Along with
Thomas Preston's Cambises (c.1561), the play has been identified as a "hybrid morality", due to its articulation of classical themes, stories and characters with the medieval
allegorical tradition. Within this
genre, the central allegorical figure of the
Vice vies with a non-allegorical, classical
protagonist (Horestes); though their roles are about the same size, Horestes controls the important action. The play has an
episodic structure, which alternates
comic,
slapstick scenes with serious,
tragic ones, all unified by the theme of revenge. It is one of the earliest examples of an English
revenge play, a genre that includes
Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy (1587),
Marston's The Malcontent (1603) and
Shakespeare's Hamlet (1601). Unlike traditional moralities,
Horestes presents an
ambiguous ending. In line with both the
Orestia and the
Historyes of Troy, Horestes is forgiven for the
murder of his mother and her lover; despite its interrogation during the course of the play, however, the justification for the murders remains an unresolved issue at its conclusion. In a further departure from the
conventions of the morality, the forgiveness of Horestes is not prompted by his
repentance. ==Staging demands==