How the drama was made
On the manuscript of the dramatic poem
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One of János Arany's letters to Madách
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"... I mentioned to several of my acquaintances that
I had written a poem featuring God, the devil, Adam, Luther, Danton...;
that it started with creation, was playing in heaven and on the entire
globe and in space - they acknowledged this with a smile, but no one wanted
to read it. - Then finally I read it to our friend, Pál Szontágh last
spring and he encouraged me to submit it to Arany for his review",
wrote Imre Madách in his letter to Iván Nagy on November 2nd, 1861.
He was aware of the fact that what he had authored "was
different from our ordinary plays". According to Arany, Madách -
because "his thoughts were more powerful than his imagination"
- found satisfaction not so much in the drama of the characters and the
events but rather he was interested in the conflict of thoughts and ideas.
The real talent of a playwright was missing from him, although his poetic
commitment was hungry for appreciation. And so Arany's judgement was important
for him.
Madách worked by writing on scraps of paper, and he
kept his notes grouped in categories until his work of art was finished,
and when it was, he destroyed them together with any drafts and any other
attempts. As a result, what remained of these scraps written for The
Tragedy of Man was barely more than Madách's own handwritten list
of the characters, showing the date on which he started writing and the
date of ending his work, plus the size of the individual scenes. The first
version consisted of 4080 lines, if the 23 lines borrowed from the book
of Psalms are excluded.
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János Arany's suggested corrections to the first scene
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On the backside of this note three fragments can be read
from the 11th (London) scene. We also have some other slips of paper on
which certain parts of the Tragedy can be found, sometimes in the form
of mere idea-bits, and sometimes written almost word-for-word identical
with the finished text.
Not more than a single manuscript of the Tragedy of
Man existed; it is now kept in the archives of the National Academy
of Sciences' Library. A facsimile edition of the manuscript was published
in 1973. Madách wrote in 1861: "... I do not have a copy of the manuscript...".
And when he revised the second edition of the Tragedy, he did not work
from the manuscript that had been left in Pest, instead he relied on the
text of the first edition.
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Madách's letter to Arany
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The circumstances of the Tragedy's publication
As it is known, Arany unenthusiastically put aside the
manuscript received from this unknown provincial landlord after he had
ran his eyes through the first scene. Madách's fellow Member of Parliament,
Pál Jámbor, who was a priest and a poet himself, intervened for him and
Arany read the manuscript to the end for the second time. In his letter
of 12th September, 1861 sent to Madách János
Arany commented on the poem as follows: "The Tragedy of Man is
a remarkable work of art both in concept and composition ... I spotted some
clumsiness only here and there in the metrics and the diction." He
then offered: "I would make some corrective strokes with my pen,
myself..." Madách received Arany's comments and suggested corrections
gratefully.
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The first edition of
the Tragedy in 1861.
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It was János Arany, who presented the work to the greater
audience at the meeting of the Kisfaludy Society on October 31st, and
he read out parts of the dramatic poem during the evening. Later he took
upon himself the work of preparing it for the press. The facsimile of
the manuscript published in 1973 makes it apparent to anyone that Arany
had not made any changes to the concept or content of the Tragedy. The
volume, sponsored by the Kisfaludy Society left Gusztáv Emich's printing
house on January 16th, 1862, although it showed 1861 as the year of publication.
The number of copies is not known. The "second, significantly corrected"
edition published in 1863 included the corrections suggested by Károly
Szász, too.
The Kisfaludy Society elected the author of the Tragedy
of Man a member on January 16th, 1862, while the Hungarian Academy
of Science made him a member on January 13th, 1863. Since then more than
110 Hungarian editions of this work have been published. It has been translated
to and is available in thirty languages. Since its premiere on September
21st, 1883 it has been played more than 1400 times in the National Theatre
only. Imre Madách has thus entered the prestigious company of national
classic authors and world literature.
He was never able to surpass the artistic peak he had achieved
in the Tragedy in his remaining lifetime, neither in Moses submitted
to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences for their drama competition, nor
in his revised play, The Last Days of Csák. Still in February 1864
he began preparing a collective edition of his poetic works, but by April
he grew so weak that he was not able to read his own inaugural address
at the Academy - his fellow-poet, Károly Bérczy had to read it for him.
He died before he turned 42.
Thus, to quote Béla Németh G., Madách remained for us:
"a single-book, single-genre author".
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