Definition of Motif
Fortune serves as a prominent motif in The Spanish Tragedy. Like later works written in the genre of the revenge tragedy, Kyd’s play seems to be set in a world in which the Christian God plays little role. Instead, figures such as Fortune are invoked to emphasize the sense of moral chaos and social disorder. Where God punishes the bad and rewards the good, the goddess Fortune seems indifferent to this moral logic, instead distributing her blessings randomly.
Fortune is invoked in a pivotal scene in the play, in which Horatio and Bel-Imperia discuss their love for one another in a garden before Horatio is brutally murdered by Lorenzo and Balthazar:
HORATIO: What means my love?
BEL-IMPERIA: I know not what myself,
And yet my heart foretells me some mischance.HORATIO: Sweet, say not so; fair fortune is our friend,
And heavens have shut up day to pleasure us.
The stars, thou see'st, hold back their twinkling shine,
And Luna hides herself to pleasure us.BEL-IMPERIA: Thou hast prevailed; I'll conquer my misdoubt,
And in thy love and counsel drown my fear:
I fear no more; love now is all my thoughts.