heroes.
Similarly, according to Aristotelian law, a saint
would be unsuitable as a tragic hero. He is on the side of the moral order and
hence his fall shocks and repels. Besides, his martyrdom is a spiritual victory
which drowns the feeling of pity. Drama, on the other hand, requires for its
effectiveness a militant and combative hero. It would be important to remember
that Aristotle’s conclusions are based on the Greek drama and he is lying down
the qualifications of an ideal tragic hero. He is here discussing what is the
very best and not what is good. Overall, his views are justified, for it
requires the genius of a Shakespeare to arouse sympathy for an utter villain,
and saints as successful tragic heroes have been extremely rare.
Having rejected perfection as well as utter
depravity and villainy, Aristotle points out that:
“The ideal tragic hero … must be an intermediate
kind of person, a man not pre-eminently virtuous and just, whose misfortune,
however, is brought upon him not by vice or depravity but by some error of
judgment.”
The ideal tragic hero is a man who stands midway
between the two extremes. He is not eminently good or just, though he inclines
to the side of goodness. He is like us, but raised above the ordinary level by
a deeper vein of feeling or heightened powers of intellect or will. He is
idealized, but still he has so much of common humanity as to enlist our
interest and sympathy.
The tragic hero is not evil or vicious, but he is
also not perfect and his disaster is brought upon him by his own fault. The
Greek word used here is “Hamartia” meaning “missing the mark”. He falls not
because of the act of outside agency or evil but because of Hamartia or
“miscalculation” on his part. Hamartia is not a moral failing and it is
unfortunate that it was translated as “tragic flaw” by Bradley. Aristotle
himself distinguishes Hamartia from moral failing. He means by it some error or
judgment. He writes that the cause of the hero’s fall must lie “not in
depravity, but in some error or Hamartia on his part”. He does not assert or
deny anything about the connection of Hamartia with hero’s moral failings.
“It may be accompanied by moral imperfection, but
it is not itself a moral imperfection, and in the purest tragic situation the
suffering hero is not morally to blame.”
Thus Hamartia is an error or miscalculation, but
the error may arise from any of the three ways: It may arise from “ignorance of
some fact or circumstance”, or secondly, it may arise from hasty or careless
view of the special case, or thirdly, it may be an error voluntary, but not
deliberate, as acts committed in anger. Else and Martian Ostwald interpret
Hamartia and say that the hero has a tendency to err created by lack of
knowledge and he may commit a series of errors. This tendency to err
characterizes the hero from the beginning and at the crisis of the play it is
complemented by the recognition scene, which is a sudden change “from ignorance
to knowledge”.
In fact, Hamartia is a word with various shades of
meaning and has been interpreted by different critics. Still, all serious
modern Aristotelian scholarship agreed that Hamartia is not moral imperfection.
It is an error of judgment, whether arising from ignorance of some material
circumstance or from rashness of temper or from some passion. It may even be a
character, for the hero may have a tendency to commit errors of judgment and
may commit series of errors. This last conclusion is borne out by the play
Oedipus Tyrannus to which Aristotle refers time and again and which may be
taken to be his ideal. In this play, hero’s life is a chain or errors, the most
fatal of all being his marriage with his mother. If King Oedipus is Aristotle’s
ideal hero, we can say with Butcher that:
“His conception of Hamartia includes all the three
meanings mentioned above, which in English cannot be covered by a single term.”
Hamartia is an error, or a series of errors,
“whether morally culpable or not,” committed by an otherwise noble person, and these
errors derive him to his doom. The tragic irony lies in the fact that hero may
err mistakenly without any evil intention, yet he is doomed no less than
immorals who sin consciously. He has Hamartia and as a result his very virtues
hurry him to his ruin. Says Butcher:
“Othello in the modern drama, Oedipus in the
ancient, are the two most conspicuous examples of ruin wrought by character,
noble indeed, but not without defects, acting in the dark and, as it seemed,
for the best.”
Aristotle lays down another qualification for the
tragic hero. He must be, “of the number of those in the enjoyment of great
reputation and prosperity.” He must be a well-reputed individual occupying a
position of lofty eminence in society. This is so because Greed tragedy, with
which alone Aristotle was familiar, was written about a few distinguished royal
families. Aristotle considers eminence as essential for the tragic hero. But
Modern drama demonstrates that the meanest individual can also serve as a
tragic hero, and that tragedies of Sophoclean grandeur can be enacted even in
remote country solitudes.
However, Aristotle’s dictum is quite justified on
the principle that, “higher the state, the greater the fall that follows,” or
because heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes, while the death of
a beggar passes unnoticed. But it should be remembered that Aristotle nowhere
says that the hero should be a king or at least royally descended. They were
the Renaissance critics who distorted Aristotle and made the qualification more
rigid and narrow.
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