THE
IMITATIVE AND ITERATIVE SHAKESPEARE–II
(The
first Part of this article is Published in Triveni for April 1970)
PROF.
K. VISWANATHAM
That
we are damaged and ruined not so much by our vices as
by our virtues is another frequent idea. Timon is undone by goodness. Adam
speaks out of his experience and love:
Know
you not, master, to some kind of men
Their
graces serve them but as enemies?
Escalus knows the
truth that
Some
rise by sin and some by virtue fall.
The
‘gentle’ Shakespeare could not have approved of unrefined speech. Even truth
should be expressed with gentleness. Satyam apriyam nabrooyat. Luciana
is emphatic that
Ill
deeds are doubled with an evil word.
Gonzalo tells
Sebastian:
The
truth you speak doth lack some gentleness
And
time to speak it in; you rub the sore
When
you should bring the plaster.
Duke Senior tells
Jacques that it is
Most
mischievous foul sin, in chiding sin.
Burke’s well-known Speech
on Conciliation may be regarded as a detailed commentary on King Henry’s
wisdom: For when lenity and cruelty play for a kingdom the gentler gamester is
the soonest winner.
Honour is prized high.
Simonides in Pericles says:
For
who hates honour hates the gods above.
Examples gross as
earth make Hamlet exclaim:
Rightly
to be great
Is
not to stir without great argument
But
greatly to find quarrel in a straw
When
honour is at the stake.
Mine honour is my
life, says Norfolk in Richard II. Hotspur and Henry V are worlds apart but are
one concerning honour. Imagination of a great exploit drives Hotspur into
rhetoric:
By
heaven, methinks it were an easy leap
To
pluck bright honour from the pale-faced moon.
Henry V is no less
crazy after honour:
But
if it be sin to covet honour
I
am the most offending soul alive.
The age of Elizabeth
was the age of Hierarchy. ‘Must’ should not be used to a Tudor princess. King
Richard is conscious of his status:
Not
all the water in the rough rude sea
Can
wash the balm from an anointed king.
With the same
consciousness Claudius speaks:
Let
him go, Gertrude; do not fear our person:
There
is a divinity doth hedge a king...
Prospero’s My foot, my
tutor, sums up the whole background. Hence C. S. Lewis on p. 75 of A Preface
to Paradise Lost: The greatest statement of the Hierarchical conception in
its double reference to civil and cosmic life is, perhaps, the speech of
Ulysses in Shakespeare’s Troilus. Its special importance lies in its clear
statement of the alternative to Hierarchy.. Hierarchy is a favourite theme of
Shakespeare. A failure to accept his notion of natural authority makes
nonsense, for example, of The Taming of the Shrew. It drives the Poet Laureate
into describing Katharina’s speech of submission as ‘melancholy clap-trap.’
That
the poor obtain scant justice and are gobbled up by the V. I. Ps. is an
argument glanced at frequently. The first fisherman in Pericles comments
on the infirmities of men: “The great ones eat up the little ones; I can
compare our rich misers to nothing fitly as to a whale. “Lear pities the poor
too late:
How
shall your houseless heads and unfed sides
Your
looped and windowed raggedness, defend you
From
seasons such as these? O, I have taken
Too
little care of this.
Lear is a socialist in
modern political jargon when he says:
So
distribution should undo excess
And
each man have enough.
Lear is the champion of
justice:
Plate
sin with gold
And
the strong lance of justice hurtless breaks;
Arm
it in rags, a pigmy’s straw doth pierce it.
None can be called
deformed, states Antonio in Twelfth Night, but the unkind. The song in
The Two Gentlemen runs as
For
beauty lives with kindness.
The yellow metal was
evil then as now and as has been always. King Henry in Henry IV P2 observes:
How
quickly nature falls into revolt
When
gold becomes her object...
and
like the bees
Are
murdered for our pains.
Timon, of course, is a
play entirely devoted to gold:
This
much of this will make black, white; foul, fair..
this
embalms and spices
To
the April day again.
Cloten knows its power:
It is gold
Which
buys admittance…
What
Can
it not do and undo?
It
is commonly stated that Shakespeare’s villains defy augury. Edmund is
against whoremaster man’s laying his goatish disposition to the charge of a
star. But Gloster is afraid of the late eclipses. Lear recognizes that ‘we do
exist and cease to be’ by the operation of the stars or orbs. Kent finds
explanation only in the stars:
The
stars above us govern our conditions;
Else
one self mate and mate could not beget
Such
different issues
Helena in All’s
Well rejects the fine foppery of the stars:
Our
remedies oft in ourselves do lie
Which
we ascribe to heaven
like Cassius The
fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars.
But the mighty Caesar
feels helpless and tells Calpurnia:
What
can be avoided
Whose
end is purposed by the mighty gods?
And according to
Pisanio
Fortune
brings in some boats that are not steered.
Romeo is afraid of
‘some consequences yet hanging in the stars’.
Hamlet’s is
well-known:
If
it be now, it is not to come; if it be not to come, it
will
be now; if it be not now, yet it will come; the
readiness
is all
There is a divinity
that shapes our ends or ends our shapes
Art and Nature
relationship is an aesthetic problem that crops up often in the plays.
Polixenes’ opinion is
It
is an art
Which
does mend nature,–change it rather; but
The
art itself is nature.
The poet in Timon
thinks that it tutors nature. Enobarbus sees in Cleopatra’s pavilion ‘fancy
outwork nature’. And Iacqimo describes to Posthumus the tapestried story of
proud Cleopatra:
a
piece of work
So
bravely done, so rich, that it strive
In
workmanship and value.
In Venus and Adonis
the poet writes:
Look,
when a painter would surpass the life
In
limning out a well-proportioned steed,
His
art with nature’s workmanship at strife
As
if the dead should the living exceed.
Troilus’ words, words,
mere words, no matter from the heart is paralleled by Claudius’
Words
without thoughts never to heaven go
and
the Queen’s more matter with less art.
The advice of the
Countess in All’s Well:
and
keep thy friend
Under
thy own life’s key; be checked for silence,
But
never taxed for speech
is paralleled by
Polonius’
Grapple
them to thy soul with hoops of steel...
Give
every man thine ear, but few thy voice: ...
Lucio’s ‘But it is
impossible to extirp it quite, friar, till eating and drinking be put down’ is
strengthened by Sir Toby’s Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there
shall be no more cakes and ale?’
Leonato’s
the
wide sea
Hath
drops too few to wash her clean again
becomes the desperate
agonized cry of Macbeth:
Will
all great Neptune’s ocean wash this blood
Clean
from my hand?
and the penitent cry
of Claudius:
Is
there not rain enough in the sweet heavens
To
wash it white as snow?
That a light heart
lives long is a truism the poet is fond of stating.
Katherine in Loves
Labours Lost tells Rosaline:
And
so may you; for a light heart lives long
Autolycus sings: A
merry heart goes all the way. Silence in Henry VI, P2 is not silent
about this: And a merry heart lives long.
That sorrow suppressed
saps the soul is mentioned often. Marcus in Titus Andronicus states this
truism:
Sorrow
concealed, like an oven stopped,
Doth
burn the heart to cinders.
Malcolm echoes this:
Give
sorrow words; the grief that does not speak
Whispers
the overfraught heart, and bids it break.
Cleon’s remark that
One sorrow never comes but brings
That
may succeed as his inheritor
is more arrestingly
phrased by Claudius:
When
sorrows come, they come not single spies
But
in battalias.
Belarius and Lear
point out that greater griefs eclipse the less:
Great
griefs, I see, medicine the less
But
where the greater malady is fixed
The
lesser is scarcely felt.
We are all familiar
with Antony’s well-known
The
evil that men do lives after them;
The
good is oft interred with the bones
but not with the less
known Griffith’s
Men’s
evil manners live in brass; their virtues we write in water
Brutus tells Lucilius:
When love begins to sicken and decay,
It
useth an enforced ceremony.
Timon explains to the
lords: Ceremony was but devised at first
To
set a gloss on faint deeds, hollow welcomes,
Recanting
goodness, sorry ere it is shown;
But
where there is true friendship there needs none.
Flattery is the
monarch’s plague in Sonnet CXIV. Helicanus is of the view that
They
do abuse the king that flatter him
For
flattery is the bellows blows up sin.
Falstaff saves Henry
from this plague and for this service at least the king should not have
said: I know thee not.
It is interesting to
contrast what King Richard says about his cousin:
How
he did seem to dive in their hearts
With
humble and familiar courtesy...
And
he our subjects next degree in hope
with King Henry’s
reprimand to his son:
By
being seldom seen, I could not stir
But
like a comet I was wondered at
whereas the Prince was
like the King
He
was but as the cuckoo in June,
Heard,
not regarded
The Dauphin’s remark:
Self
love, my liege, is not so vile a sin
As
self-neglecting
is more emphatic in
Sonnet LXII:
Sin
of self love possesseth all mine eye,
And
all my soul, and all my every part;
And
for this sin there is no remedy...
Self
so self-loving were iniquity.
Whatever praises
itself, observes Agamemnon, but in the deed devours the
deed in the praise.
We are lacking in
knowledge of self and hence the errors we commit for good or for bad. It is
Menecrates’ acute mind that thinks:
We,
ignorant of ourselves,
Beg
often our own harms which the wise powers
Deny
us for our good; so find we profit
By
losing of our prayers.
Shakespeare knew the
large gap between professions and practice, doing and thinking, praxis and
gnosis. If to do were as easy, says Portia, as to know what were good to do
chapels had been churches and poor men’s cottages princes’ palaces.
Coriolanus consoles
his mother:
I
shall be loved when I am lacked.
Caesar in Antony
and Cleopatra tells the messenger:
And
the ebbed man...
Comes
deared by being lacked.
Absence brings lovers
closer to each other than togetherness and is elaborated in the Absence Group
of Sonnets:
For
then my thoughts (from far where I abide)
Intend
a zealous pilgrimage to thee. XXVII
Brutus replies to
Cassius:
No,
Cassius; for the eye sees not itself
But
by reflection, by some other things.
The same idea we find
in Troilus and Cressida. Achilles informs Ulysses:
nor
doth the eye itself,–
That
most pure spirit of sense,behold itself
Not
going from itself.
This vexing
metaphysical problem re-phrases itself in Coleridge as the Subject that
objectifies itself to itself. The problem of the eye is perhaps distantly
related to
Light
seeking light doth light of light beguile, and
The
eye grows brighter by fixing it on a fairer eye
in Loves Labours
Lost.
Consider the
oft-quoted remark of Hamlet:
That
one may smile, and smile, and be a villain.
It occurs in Gloster’s
speech in Henry VI, P3:
Why,
I can smile, and murder while I smile. (III-2)
Antonio asks Bassamo to
mark that the devil
Is
like a villain with a smiling cheek (I-3)
The poet seems to be
fond of the idea of one fire driving out another. Proteus in The Two
Gentlemen makes use of this simile:
Even
as one heat another heat expels
Or
as one nail by strength drives out another
Brutus talking to
Antony in Julius Caesar echoes it:
As
fire drives out fire, so pity pity.
Aufidius uses the same
idea:
One
fire drives out one fire; one nail, one nail
Rights
by rights falter.
The poet is much inclined
to the simile of an object that inclines neither way. Northumberland describes
his mind:
It
is with my mind
As
with the tide swelled up unto its height
That
makes a still stand, running neither way.
Antony speaks of the
swan’s down feather
That
stands upon the swell at the full tide
And
neither way inclines.
Closely associated
with this is the Ghost’s fat weed that rots itself in ease on Lethe wharf and
Caesar’s vagabond flag that rots itself with motion lackeying the varying tide
going to and back upon the stream.
Viola’s
She sat like patience on a monument
Smiling at grief
is repeated in a
far-off play like Pericles
Yet thou dost look
Like patience gazing on kings’
graves and smiling
Extremity out of act
Rosaline’s
The blood of youth burns not with
such excess
As gravity’s revolt to wantonness
is memorably and
aphoristically expressed, in Sonnet XCIV:
Lilies that fester smell far worse
than weeds
Aufidius’ I know thee
not and King Henry’s I know thee not mark the beginning and end of two
different adventures in friendship. Lear and Shallow remember the time when
they made others ‘skip’. I have seen the time says Shallow, with my long sword
I would have made yon four tall fellows skip like rats. Lear expresses almost
the same:
I have seen the day, with my good
biting falchion
I would have made them skip.
Falstaff ‘ensconces’
himself like Polonius but not with the same tragic sequence.
‘Happy man be his
dole’ is mentioned by Slender in Merry Wives, by Hortentio in The
Taming, by Leontes in The Winters Tale–perhaps a kind of ‘swear’ or
wish word. It is on the lips of Falstaff too: Happy man be his dole, say I.
John Holland’s Labour
in thy vocation in Henry VI, P2 is echoed by Falstaff: It is no sin to
labour in his vocation, Hal.
Gaunt’s exhortation to
Bolingbroke
There is no virtue like necessity
dawns upon King Lear
overpoweringly:
The art of our necessities is
strange
That can make vile things precious.
Othello speaks of
men whose heads
Do grow beneath their shoulders;
Gonzalo refers to men
Whose heads stood in their breasts.
Queen Elizabeth’s ‘You
have no cause’ to the Archbishop of York is repeated in King Lear’s
‘You have some cause, they have not’ to Cordelia followed by
her
No cause, no cause.
The snail in Venus and Adonis
whose tender horns being hit
Shrinks backward in his shelly cave
with pain
emerges with new
transferred vitality in Coriolanus:
It is Aufidius
Who hearing of our Marcius’
banishment
Thrusts forth his horns again into the World;
Which were inshelled when Marcius stood for Rome And
durst not once peep out.
As one connected with
the theatre it will be surprising if Shakespeare does not refer to his own
domain. York commisserates with Richard:
As in a theatre the eyes of men
After a well-graced actor leaves the
stage
Are idly bent on him that enters
next...
Sonnet XXIII explains
that the poet failed to say the perfect ceremony of love’s rite
As an unperfect actor on the stage
Who with his fear is put besides his
part.
Hamlet is the Director
of the Gonzago play and in Act III,
Sc. 2 gives a succinct and meaningful lecture on contemporary theatre:
“Speak the speech, I
pray you,...shows a most pitiful ambition in the fool that uses it.”
The love of England
runs like a golden thread in the plays. The Bastard’s
This England never did, nor never
shall,
Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror
is as remarkable as
old Gaunt’s
This royal throne of kings, this
sceptered isle.
The Chorus in Henry
V compares England to a “little body with a mighty heart.” Hasting’s in Henry
VI, P. 3.
England is safe, if true with itself
foreshadows the
Bastard’s sentiment. Imogen’s lyrical description is most happy:
In a great pool a swan’s nest.
Anne Bullen’s I swear
again I would not be a queen
For all the world by my troth and
maidenhead
is a distant cousin of
Desdemona’s
Wouldst thou do such a deed for all
the world?
Body-Mind
correspondence is a frequent Renaissance idea. Viola talking about the Captain
asserts this
And though this nature with a
beauteous wall
Doth oft close in pollution, yet of
thee
I believe thou hast a mind that
suits
With this thy fair and outward
character.
The poet tells the
young men in Sonnet XI
She carved thee tor her seal, and
meant thereby
Thou shouldst print more, nor let
thy copy die.
He questions him in
XCIII
How like Eve’s apple doth thy beauty
grow,
If thy sweet virtue answer not thy
show?
Miranda thinks There
is nothing ill can dwell in such a temple.
Lear’s ferocious
curses hurled at his daughter:
If she must teem
Create her child of spleen, that it
may live
And be a thwart disnatured torment to her!
has the same blasting
vocabulary as Prospero’s
but barren hate,
Sour-eyed disdain, and discord shall
bestrew
The union of your bed with weeds so
loathly
That you shall hate it both.
There is no need to talk about
Shakespeare’s bawdy so neatly collected by Partridge and Hilda Hulme. Bowdler
will stir in his grave that expressions that appeared so innocent were not so
innocent after all! Hilda Hulme’s explanation of a Table of green fields almost
revolutionizes our interpretation of Falstaff’s end. Even a fine generalization
like
Some rise by sin and some by virtue
fall
has indecent
connotation. Partridge connects Bawdy with Bravado in creativity Burgundy’s
frankness of mirth in Henry V:
Can you blame her then, being a maid
yet rosed-over with the virgin crimson of modesty if she deny the appearance of
a naked blind boy in her naked seeing self
flows into Mercutio’s
talk to Benvolio:
it would anger him
To raise a spirit in his mistress circle
Of some strange nature, letting it
there stand
Till she had laid it and conjured it
down.
(In one of the stories
of the great Sanskrit classic, Kathasaritsagara this ‘naked seeing self’
is described as a wound which no physician can heal; the daughter saves her
father from the jaws of an ogre by stipulating that the ogre could devour her
father if he healed her wound.) This bawdy has its origins in the Dark Lady.
The poet asks her salaciously and sarcastically and pitifully
Wilt thou whose will is large and
spacious
Not once vouchsafe to hide my will
in thine? CXXV
This “mistress” circle
colours and taints Shakespeare’s imagination either creating an Ariel of love
or a Caliban of lust, goading him to a raging madness and demented speech or
gracious music and marriage of minds:
Hang there like fruit, my soul,
Till the tree die!
What is it we learn
from this imitation and iteration illustrated above?
The poet does not hesitate to
imitate or repeat himself in fun or seriousness if a fine expression or idea
got inscribed on the tablets of his mind. The ideas repeated take us closer to
Shakespeare. He (at a lower level) had the trick of repeating words as we find
in Hamlet; (at a higher level) he hated slander as much as his Duke:
back-wounding calumny
The whitest virtue strikes.
It is through these
observations that we get to know the author and we realize the wisdom of C. S.
Lewis’ statement: I believe that Sidney and Shakespeare are in this respect
like Spencer, and to grasp this is one of the first duties of their critics. I
do not think Shakespeare wrote a single line to express ‘his’ ideas. What
some call his philosophy, he would have called common knowledge. (English
Literature in the Sixteenth
Century, p. 387) He is the poet of the common man hating
the things he hates, loving the things he loves, glorying in his glory and
failing with his frailties, always aware of the other man’s point of view,
frequently buttonholing us with an observation like:
The man that once did sell the
lion’s skin
While the beast lived was killed
with hunting him
or upsetting us by ‘Think
we had mothers’ washing the dirty linen of human suspicion.
As Melville said:
No utter surprise can come to him
Who reaches Shakespeare’s core;
That which we seek and shun is there
Man’s final lore.
Shakespeare’s poetry
is a bountiful answer that fits all questions; it is a Barber’s chair that fits
all buttocks (as the Clown picturesquely re-phrases the statement of the
Countess in All’s Well–II, 2)
The testament of
Shakespeare’s life is in Gloster’s words in Richard III:
It is death for me to be at enmity
I hate it and desire all good men’s
love,–
and in Hamlet’s:
Odd’s bodkin, man, better: Use every
man after his desert, and who should ‘scape whipping? Use them after your own honour
and dignity: the less they deserve the more merit is in your bounty and in
Lear’s
None does offend
and in Edgar’s
Ripeness is all
Is it correct to think
that he was not one
Whose blood and judgment are so well
co-medled
That they are not a pipe for
Fortune’s finger
To sound what stop she please?
The documented wisdom
and ineffable commonsense cancels that allegation. He was that rarest of all
human beings, as Prof. Raleigh wrote, a complete man–one who achieved
sophrosyne through laughter as broad as ten thousand beeves at pasture, through
the vast reciprocity of human tears.
Valmiki’s Nakaschinnaparadhyati,
and Shakespeare’s Odd’s bodkin, man, better–are the most healing rubrics of
advice to humanity diseased with fault-finding. Tolerance, Charity, Respect for
the other man’s or woman’s point of view, Democracy–are implicit in the
world-view of Valmiki and Shakespeare.