Shakespeare
Shakespeare
Shakespeare
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or
SHI\Kf.SPl-.ARF:
IN
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A C()~lF,~I( I
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en by 1
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The to~
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CON TENT"
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fHAK
'" A, BI.OK
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PEA
Plays
since bee
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5.1<1. P
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A. tUNACHAR5KY
between
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C!- ,11
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the 0\ e jon'
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I. AKSYONOV W'.al I
These ar
give lOr
popularil
'" A, SMIRNOV
Bar
'OCO
, 1.
ANISrMOV
"
58
un
the
h kespe .re
A. AN.K __
M. MOR0Z0V
Thl, collI
pubUeatil
th@ Stud.
to thE' In
of t~ Ul
Th@ boo,
of artIcll
writers, (
of the tJ
e ,
,f
W' Ilr
y~-=I
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In
84
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KONST\NT N S "NI.J.'V-'V
tween &:
tbedemOl
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the fact t
tonner w.
pI,)
nv, Shl e
~ ~
G. LANOY,," My
thla colle
well-kn,",
G. KOZINT'EV
auch at
M.Monn
In the lie!
spearoe an,
will find
of artlclee
k. Stanl
AOD ~t til
B-bl;
O. UlacOil
others-wI
1(", lI'3/:oo'I(,
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PREFACE
In the
ha\'e I
million
en by
So\'iet
lions (
been p I
in the
The f(
thousar
speare
betweel
since be
These,
give
III
popular
This col
publicat
the Stu
10 the
of th(' t
Th. bo<
of artie
writers
ot the '
tween
the dem
ttth-cell
the tact
fOnTIer \
A. Luna
thI. col;
well ho
auch u
M. Men!
In the _
-PHft' a
will find
ot artlel.
K.
Star
G. Uta
othera ,
Incamat
of .......
_tap an
MM.
_tudl_
SAY WHAT you will, fi9ures still cannot but CUr)' 1 ~ertain
conviction. Since the October Revolution, ovel 5,000,000
copies of Shakespcare's works have been published in 28
languagc!> spoken by various peoples of the Soviet Union.
Over the years 1945-1957 alone, the Soviet stage saw marc
than 300 productions of Shakespeare's plays. Morozov
book Shahespeare, published in the series "Lives of Remark
able People" in two editions which together ran to 100,000
copics, sold out almost at once. The four volumes of Shakt
spearc's works in English, edited and annotated by S. Dina
mov, the publication of which in 100,000 copies was begun
in 1937 and completed in 1939, have long since bccome 1
bibliographical rarity. Shakespeare's collectc:! works tran!
latcd into Russian in eight volumes, publi!::he.l by Iskusstv
in an edition of 225,000 copies, sold out on a sui .cription
basis. Shakespearc's Sonnets. as translated by the 'atc 'Samui
Yakovlevich Marshak, disappear like drops n the anu
whenever they arc reissued, notwithsl mding en..,rnou' e:li'
tions. "What do you expect~" the young ~alt; worn n In t'\t;
bookshop turned on me indignant y when I ve"1ture
l
grumble at the instantaneous disappe_ r m( e f the (' nnets,
whkh t.ad materialL<>d briefly on their helv .. thai ve'"
mOlnmg Al cr all, it'~ Shakesl ""arc: I" And you should have
~ cen her flcc al vc with contempt r th~ dilatcry pu h"
md with under t;-nding 01 the importanc- of tho"'" Mnnets,
which th~ Mo: 'ow 1ubli( always quick to Snal' UI) arvthm~
new in the wlv"f ook had been tracking dow- )J over
the city from the moment the shops h d 01 ,~d. fhe' ql ~<. ..
Englishman's reflected ~l< ry hone "-'lck at me from tt,: eyc)
':If this youthful Cl'catu ~,so erenely con ou' of ttlC tr JP
worth of William Shakespe3.l'e
Shak~spcare, of course occupcd 1 -pCCI_ 1)1 C" 1 Rl'" . fJ.
culture before Octobe- 917. r:'1e irst tr'lnslat.on~
. hs
play" were made in the n'ddlc 01 the clgf"atc""fJ.ll l.: ~nl .lIV
Thc beginOlW.. . Shakespearc.m
. c m 10 Ru' 51
tc ')
t'"t:- e"1d ..,t th" century when ?\I. "-ar m: n pubils.~rd ,
.,refacc to hi! W1 t ansI-ti, ., of ''.liius ClesaJ ( l A 7).
Th~ Decc-nbl i! ts "l. ~f" tl1 he mti V "'i ,<"'lelbc .~' W ..
r l l j tnt 'e tcol n ~hakc5f ...
0r PU5hkir ",d, tel', fur
Belin' !t~ the imrno .1 her tage .-f Shakcspe", ~ s~ - ~d zs '1
7
1
t. 1948, p. 459.
In the [
ha\'e
b(
million
en by
Sol'iet I
liom 0
been p~
in the
The ((
thousar
.......
betweeJ
since Ix
These
give ,
populill
This
e(
publiCi
the Stl
to the
ot thf'
The Ix
ot &r\I
write...
of the
.....
tween
I,,",-co
the flu
tormer
A. L18
thlaa
well-kt
...h
M. Mo
In the
JpDre
Will fir
ot artie
K. St
G. Uia
othu
In.....
ot Iho.
If. . . .
'font t
'h"'
,
Taken together, tlll'y gi\',t' ,Ill ilkil. of the. Illilin
l'rodu<.:ers.
J . J 'he stud, and 1I1tl'rprl'liltlOll 01 Sh;lk(.:
,
long \\' lie I
"
lmes a
de 'eloped in this l'Otm(ry, and lll'lp t1~ to undC'r
h
spcadfe th.Js underlying signiticance of the dCVlh,.'PIll<.'llt of
stan
c
"
USSR
Sh.Jkcspeare studICS m t.he . '~,' ' ,
This book begins wIth all lI~sp'l'l~d addl.'l'ss hy th~ poel
Alexander Blok to the actors ot the Bol~hol Drama 1 hl'titre
in Petrograd who, in thc hard and herOIC days of the Civil
1;100 m th<..' artir:lc in th)s colleelll n_ 'Bacon ,mll the Ch" 1dcr
(If Shake ;- lrc's Plays" was written in lQ34. It I un char'
sky',. be- t wor'< on Shake' pea anu, in our orinion, ont" of
the bc<,t Soviet <!"tic1 t, h:,.vc br:en wr ~~c, on c ph losiph c
c()nlt~nt (";If hi1 play
At ahout the same timf> M.ax n G< r"<ty c . w", wr:Unq
good dL 11 ahoul Sh "'cs 1' lTC.
. Corkv held 'n~t Shakcspe yo was 'I'te 'voll~ ,r~1tes
playwright". At the s?mr ~iT?(' h.. .... 0:1 th" 11' 911;lt
writer WiI'l a nC'hody ID ongt-"
rr.r ~:I' r G, r' "
conSidered 5h..:'
'1re one of h. ~:l4 ~ r'l. W\.--. he pond
rc't.H TIl in the
cl'ed the prospcct've df"~ pIc pmnt ~f 50\,...__
theatre, he locked t .... Shakespc_ e :IS :I nc de' 'l,I''jrt 1y of the
particular "ttcnt on of young SOVi4 dr_Tr.
:
ooking
back to Shakespcar .... which accords w. 1 t 11 advi C ot "" __ '1C
and Engels in th:" let'! ) to T 1 a11e 1
eve' )cd nc- e
fully in GI ky s 'ar ie', "011 Play,' 1rd w accc t_4 i::S 1
baSiC tenet of the pT" :urn e f Y"'"lng '# ; t ..I :lIla 1 lC
thirties.
"A reat. ~isto~cc'
;L ..
11 eit 1C 1 n'" n h n.. ve
been before nOI 5l 14~, a Burr ., 'Be ng w t 1 ( l C p:
1 ~ .
Vlarimir Lenin, lZ:S ren..:l red 1- .:.~t tr_ t), '" of th .. ,-c::"
for~e', epL' n9 h n by t - : " ,
rcvc 11 :r.
iqhl) ... f .1e wor1t.ing das ! 1 -:: 1 "' ... t.,
th s man 0
action, lhis builrer of 'le nC'" ". !' d ~ c ~ 'It t '-- I).e
hero 01 "lloc.:rr _ aD1~ And, ir ori r t
t thl~ b~
with the rec" --r' v baJ powe"
~
l__
' t ' e cnl.ld
- rtudy the l r
f. w 'ting - 1;
Ir
s C' th_ "It
unsurpz.. Sf>~ r. SL -s of th _. te lry f~ r n J '1 'I!~ 3.11 ir
"e works ot "::bakesl _ ... '
fvcrvth: 11 bC'ut th ~ en
__ ~I'" tiradt;:
;"'nif _mt th..
! a,' that LOl kv di4 ro~ 51::: ... Jmf ):" rs
n c:.hal c ' ._ are'
play" W 14 re~~ ~ whole lir" 01 bourgi-i
' _S,
rmnmb
with I)e romanl cs f'" L:.. e :..; r-ool n isted th~ t Shake
;pea: e c tch ng u" 'It;: ~!'CI. .:-r into th_ wor d of nagifl'::"
ion, m ' _.:!i hill fOl gf the rc~, \ 'rod 1t "coml_r
we?,: V
lrd suffc log m,:m wro sk"
l:y t}-!"t r C'~o 11..:1 r 1S' hIm
'1
cr._
1. M. Grol .y
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pub)
the
totl
01 II
The
or
wrt.
or a
tW!1!
1the ,
the t
rOlliN
A. L
thIo
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",,'b
II. II
In Ilk
-PUn
willI
or_
K. S
G. VI
OChn.
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rest and distraction; and the fact that. when he calls on the
Soviet writer to create an image of the "teacher of the rev
olutionary rights of the working class", Gorky considers it
possible to direct his attention to the practice of Shakespeare.
in whose plays there are indeed many characters who speak
out passionately and boldly in favour of new ideas giving
an example by actions which set them above the canons of
behaviour acceptable for their day and age.
Shakespeare's vividly-drawn characters can indeed serve as
teachers of a "new life", particularly. perhaps, the gay heroes
and lovely heroines of his comedies with their dauntless
frankness in the face of their enemies and their readiness to
stand up for their beliefs, if necessary by force of arms.
Gorky asserts the view of Shakespeare as an artist whose
work embodies the revolutionary essence of the Renaissance,
and this is why he is a source of such unfailing interest to
the Soviet dramatist, whose calling it is to express new,
gigantic conflicts born of a new revolutionary era, foreshadowing an infinitely more significant turning-point in the history
of mankind.
During the thirties, Soviet studies of Shakespeare, continuing in the spirit of Gorky's interpretation of his realist and
humanistic art were closely bound up with the life of the
Soviet theatre which, in the course of these years, put on a
number of important new productions of Shakespeare's
plays. This development of Shakespearean studies went hand
in hand with a general increase in scholarly output made
possible by successes achieved in the building of
socialism. Progress in the working out of a general MarxistLeninist line of approach facilitated the appearance of
new and profound studies. The works of 1. Aksyonov,
S. Krzhizhanovsky. A. A. Smirnov's book The Work of
Shalzespeare, the discussion of certain points in this book
initiated by A. Kemenov's article entitled "Shakespeare in
~he Arms of a Bourgeois Sociologist", the early critical works
of MM. Morozov and the articles of S. Dinamov went ":0
m..lke 11;' th4 r:,ch and vital groundwork of Soviet Shake
"'pr.ar"oiol1Y dUj ing the thirties. The achievements of thi!
pcriod were .:on~mued in the forties and fifties in the works
of A. A Smirnov. M M. Morozov. A. A. Anikst. V. Uzin ,nd
"'ttc~- scholars who 'iought to adv,lnt e and lend a more
J,rofound ar.d striclly ~ actual basis to t~c <;tudy of such
proHcm!. lS ';hakec;:p'are's TPa~ism In lt~ at tual hi~tol'ical
12
context, the degrec to which his art was li,ked LJ the foJ\
traditions and til the ordin~J' pc:")plc 01 his dav, :td
important questions c",nLerning the period .... ation ,,)f his worl .
Since the War, Soviet studic, of Shake' peare 'lave "11ade
considerable progress. A s~duus publ~cation W1.S- The
Shahespeare Col/eeliot! (Shekspirovsw Sbornik) from Whl' ~
several of the works published 10 t'1l~ volume ue t<!kcn.
Interesting new books on Shakespe3.re inc'ude KO-i ltS:V'5
Our Contemporary Shahespeare (1962), an extnc~ trom
which is published in this collect" on 1!" ,n C'. -n Ie 01
a "film produccr's view" of Shakespe'lrc wr ttcn bv :1.1"
author for whom the English dramatist is a~ lexh<l'.l~ tiblc
source of inspiration and ide~s, Art des on Shakespc_ "h ... ve
come to occupy an outstanding -laL" 1 tPe pc 14 dical p.. "'s
and in publications by indiv'dual c,'llli..: ). -r;4 ycar 1 ~l 4.
the fourth centcm_ y of Shakespe", E
:r " ~w t 1(' pub! n'
tion of a number of ncw books on Sl _'- 'I lrc
As has already been poin~ed cut in ....'---1'i n oduction
scholarly work on Sh 1kespean:: ha~ ... 'w ;lV5; C ... :::
o. elY
intel:onnccted with the w ~~'k of '_ ~ e "t.3tric" com rue
wil'" . hc crc_ ~ vi. S ~ ~ing!:> 0_ th_ a1 t;J.~w lr 1
f IT'cn
of 01.11' theatre' The U.S.S.R, c n 1..;: .. t l 14
u,;-:i u: eu
litenture of ..... is kind lbou lL 1! ,. won:s whi4 1 baL gJ
c.. general id~ 1. ot tOlE:. .I. n4 Ie':: ot iDte pl ting indiv1dual "lay,
on t e Soviet st,-gc "n~ fol1..:w tre ploce .... o.
_ recr __ . 01
of in(.uVlLIIJ ... (;'land_r> W1S 01 ~1.~y" ~ 14
D.05t
intel'c'Jt,ng f "'Ill t liS Lre:.~.l1'C :10U,
01 S("Ivu.;~ t 1( ltre 1
literatu e c-n ';.l.kc
)" ",bsor'---lrg ,... 'I 114 : d,)cu
mentary ;iLCOUJ1ts .... f th ~ er.:'lUV( ;is. ilril. t'::l f ;h~ . ~ uc
by people of the e t t:
For this r"::1S0n we d~"'14 ed to show ."1,; \1",,11 ~v ",I '-'.J'\,et
theatriol litc.ratu" ~ m hakc:..ppare ince, 1 . Lll t mes, the
production of Hr~lllet is ope f the n O! t ...r;;eD. prot"'lelTt !
c",nfJ'onting our ShakC"pf'arC~~l . 1L 1tr ". v,.-e .. -: ~ !,}'vcn wo
1
dilfc nt inl Mretatil lS 01 Haulet wh ch re'~t;w~ tile dC!ve
opme'lt of the ~ovi( t approa! 1 to p1 .)duct "'n~ ,,)f ~p._ {espe~re
between the b ties ='Inc
t: new c 07' 01
lam ets whIch
I Ok 'lo~kov '~rorluc
L
J.r
rprinr.;;..1p:t ",ul' ~ tat-e d r .
, .
Jon .h Jkc pCClre in Sovit.t 'let I, s i:~ 0 bee mc ::I su 1t.i.:vul
n,m' four sta" o;;ipe
ln..l ._:ld not "-11 rc Y " bC..lut!.:
~ 3dt ~'lu S "er" Cpl~)e"1teJ bv lP. extrJC~ L'om ~ahrd1
L. ~;1l>V:}, W 10 CL ... lkJ, 10
1n immo 1 t" charcograPlhl~ Im39 '
onc 01 sta" ~espe_ ... rr\lst rnchantmg . eraires Jhcl. PIt:!
A
In .
bay.
...
mill
--
b ut
lnt
thou
SHAKESPEARE
A'l/fJ TdE STUDY OF LITERATlRE
ALEXANDER BLOK
In the UJ
ha\'e bee!
million co
en by th
Soviet UnJ
tioru of ,
been put 0
in the cou
The fourthousand
speare in
between 1
since becolT
These are j
give some
popularity
This collect!
pUblication
the Study (
to the Instil
of tht' U.S.S.
The book n
of articles
writers, cnt!
of the thea'
tWeen SoVl(!
thf! demoer
lith-century
the fact thai
former were
A. LUnat'h
th.. colI~tI
well-known
.uch as I
M. Momzov
In the ~
sPt>a1"@ and
will nnd a
of article. b
K. Stanis
O. Ulanov.
other. wh(
Inam.Un. '
of the ,",a
stale and
More Uq
studt. of
.......
hook. It ..
.. an In
valuabl.
world atud
Scene 2.)
knowledyc ollifc,
OUI
Shak~'
,- ,
hlgh~l
17
In tbe U
ba.. bel
million c
en by
Soviet Ul
tions of
been put
in the ex
The tou
thouAnd
Q!'re ir
between
since becI
n....n
Cive IOn
populartt
whi~areinli~.
In
this traged
Yci
yan
whol~ ~:l~l~e
2
Four gC!1entions dl e paradrJ
f
Tet U~ fint take q look t the orc '1S .i'" Kmy L -:lr
e ~,'angprgcn~lc;;.tor ot the
traHcdy, at !.he brighte t" a.
OUl ht to f
.
s :PUltS.."t"'o:e Wll,t w.'ud S;C,::1
1
arm an eXLeptlon, w;
t fi t . h
.
._-,
sll,Je t.:-. (,111 d . Here' .
~-." ,:I, ~s Slg. t.t ,~ impos
1S
lhe King. Sh~ IS tlesh IO~lde!ta, ,the: : lVOl ~n~" d, LUphle r of
mhert~:ed ht;r falher's 0 .Ie flh \Jf olJ, Le ..F; she ha~
tc IT; hie Inabil ity t
stu~bornnes), S I, ,m!le';s pride, hIS
!'Iiily to compl'om' u cOmjr,'flllsC" tClr::.. lt bccduse this in~
unr"v,.lIiny oj a ,!~:'lV<.! the fi',1 "ulwllrd im';"lu'lst: to the
began to roll out n. Ie. t~~191fe of ml,Jol'tunes which then
q.drly vclouty {' J.J,el,l t"l[l f'''' sll1ng, unwinding Ihelf with
~.:;lrue Ia \~ " ten co
. t: J WIt h 1)es d emon.'
.but whC'l'e is .that
d.
. ..
mp.:.ll
mOl,ture
1 '1 hn
t h (' very e<:,cnce d rwy
In f
..
'
. '~1~ k ,"'up WhIC h l~,
here WI: have the f ~ tCl:rlnme '.Jul oJI Desdemona? Ant!
c...,mpilrc--.d to AntilJo de. h,~~ 1110T"l" ~'ften :.l\~I, Cordelia i;.;
il <tit<:, ,I !i1t'St un~''''~:~llJl ': am ..'l.re many <{Ull .., unwl)mJ.nly
.1 ~"mlJllfl('bcing.
y '\Ill which h3S taken posS('t;sion d
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noisy rustling of its still living leaves, just i\~ if they had
all realised simultaneously that they Illust pellsh and w~l'e
sending up a soughing rustle into the blue before hurtllllg
down to shatter and to part bury themselves III the earth
which, until this day, only their roots had known.
.
Such a proudly growing tree was the heart of KlIlg Lear.
He was not a king in our sense: he is a big landowner, and
his kingdom is not a kingdom but an estate with "shadowy
forests", full of game and herbs and berries, with boundless
meadows, and rivers rich in fish. King Lear's subjects have
been used for many years to living under his glorious sceptre;
they love him for his mercy and his kind heart and fear his
stern and hasty temper. No one had it in his heart to hate
him, for in this man, "every inch a King", there was too
much virtue and integrity.
In the course of long years of glorious rule, unshadowed
by failure, the heart of Lear became filled with pride the
measure of which he did not know himself; no one infringed
upon this pride, because it was natural.
And so, the old King has sensed the approach of Autumn.
He is wise with the wisdom of Nature itself and he knows
that there is no halting this advance of Autumn, but he is
also unwise like this same Nature, and he does not know
that, with the Autumn, something else may come-at once
terrible and unexpected.
King Lear has understood that the blood is coursing less
strongly through his veins, that it is time for him to pass on
the burden of power to others. But he has not foreseen that
the people to whom he intended passing on this burden were
not as he had thought them to be.
Unhurriedly, the King divides up his domain, of which
every meadow and every grove is familiar to him, so fairly
between his heirs "that curiosity in neither can make choice
of either's moiety". The solemn ceremony of the hand -over
begins. The King, at the height of his power, has, it would
seeDl, taken all that he wished from life. He has long since
married off his two elder daughters, their future is assured,
he has almost lost touch with theDl; he is left with his youngest daughter. his favourite, the object of his tender solicitude.
Two dia~shed foreigners are seeking her hand. Today,
... he glVes away his power. he will also give away his
beloved daughter to one or the other of them. At this solemn
moment the old man is full of double pride-the pride of a
f
..
at
23
in the
The fo
tholl'Pn
4e u e
betweel
since be
Theoe
live _
popuJar
. Not one word of this crosses the lips of that cruel sad
bItter artIst Shakespeare. Courageously he ends
' f II'
stop, on the exhortation:
on a u
I
Thla: co'
publlca'l
the Sta
to the .
of tIw t
The bo
write ..,
July n, 1920
of artie
oflbe
'" T 0 L I l
.j
,In
01
We...
1- II
)r-found
f the baSIC
rar
b
-'u
.peare
betwe
.inee t
Th<oe
give
popule
Thls"
publiCI
the St
to the
o'the
The'"
01 art!
wrlten
01 the
lHun
the <lor
Itth~
the lac:
tOiniE"
lb.
A. Lur.
eo
weU.okn
ouch
M.Mor
In the
SPUN .
Will ftn
of artIel
K. ilia
G, IJIar
otb 1-,
ble huma n val JC which rests in their ve"y -ont~rnpl for all
~re,"... nccl~crt ODin.on~. But. at the same time h:: .. 1lses th'lt
their lot I ::' a pcnku3 one; he wh('l ar andons the h'odden
path, he wh.o ct: OLt I J seck h~ppiness In~ SUI eiS f1 the
occan, trustIng Imself to ~"'e WIll of the w'nds with oniy
on~ captain on board Re.:!svn- k~1ng too, eat a I" sk.
RcasoJ'l 1S c.: weape n in the it uggle f01 ucccss-thb s ne
il !:ipcCt of Sha, ' espeare s lttitude to intcUert which had bctomc
such a great fOl - iT' thp WQ] Id of lis tiIT'e
The other aspect was conuiuc in he l,ught that, to "le
man of intellect, who usc') h] rea~ on 15 '" bn, iant tl)rch, many
things become clear which,. for ordina~ pc_pIe,. :1.1 .... till dark
Suddenly, with extraordmary l~ dltv nd :h~tnctnI;AA. he
sees himself and all that surrounr1s li:! , lis : ;l"!.:~ Inl:
terrible war ~ lluminated by thr !::~ ... b9ht l. j:" , 1...:10 Ii
'lppears t"rat the wor'd ls ,ot only, s.. an1~ ,,1r1 t rible, b~l
mean and stupid as we' "'c.,t,.. sSlbJv
1: lot w rti wr. ~
living in it en .", -nC4 1,," e1 - .1(' gre_tesi. U:J ~~J ~~d
victor1cs whu" t 1-as to r-:. r do lot "'l~" j:"y '1-1::' (.0,- 11. _ e _1. t
ence 01 to m -t Of' the f,,:t th .... ~..! v of- ):11"'"
'" r"
Inl.
e,he-n~' c:. "u! 1...... -rr::: wh n TIldV CJ d age nd ~I ~t1. If'
irescapal!e l<>t 0: (J liv_"1! ~.... ngs, _el! D --er 3.1.
.
lLre ,."'IS'n, "l"recoc .Jt.:.lv wid_ 3.' - __ becon ) the :111_
c'u~ e 01 -e s 'Henne: f th:o nPl S :: \ l,orr: it nl -n::s. F ....:~
we have to ....0 ""11h'Lo::-:: 01 the t:: tV\; d ,1:'ance.s 0: t1 ....
Vl~ ~ phi n01 'ene n Wi k.b w_ C:1 ... r t:'.l'- nd p', CI~el:v ~c
m.:aL ted ' th::- t ... 0' \,. ibcvrw~ .W
)"ll'"'dv Wo~ 4 r, ~ W:.
r"nncis B;lc In, 3. 1.-n ot lr."C It. ..... po':; :; ~d... amnd ,"
uae, int. e-nan, "I~ t ...d b" ,"to; nrh::,.!~ s::t U . 01 the R~enal:;
t. Ivpes 01 :)hake'
dill.;
"'ad .ol.,t.thu.g 1 to: :m,"U0 1 \A,
u_.l ~' . ~ , . 'el
r~'s he _cs
.... c im,"1 ect As we b.C'con e n.'. ~ ell ~ :
.
' . ,.,
n' niJl3htv w: th ~t1e rnaxlr.l.
uC 1L1i Inl:" w
b .... .)111 n.
t.
. ,
,,'
l'
hp -:-fc J" for' haviL ~1I in e ".vdav lL ," we w::, see. IS
\in.hl With 'e fiJ: CW::'S Of Mpto:hj..:.ve:~i.
,
.
h
.
' h 5 ~ ... "lght j'.;ofll
t c
satT'c ""I'll; 1 rrust ~': erop a l~;. ,. .
.
f
A the
(; ... i.
m , It "h..:: .llthOl.gJ- ik.::::on feels absolutely 110 shad.ow ~
b' ......
:,::.
AI
'"-
ny
he
e lCa c
'
In the
ha\'('
milUOI
en by
SovIet
tions
beenp
in the
The r
thousa
Qe,re
betwee
since b
Thoe
give I
popul,
1'hla ...
publica
the Stt
to the
ot 1M 1
TIle bo
'" artIo
wrfteta.
"'the
'.em
the cion
,the tact
fOllilEr
A. LUll;
thlo col
well-lm(
ouch ..
M. Mar.
In the
,p~"e
will ftn(
of artich
K. StII
o. UIon
'at.......
..
.... ...
oducs "
--Ib
"on
ili. .
In th
have
milli(
en b
Sovie
tions
been
in th.
The
thou!
.peat'<
betwf
since
Th...
give
popul
ThJs (
public
the S
to thE
01 the
The h
01 an
writer
0Iu..
tweeu
the de
11th...
the 10<
tot ihet
A. LUI
..
...eUoob
ouc:h
M .....
In the
41'N,
WIll ...
of a tid
Boa
It
Q.
U\or
Pas '
"' ......
I~
-s.
-., ' -
L8
1"
-I
~~It
Ir
"ths,
JO
,,
In th
ha\'e
millie
en b:
So"ietions
been I
in the
The j
thousa
speare
betwee
since b
These l
give s
popular
This col
publlcat
the Stu<
to the II
of th.. u_
The bool
of articl,
writen, (
of the U
tw.." SG
the demO(
lith~tu
the fact tt
former
Wt
A. Lunacl
tht. coli..
weU-know
IfUch a.
M. Morozc
In the lie(!
speare and
wlll ftnd I
of artlcle1
K. Stanla
G. Ulanov
othns wh
incarnatln.
of the .. !a:I
t ...
and.
More than
studl. of :
"'-beI
bcdr:. It Is
_ an Intr!
V'alub)e ct
,n
WOi~ atud~
Sheik
'.
<
...
". - -
~
GlouCCSll"
In Ib
have
millio
i!.
Hie 'lard
lions
....n'
Buc.:kingham
These I
give a
populal
This co
publica'
the Stu
10 the I
ot thE' t
The hOI
ot artie
:i1~1
tween
the den'
Utth-cer
the fact
tormer
A, Lu"
thta co
well-kn,
.uch a
M. Mot
In the
apeare ,
will On
or aMlel
K. Sq
G. Vial
otM"
In.......
01 the
(Olllt:, (.
(. :.1ll5i
Soviet
speare
betwee
since b4
Bw:kil1gham
en b)
In the
The t
thoula
u!Jin,
t.,
'"
In t~
ha\'e
millio
en b}
So\'let
lions
been.
In the
The t
thousa
speare
betwee
since lH
These
give
Sl
popular
This eol
publlcat
the Stu.
to thE' I
ot thE' U
The boo
of artiel
WTiten
ot the't
tween S
the demc
11th-cent
the tact
tonner w
A. Lunac
thlli cou.
9(ell--ltno",
ouch at
M, Moroz
In the Me
apeare ani
will nnd
of artlel.
K, Stanb
C. UIanov
othe,s
w~
Incarnatln.
of the 11 E.
a"" and a
More than
atucll.. ot ;
rble. bet
bocdi:. It 18
.. an Intrl
vahqbJ. ch
_01 kf atudll
'he.. '
71 ...
MUl(.;n Oll
'
[.
h' Jam
h.w.
Richard's. It is one and the same school of life, one and the
same world.
Perhaps Shakespeare comes closer to Bacon in scalc wh n
he creates the illegitimate son of Gloucester 'Edmund in
great tragedy of Killg Lear.
e
. It .shoyld
not~d from the start that Edmund, also, has
hIS JusttficatlOn, Rlc~ard e~ters into a monstrous struggle
for power and explalOs thIS by the circumstance of hIS
physi~al d~formity, E.dmund enters into a similar plot and
explalOs thIS by the CIrcumstance that he is a base-born !)on.
Here, we are evidently confronted with a broad generahsa'
tion.
Shakespeare asks himself: why has a type of man come
into being who is prepared to put his reason at tl e service
of careerism, of ambition, and who makes so dangerous c:.
servant of this reason, so sharp, a poisoned dagger )f '115
will? And he answers-why, yes, all men likc thaI Ire. in a
way, base-born, they are all people to WhOM fate h::s nol
given all that they should like to have. They are people who
see themselves as unfairly done out oj thel r ghthl place
in life, as slighted from the cradle, and W 10 fOl this rea! on
set about righting what. they are convinc-.;Io.l. are ver-igh's
of Nature. with the help of superbly thoc_
ut intrigue'.
It must be admitted that the RUSSI..:'! 1 t Inslator of King
Lear, Druzhinin, gives. in his preface to the plilY, U~ excel
lent analysis of Edmund's character' an m_'}1 ;i5 whiL'" IS a
firmly drafted that we p-efer to "lor~ow the whole p~ssagt
just as he wrote it:
"The basic feature of this ty.-'" is thai br lZcn in.olence ;md
shamelessness which always enables the POfsessor f suc'1
traits to lie without the least tw_n~e of conScH"OL .... ~o don
any mask, acting always under thenfluf'uce :>f one domhating desire to make their own way at C!.1V cosl even :f that
way should lie over the dead bodies of fathel or l-rothcr
Edmund is no mere narrow egoist, neltller is he ,;: blind
villain capable cof ~aking pleasure in his own "I doing. Ed
mund is a richly JiFted character, but a character w'1o has
been cankered a; the root and who. be...:ausl' of th: s, can only
use his exceptional talents to the detriment of hIS fellows.
Fdmund's genius IS "'videlt in his every step, in his C\'cry
WO!:l. for not Onto -;te"""' doe" he take and not one movement
docs "c make wl:ticn has nol been carefully calculated, and
the' e eternal c_.!culali<"ns ~o dlY up ~rn:,tnd's hc:ut and
th
?c
"t
so
,"'
==
=.'
-
37
36
I"
In t~
ha'-e
millio
en b)
SO\-iet
How
been,
in the
The t
thousa
speare
betwee
since hi
These ~
give 8,
popular
This col
publicat
the Stu!
to the I
of thf' U
Th. boo
of artiel
wri......
of the t
tween S
the dem(
J8th~t
the fact
former "
A. Luna(
lb. calif
well-kn~
such ..
M_ Moroz
In the lie!:
apeare an.
will ftnd
of artlcl.
K. Stanlr
G. Ulanov
other: wt
Inearn.tlna
the"!a
t .. and.
of
More th.n
aNdt. or .
........ be!
boN+' It fa
.. an Inire
vaJuab.. d!
....Id .tud14
.ek'
'- ...
'7
thy
f 'fi"
l8
, t 'ics over countlcss perils and SUI" "f his own courage
Vlcdo:night. Surely, it must be pleasant indeed to trium~t"
iln
man J:ke that? Incidentdlly, it is ~lso elSY, ecausc
over
'
l'U
b
d ry s t r...w It
" I~
h ' aingenuous,
t"ust fu,
10 amma Ie a!
e 15 asy to get .,e mastery of him. t;o lead him by hIS black
very cAnd don't you ice what a pleasUl:! that is? Don't ynu
If "
I
nosc,
sec how delightful I. is to see onese, leutenan~. ag~, a
Ily smart aleck without the least claim to dlSI nctlon.
rasea
'
in the role of guide, mastct, F ate, p rOVI'dI n_ ~ lnL G('d 'n
relation to thiS famous, hot headed, "owc ful, dangel us
and fiery general?
.
And Desdemona? 5h(' is the daughter 01 '5E"""latl,r B, It m,tJo,
she is the finest fJl w. r of Venetian ~ult~h; she' IS 111 lyncai
'ty and noble devotion sJ""le IS hk:> 1 iong, he IS a
I
scnsuil I
h'
Id h
great prize, the highc. t rewCl
fOl W Ich a n :10 ,ou
ope
and she has :;urrender:>~ hers!
Othello y.. thou! . _ erve
has ranted h n the pI ize of herse l ~u~ stoe s tr J! tIn~, shr.
is d~encele<;.s, she is honoo. ble She": IS lC -lble of !usped'
in an one ,f double de.;: nt. snc ao~ noL pvc} k,ow the
't ;s verY c sv to Jre h
lli~" any
g . Y of the w.
mr.anmg
h JW Igr.....
- b ~ it IS 'l _fe '
let AJ"ld, iUre1y. you -mst see
.
f
ll,
'"'''It:'y uch l .,,1 II e 01 ] ItU ~ IS
that - e :1te 0 suc c..
t'tis was
,
c
holman ,unn.ng,
coml inatll...n! ir ,res c rn '.at! n,
h as ........ O'le -;0
t qc sue
. ..
the he\,,,,,,lv f t II <"lfl' r U 1 f1h
(hC"'dcr'os ..i.e ~lclos.
cr. Iv de ibe~ LV I.: ren~ mal W 5 suf#kl;" 'l~Y . ,U
CcnF~(, y 1 L klrq, F ~(1 i.~lJn ;mnc l~ we shall
rcmov_J f um ny form . f c...ncroU! ..
t"
&,
(.i
'
,,
,
.,b.
.,
I
T.
"
PC
Th
pu'
the
to
ot ,
Th,
ot
Wtll
ot ,
tw..
the
11ththe
torm
A. I
th.
\VeJl
"".h
M. J!
._,..
In th,
will I
of ani
K.
O. UI
otha
In......
ottho
;;0
in
40
. .
,
I
.'
..
T
.. ... . ..
,
,
. . It is my only suit
Provided that you weed your better judgements
Of all opinion that grolVs tanh in them
That I am wise. . . . . . .
. . .
. . . . .
til
10
ot
Tl
ot
ot
tw,
,h,
'ot
tho
ton
A.
Ib..
We'
wei
M.
In ,
Lpn
"'111
ot
K.
OJ
O. I
othet
Inear
otllt
,t
M.,..
1tud\4
:::1
The1c
.,,) need
-oin OU~ th~t these wvds 'ould have
be!';n
k"'l
y Rk.har~'"1 or by Edmund, 0] by Iago
0'1 uct} 1 r ,-t~. HamId m gl t lot only lave SUIVIV.:d the
. 193211- s;)vil.:t pro
or
n~ture
41
,,
I.
.1
T
II
P(
To die-to sleep
No more, and by a sleep to say we end
The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir to!
And, further on, he elaborates his thought llhcr mOl .
clearly. He says ~
For who would bear the whips and scams of time
The oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely
The pangs of despised love, the law' delay.
The insolence of office and the spurns
That patient merit of the unwrrthy take:.,
I
I
,,
.t
T
"'
po
T>
p.
'h,
'0
ot
Th
ot
wn
ot
twe
the
'ott
!be
tom
A. 1
"""
... ,
weU
8O.h
In U
.pen
wm
ot..,
K. j
G. U
otben
.,..,.
Jnean
:::
ed
m '.
1 Is.
boo'
Tired with all these, for restful death I cry,As, to behold Desert a beggar born,
And needy Nothing trimm'd in jollity,
And purest Faith unhappily forsworn ,
And gilded Honour shamefully misplaced
And maiden Virtue rudely strumpeted,
And right Perfection wrongfully disgraced,
And Strength by limping Sway disabled.
And Art made tongue-tied by Authority,
And Folly, doctorlilu, cOlltrolling Sl?i1l.
And simple Truth miscall'd Simplicity,
And captive Good attending captain Ill.
Tired with all these, from these I would
be gone,
Save that, to die, I leave my love alone.
Here, all the reasons for the sadness of the awakened
intelligence are particularly clearly shown.
Everything is topsy-turvy. High places are occupied by
hideous masks. True might, true modesty, true sincerity, true
talent-an these are set at naught, and there is not the least
hope of setting things to rights.
It may be that, at the time of Essex's plot, Shakespeare
did nurse some absurd hopes that this particular, impractical
plot wi.th its extremely indefinite programme might chan~e
somethmg or other for the better; it is, however, quite ccrtalll
.
1...
grc t r"
TX Yo' v... . la! Jl.:" - ~at on
mvcshgi'lhon!;,
nap ac...lle:V_
~. -.
.
. I 04).1 u" or JuS.
'
\.
I"'"'
'I,.;
~"k '1,t SU_l !
l~ on tle
UCI~
~-:
staff If e ienes If> oldnaglc, it :' ':Y__ ll.>e It 'fs fa~e.
the same time Lu"lC"nea to ..._01 the po.... ,r 0 L: Oll'a
. ,
,
'1
~.(':i (lC.:UC d
knowledge whIch Ill10 ,ic1ueves hroug- app.1
'"
1'-" Acden'v f\a:on passe,
.. ,'-.
.- d I
new magIC. Throug h hIS OW:l pec'J :~
.
'C31 '\JJ .1" a "m 0
out mto
the \.. tOl'la~ Atl an t 1~ B~~'"
'l-~
Prospc,"v
.
.'
Sh k pedrc w~s
It is 4i'mo!t i,)l)~sJ~l"
behe,2' ..1al ~ d e~ t I' '\..15
, o;,u~t'e drgw'lCn s. .1 toll
.
hmilld: Wl1h "om::-.' f Ba(l..lns meSI.
'"
'\riel JS the
way "r m!-t ..mcc ' is very C..lsy tlJ ":~'~~.,.l.m ~ c"~ception
E. noolhmeDt of th.!! whIch Bacon w~h: ~~rn:_. el~ Caliban
to which we will rc!'Jrr,t. Pro~pcr? s p~;e. 0~~r ...wel' lohe
I-prcsents c..~ onf' 3r.d t.1C' sa~c time h~ p~;)ple in gene!'aJ
OWe1 elcmtnts "f n;J.ture over :nc ..:ommo
.
m~ ,'vcr t~e 1lativcs o! c..:-lorues m par~~'lr~ as indifferent
fLowcvc 'Pro~pc~' 1!:- not so much u aPr.
0:.
.... '
c,
Lo
41
46
--
Al
,,
:
T
'"...
TI
po
Tb
pu'
Ibo
10 ,
ct.
The
ct ,
.....
ct
ew 2l
1lbo,
Ibo.
t4lih
A. L
II1II
'J~
11.11
I ....
h:d
48
,
ttl
__ ._ ! ....
or
.... . c.. .
I-- ../ ,
...
....
,,
"
...
."
'M
II
po
.."
pul
''0h.,
11
. ,,
Th.
ot
of ,
'h.
'"
'Ith
,.. I
...
...."
A L
h ..
"h
.. II
In
..
f
"
t~
ar CI hlVcnt1.0ns ot S~lcncC'
Bac: n 1$ full of youthful, happy, sparkling, 1<iIV
II
n
'lC". He ~now that the ocia! order i~ unju5, }- c '" O~
that il s nc_":' sary to come 0 cr ns with TIlrV thln9~
a nevil 11 11"_ And. in gene'l 11. he :; w 1 v.)1 Vdnous
',t
''14"
on
'11
""
n:
()I
to r
ti f
1
11
1(
1(
.. tl1':
liJ
_ Ba( c
Sl
uC
pc ...'03 pI..
r.
'
111 d1
'J
:J
nil
":.!
to
P
v
, c'
r t~
... nC:.II
cng1
rd' """cn r
ngly' t ma.l
~ fl.'
'n h ,yo,,~L
p_ll
n th . . ' ~
11 d
p 'g
-::l.11
t 1, :tirq
11
11
I!
qe''1( _
"Jr -
ft'l
109
,d
"'vc
~l-
l,
t: ..
'
1...
.,
l("lw
xw
I.-
C'
1t
n " 51 1
th
"
0\ ...~r
r ttcr
~r ~
:m mo
II:1t +hr.;
r.'
Y t1
10
.. t 1
11
49
,1.-
.,_)1
..f
.
n"
llL
W
"I ct
' I I"
new f a rms 0 f SOCIa lfe. Thl'rl" before.
C \\'1 1 fOlln
a ttractive per spccti\'CS, almost limitless l~~r~pcn ,up th{' Tllo
I am call ing.
,.
spcchvC's, Whithc
,
<
po
Th
934
b
h
.,
tI
Ix
,"Tl
gi'
pul
'he
to
orr
Th,
of
wri'
of '
IVAN
"I
fonn
A, I
thlo
well_
OUch
~
.....
In '"
Will :
of art
K. ~
o. u:
othen
incom
of tho
_t.
- ..
st... i
TIll:
lne
Mor.
ihk.
book
'l.
tw"
the
lith
the
M,
AKSYONOV
Thp
(1Jprcs~ol
par.L~:
In.'
"T'Jlat n
valuab.
world ,
.''1 I
"
,,
b
b
T
U
...=
.'
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DO
'1'1<
I:
10,
01.
'I'l1o
01
fd
1':
;)
52
,,
P'
'h
10
01
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11
lo
~p}-~ "'~, ~
sy./
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~ alj a~ ~;I m~
is th 'atemn!,. ~om
II
t.~
~c ;'11 t
'cbcllion wit'1tn the capital. bUl h",. ~ ~., (.)~g . n wh., 1
hcfol"> they e U'~ ;U C 1tl sh th_ r 1.: nh ~. r:'" r ~ f)C'
,
1 llthe~~
n
.\(1
to me cxt"nl, lfIV Vt.
1.) ,11
u:".J
out tn ..it Ull C f~.'" 'lV_ ~- pn ~::
. . t "'Jand(.J
ll,;:-t of dell
The S... ;:~~ "t"~' aT"
the "x~rc;ne "lal.y for th ... ('
I .hull p:::. ....- t lo 11
and 1",g r""
1 whl( lo-; :'I
51 C '1
r ,".'1P i4 1.(
1lth_
t
_ l "1.0 1
,1Jons('lll,
i\.J._ ~ for'
..~
J'''''1
mad_ t t}llt :-,~
{hisb ry :11> rt.Ol_ ~'"\; ... i tr_ '~':tK- II ....'_, W rtr. q'lot
Sl n\ h3s uc.:cc c..J n -. J n,; .
d on th \.; i"')O . Or..
}eyal.l~
iog in l~' Cl11 ~ly
. n.9
wor'...I.w d~ igni t canc
the qui ....:J' of RI mar }U ttl c5 :;:! .. l
x m,1 ... for
.r~
"')[ Rom. <ll1d the v "ut: o! 11 er. ~
k hi s ... .,1 ..
'
L~
'1....., tl r:'. ...
t h (' 'fit "> (T n'v sc
~~
M
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Who po ,/". L 01
A 10114 of tile ,re
, ,
~ljl ~
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Nl "
j(
r:e C1 J:
r'l);ue
'J) tJO u ... /J, h1
do::.l rr.'.1
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(u II
Syl! f1'j~
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ulh
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1! ,..
n/K'
h t
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ra.
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em I L t
bII Idie?)
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state
1
1
,
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of th(
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Sb....
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A. SMIRNOV
,
,
i
"
of
II
'"
TI
II'
PO
TIl.
Shak('sprarr's Humanism)
of
58
monologue of Timon on how gold perverts all human feelingS); in King .Lear (w~ere the old King, made wise by hIS
misfortunes. enes out: Through tattered d('lthcs small Vi(L>
do appear ; l"0bcs and furred gowns hide alL Plate sin with
gold, and the strong lance of justice hur..~es breaks .. ,"
(IV. 6}). in The Mercbant of Venice (the theme Of Shylcrk.
the scenc of the three caskets, III, 2), ctc. On t'lc othe hand.
in his Histories. Shakespeare shows how grell wa'S the evil
and danger to the country as a whole n'F!" ,e'ltcd by the
wild. unruly feudal leaders, ridicules arLstocratic llt'ogancc
in the comedy AI!'!; Well That Ends Well. pla~ upon c..:rl;ain
typical features ;f feudal parasitism in the image of ralstaff,
etc.
At the same time, howeve'-, Shakespe,lH' md~es n:.'l diffe!'
ence between these two ordel'~, in so far 15 hI' is always
free of schematic generalisations. quite ar:l1t from the
fact that the very c('''''ceptions "feuoal" and "bourge ...,L;' had
no conscious existt"nce in the mi~ld!' of pc:-:'l;:: of hi!' time_
Thinking of and accepting ;~fe a~ a cC"'!JlplelC, Shakespe:m.:
took feudal or bourgeois features :as theY3rp .. 3!~d in 1m
own epoch e~ the moment of confluence, while :at the ~lm('
time, their complex.: unity was eS:3bPshc..! in hi; -JW!1 mind
by the fact that both WC':-,' ~o<;til~ 'J the prim :p 1e ,~ ,c_~lthy
humanity. Such is the origin c' c;;;.~:: ':Jr/1 (x'.:.mdy
complex' images as Richard II! w~o :night ~~!" ~~:,:~.~gical1y
defined as a combination of feudal utth:",Jat and brilliant
predator-adventurer of the epoch of prima:"v :ac,:umulatior.,
or of Falstaff who will learn the humocr of th:; .lge" (Merry
Wive<; of Wi,.,dsor [ 3) .lnd, having .::sbC!~dcJ h:s feudal
train, emharks "JF,'n .l r::-~taH(.' Clter;1l"i.:'c' ~f doubtful
honesty.
The enemy of medieval ideas, .:-!' :te,'editary nobility, r..::ligious fanatitism, racial prejudice. et,:' .. Sb.kc~pc.lrc nffirm<:
objectively in his works the principle of equality, the equal
moral value of people of all ..:lassl"s ..,!l r.lCcS and all creed~.
This is shown dearly enough in his portr.ly~,l.s of ~thelio=
the black African who st:mds-l"Tlor~l1y and tnteJlectua~ Ym
head and shouldel'~ ::tt'ove thl! VcnctLln anstocrats by w 0
he is sttnounded of Shylock who. br .:Lll his personal
'"
"tl
ml,:mnl'~S. is ~hr'wn.
frL~m the religious.m d raCl<l JpolO
.0
view as a vidim oj the Christi~ns who gang up to bate hun
(ct. his monoi()Qu(' Ad III. Scen~' L .lcknow!ed~('d by many
clitics to t,>! the hest ~pe..-:ch in defence of the Idea of equal
rights for all peoples and all faiths in the whole of '
,,
,
I
,
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60
th
be oc
f the plc;Jsure which it glVes e w arc.
l'eil50n 0 y such is the case of Rich_ j III 3ut . 1 n re
P
. crmancnc
.
arc Shakespearc's portrayaIS 01 h ypOCflt("s 1
mtcrestmg ocris 'la' become second "1_U
md who
,0
yP
whom h
Y " ,uc11 to themselves. :;u(h is M::!v)lio
k
t spca
evcn hY ' .....
I
h h
'
o
'rctended "respectabfily" i! l ~s W IC 1( ~ s
d I l l t the sake c' hl~ c 11 ~cr ana \- ':uc 1
whosc P
ut on once an or a OJ.
lIB t
P
t be indistinguishal1te F~:n 11S rl..l ace . . u
has grown 0
.
tiog( a WIth
'f . Malvolio thlS
ganie' t-vPIJ ... ISV ;
1, m
. Angelo (\It.. ~UIe tor ~1el. ;uel t taK ... _-:'I 1
grotesque, 10
tragic characte1
~_
Still more charactt:Jl, tiC 01 Sh___ sJ ...;.. ... outlook "n
~("'leral md(
L
thesc ethical, lOman' :uian prnl.. '.~ I~ ) nr. hen._.
standing of tJ e whole ro __: ot k ~. : _= 1. y... t!.
this. his mo ~ qener lllseu udqe4. . s "1
this life
_
m t'" poir.~ of
If we examm~ all ShaKt;te~ll "s '\: ';",... ~1..at f r ...... tlu,,:
view. we w,11 ,e 10I ce ~ -1 - ~ _Co---._...
"nature nf' ,. liS
highest cite" on was If' C0n,-_"). v' ind
H: conccpt f
favouritc WOt is) Nol only ioes ..
r.._ l\!.'1cnts t.n
v..lichitp"C
Ith
naturc and 0
e Images ... _"'. ul! &"1 ht but lal
support of some ,f h: n: s. 1m -. .
h"urc)
.
d
aCi lnst "" 1(.; 1
......
And "ere W'" ualiU S
l-'fs also the ~('Itm an c eno n .
the w' rth1l1c::, c!
hum~n 3ct~~~~od t arc D.s. ;
rly. in
of nature a. Sh_ spt.lrc nde
W1.ic" 1. alwa:-.;
gOll"1g
cvi~cnc('. Fl st-tl'e
11 Vt; ~pro;;-h_
Shal" ~"'arc ~ del
on 111 na1 urc Hcnce, on the..: 0 re' -cJ :n the dyn"mlsm of
of movem t, ~ .d.~~elOI ~cn",.expl ')'snov 19 thf' j( elophis iJ11ag('s <'.."1d 111 11 m )terl)
Y
tL r 1..
d hI' a"\l re
h
t
on 1 ( ' ) lC k
,
mcnt oj hiS 1C" oes
lC c f
thing exc~eding 1, hi'
llP ~
,1
14"
sure' flu t:v
~ lY .'1.. t' c dcm. 1d ~. that
u'lt.:I '"
I
nPIC SI e ... I eXI.. '1( c
d .U 1 ~s vallI.. 111 d I"1!
It::.
srllncthm~ .01 ... \I .
. c' d'ne
.",'"
rt.-, c' a~ ... ght
bcauty uch l~ lC' blo::. C"ll nr: .:... Ul.
:r
!l
I
1
.r.
...."
.....
...
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k
III
A.
III
2
However, although Shakespeare remained faithful to
humanistic ideas throughout his writings. his humanism is not
monolithic.
We distinguish three periods in Shakespeare's work: (1)
the early period, during which he writes mainly gay, lusty
comedies and dramatic Histories (roughly from 1590-1600);
(2) the middle period of the great tragedies, heroically stern
and sometimes gloomy (1601-160B); and (3) the late period
of reconciliation during which Shakespeare creates plays of
a peculiar type, of a legendary, idyllic character with a
softened tragic quality (1609-1612). Each transition from
onc period to the next is marked by profound changes in
Shakespeare's philosophy and poetics. Particularly significant
is the transition from the first to the sccond period on the
boundary of which stands Humlet. basically assignable to
According to Caroline Spurgeon, "evil, in Shakespeare's imagina'
tion, is dirty, black, and foul, a blot, a spot, a stain; Shakespeare als.o
thinks of evil as a sickness, an infection, a sore and an ulcer". But 11
carries with it no "sense of sin". (Caroline Spurgeon, SlJalwspcare's
lUUlgery and What It Tells Us, Cambridge, 1935. pp. 158-159, 161, 166.)
62
<
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63
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othenJnearru
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.
book. 11
vaJuabl~
World It
Shekg
el.;
sical Barroco. bul whoch could 5'" ve qUlte otl:.::.- even 1iamctrically opposed aims.
These neW positions w'lich Shakespeare had adoptc-:J. we
a direct expression of the :risis of Rcnaissancc-typt;: numan'
ism, a crisis which had 11 eady found u11 expre::. lD in
Hamlet. In the last analysis, it onsisted in awaroess. c :he
discrepancy between the ide'lls ')1 Renaissance humanism
:~I
~14,
Cath~hc
!\t:~e
",n~.:11 ,~.lS,
~t(:1
~!".
~rdc.:1",
hnvesti~Ai '
c'" rc execu _ 1. Aftl . thi~, Ih
=,,~ .
nc ne
Owal 5 re igi 15. :il nl 1( lnd t:' 11 .
...;al ff4:t:' h n
...are,c<:am
en~. Exc.:Jtion .. '1 t4 ~ nt nt.i o~ "e-' tbn);.'" u g n '
_veral 10ze 1 p _0(.'
""
-r n
~lt ~
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67
,
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all ,
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twa
twUl.
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th~~Ci S(thr
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68
,
,
I
T
U
..
1M
air
'1'1
II'
po
Tb.
pu'
the
to l
otl
TIle
ot,
<
(tk
e enalssance was ca bi
f b .
rna Ism
possible directions dep ~~ e 0
emg channelled in two
handled by progre~sive :~r;;g on w~ethe: it were being
by the reaction.
s (humamsm, m particular). or
In this epoch of sy t
.
~atho1ic Church to dr!:~rt~h ende~vour on the part of the
mto her own servic th
e achIevements of lay thought
neglect to make us:' of ~h ~orces of reaction did not of course
~f man for its own end IS ~cw conception of the world and
"mult~ple levels" of tru s. Fl,rst and foremost, the idea of
multlplicity". The old t~ ~~s. replaced by the idea of its
faith and knowledg th ua IStlC doctrine (good and evil
"an
d realiora) all e,
ed
earthly
J"I an d the heavenly real'
fa
t
Ie
Ior. an d, as it were urne
outtob
'
a art'
1 : an excellent preparation
~hlch was now adv~cat~ ~CUtrr mstance of the pluralism
btruths" (or, correspondingl 0 Ie result arrived at was that
elm)0Thre than two, as for ins~ nO.nTIs. values, criteria) could
,nee,
e world of l' .
sublimated feelings P(i~C~~~:l ~nterests; 2) the world of ideal,
nfvel~); 3) the world of e rat ur?-late chivalric and pastoral
a rhlhlosOPhy; 5) the worl~a~f sCll:n~e; 4) the world of rationuc pluralism (0 d '
rc Iglon.
people of the Renafssa~~~~ml:s r:lS~1 tO be ~e~ with among
ca t h e sptrltual struggle
70
':-'!l~sdf." a::'
~hr-uhl
th~
s~~
phccy of the "We'r,' ,i~:C'I" .liter he' h:1S jc.:lmt th:lt BI!na~t:~S spe~ch,
IS on the m;ll, h .l!:l:l;ln~t h'Tl'I, In the ,,;une pl.:1Y. lflb'h po 1 '0 bell for
the"
f
"
, " who has ccn sen
, lc' LS.:I" .rCl'C" t{'J .:II' -',q'.llV"C:1C'f
.
d
C10U>J h fc>r
gL\'\~g ,'vid, n,,'C' ,\<:j.Jin<;t 0('111 s~d('~, "who C0n:ml,t.tenr tr~).l,s~m'mcnt.:ltor~
Cod, \"'~", y ... t ,','l,lld n,'t "'--lUI'I.',:,c.lte to he.J'\en v' th JCSUI.( Harsnct
!>c't' iTl.
.J rc:c'rCtK<' t(" th<' bhc ......' -idcncc
by e d er P1-'"
"th gtven
"the gunpow
. . who
('xammcd in Mal',h 16.).' in c.;;ntl<,C"tl.;;n WI
.
C f "two truths",
~"ught to justify hirn~,Jf by p.:"stulating the eXlstenc 0
thi~
71
,
t
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II
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sil
TI
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po
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oft
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of ;
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19th
t/,. ,
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well..;
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M. M
In tht
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Will f
of artl
K.
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othersincarnl
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_ta,e a
More 1
studies
.-.vI .,
book. It
.. an
valuabl(
world It
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tonn,
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M. M
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wilJ f
ot
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others_
incarn,
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reVieUr
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valuablt
World st
on~
CI~ ~~e:
fa~hers.
~wards
d'
,
,
t
T
U
:...
TI
II'
po
TIL
put
the
to,
....
01,
ol.
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ol.
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",,...
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-.
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to the dark of night. ~o the 0"":1, the wolf, the crow and the
bear-all creatures of night, malice and death. a contrapO~iti an
vhich is as it were summed up by Macbeth's: "Good thin
~f day begin to droop and .~rowsc; whiles night's bla~k
agents to their preys do rouse (III. 2).
Apart from this. besides those aspects of nature which ar
usual and. as it werc, "normal", there arc also abnormalitic~
or "sicknesses", the cosmic rcn~ctions (n common motif in
folk poetry) of great human CrImes, of the perversions of
human nature: su-::h arc the terrible, untame manifestations
described in Julius Caesar (1. 3). Hamlet (r, 1). King Lear
(1, 2). Macbetb (II. 3; II. 4), to some extent in Amouy and
Cleopatra (IV, 3).
Another form of the repulsive or "evil" in nature is
according to Shakespeare, all low and unclean clements, cast:
offs, as it were, rejected by nature herself as a result of the
process of life going on within her.
The most vivid example is the explanation (which
undoubtedly reflects Shakespeare's own opinion) offered by
Banquo on the appearance of the "weird sisters": "The earth
hath bubbles, as the water has, and these are of them" (I, 3).A similar contraposition of "fair" and "foul" marks
Shakespeare's attitude to the inner life of man. But in
neither case, as we have already noted, does it bear an
abstract, moral character, but rather expresses the antithesis
be~een the life-giving and the death-dealing principles: life,
eXI~tence. blossoming-putrefaction, decay, death. However,
as III nature, so here Shakespeare does not assert that the
ab?,s~ dividing fair from foul is unpassable. Both these
pnncipies can exist to some extent side by side within the
same. natural phenomenon. within the same human soul.
c~n. 111 part, grow into one another, in part show themselves
:lther as themselv~s or as their opposites according to our
pproach ~o the gIven phenomenon, experience or problem.
S,?me ghmpses of such a dialectical approach to the anti~~e~I~, of what must still conditionally be called "good" and
ev~l are afforded in the plays of Shakespeare's early
pe~lod. In Romeo and Juliet. Friar Laurence this naturp~lloso?h whose clear mind and freedom fro~ self-interest
raise hIm above his surroundings and through whom Shake It i
ra er
tn
Measure,
the sense of the scum on the surface cf life.
76
.
d
t
'
.,~~ -~""".;;" ~"'r 9 1 <,;:'1
who seeinfl th.: 'welt ~:s ..:,:-, 3S f!,l'.t: ........... - ' ,
.
'
witc'hcs interpret their words in the Sd!SC th;l~ "'__ ~J.t hiS, In
,
.
d h . f u1 1<;.-:0:' t emfact. fair lS~'{or thcm-tJut an w at ~s c-.. '. _ d- g t..,
fair As .Jeml~nic- bcinqs. the "weird $lsh::rs dl-h_;:"r ln
.
. Sh k
re' time) stoo possess\?d 0
the accepted views 01 .. J. espca s
- h' .
they
great. though limited insight. Mc:reo~er~:ll;_~~~a~~:~~~ation.
are not engaged on a banal exercise III
( h
t battle
but in a ,iiscu:;sion of the dooms ~f men t e g~:n of th;
the fate uf Macbeth). Their ~hanht "Itfhe fon~~~~fe, Ma~bcth
intcradion of fair .:md foul In t e l e 0 P ~
>
77
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sir
gil
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ot BrU
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.. an
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Shakeop
Ib
78
--=
11 thl n C
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net d ... d of tJ .,11 on I"" tion. bJI
c 11 .. v,
co., I='
1~.e
111' iUl1
W ",l
~o.,
t: 1
:r al ,- ue'
formal nit al 'r::1C.' C a~ tiOl: Ilv '\ (. mp'cl. S.
Tragi( HI rc 1 'e ,1 P ~
C:::=1bl Jre 193U
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tragedies emanate hopelessness: t.1C ~~l:n up perspectives
a
hand
h te
the o
r , not even he
WllC
J
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of .MJ
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1
't i not in lpt that Marlow..:' ~ e~:~:!"ac-tc:''; 1:a"e )i'.;)rt than ... nc"
....
.
fi'
':'cc TI,~y ail,! two-dimen
be"n ,,'mparec\
to gUh'~ O!1 a _.1 .'.. .... , .
"
d'
..
... d
III - wt~, .. "'1't,,'" d\;n:1.ml~m '-'
slonol,sLlti...:. 1::x.I:1!~ IVUI,
lc . '" . . . . '~~
J.
cf .
make Lh('m,..~lvcs felt. Towards the end 0i1 ~lS bn : htc:J.~
,
I
' Sha . e-p,;-:t''C 10 a.tlsth.
c'~ret'r Marlowe W~~ gt",:.wm~l c OSC"T.') . l \ : ' , .
method.
f
t"
A d 'n 01 Ft'vIt is ]loisi"'le to find ~ numh~r 0 cx~("p.l(1n5. r t:
in its
ersham
"\~'di"mmc1
in the p"ychologlc:l1
. ,. .
'
'h\\ ...1rkmg
the Uprc-Sha k espcarean
0 c,
(Alice, Mugl,v)
" . but. ~~n thc
h "t
f the mora I'Ity ]l I'<iy ....,'th
1
thcatl"'~ is slill iniol'1lH"d by. t l'SPtrl .c .
Shakcspearc's
it::; schcm;ltll', twodim clU>1onal. statIc lmagcsb, k d n 'hi'
.
.'
. '. th t he set out to rca
ow
.
lmm('n~e hlslorK.il mel"lt IS
A.
h . > t, '\rc not abstract
"1'Ity. 'l'h co l' h,11,:(':.
' t('!"s which ow
e lrdll'S
<
l!""mOp]
pushkin's
expression.
hgl1l'c) but "living 1'('lOgs , to oor; h
tel'S however, can
By n0 l1ll'J.ns ,Ill of Sh~kcspea:e, s rf a;~c res~cd dynamism.
bl! s;dd. to pos~css suffiCl('ntly dt.:J y
P
,
I
t
...=
.'
TI
po
Richard III, for installce, is ,111 Ollhl'.l<.1 out villain from the
vcry start of the tragedy. "I am dctcrmlllcd to prove a villain"
he informs us on his vcry first appc<ll'.1t1CC (I. 1). TntC'. Richard
who belongs to the carl~ period of,ShakcspcClrc's work. still
has much in common With the static char.:tdcrs of Marlowe
But lago, too, created in the peliod of Shakespeare's maturity
even though the "scale" of his villainy might. he said to gro\~':
also remains essentially the samc--an utter vdltlin throughout
the whole play.
Let tiS remember lago's words " ... r will wear my heart
upon my sleeve for dawes to pcc~ at" (1. 1), that is to say "if
I were to tell everyone all my lIl11cr feelings. I should be
pecked to pieces by any fool that happened along". From this
it is possible to conclude that lago's villainy is, so to speak a
form of self-defence. It is the result of his contact with' il
definite cir~le of people, of conditioning by this circle, the
repre~entatl\'e (or "quintessence") of which is lago himself,
The Impact of society on the character of the dramalis
perso.,we frequently makes itself felt in Shakespeare's drama,
In this respe~t, Shakespeare differs from his predecessors and
contemporarIes, for whom the character of their dramatis
per~ollae was something inborn and unchanging, But the formahan of Ia~o'~ ~i1Iainy takes place before the beginning of
the, tragedy,: It IS ItS "prehistory", In the actual course of the
achon Iago s cha~acter docs not appear particularly dynamic,
A~o,ther matter ,IS, to ,take another instance, the unchangc'
abilIty of Horatio, !hls can be justified on psychological
rroun~s: such StudiOUS, well,balanced and calm people as
'ho~atl,o generally remain fairly unchangeable throughout
t elr hves,
t In ~any other c,ases, the dynamism of Shakespeare's characers s o",:"s up With extraordinary vividness. These arc the
cases which mterest
. t h em 'nn
d expression these
, , us
. smce 111
new alhl~ charactenstlc features which distinguish Shakespeare
f rom
. h out an understanding
' .
h' h IS
h contemporar,e
'
s an d Wit
of
W"IC ~ e stfage mcarnations of these works which were after
' were, depth
'
,
ba ,wntten or the stage
. ' I ose, as It
of perspective,
ecome
more
d Imensional" and easily
grow
into
est superficial
bl h d ,more "
twoa IS e patterns.
~t uS,look at a few examples,
As fhes to wanta b
for their sport"
oys are we to the gods; they kill us
Hard on this r~ e~c
Gloucester in Kiny Lear (IV, 1),
ar 0 ows another: "'Tis the times' plague,
rt\TS
.
86
\\.hc1. ma~J11r rl lc.;.d the blind" (lV, 1 '. Before us ari-::L$ th.'
J1'Iaje tic If'il\ 501ro~bl figure of a wi}itl"-hai"c 1 c-ld man
{Regan 51
d hi white ?(ard (Ill, 7)). Gloucestcr is a~
th >ugh"lufllined by a h~(Jhcrwi"dJm, ThrouQh thr- blind h,,\
Jow, whl( 'l ,'" 'eft I ',1'11 f "11' ('Ie~ he lC'1C~s tnt., th~ Vf'l'Y
depth' "II "fe 1Ie 'll .11' 'i th;,t "dL~'ributi~n ~h('uld undo
eXC'c,s, .;nd e.;._'l ']l~"1 h.lve cnoua'"''' (IV, 1), This app'.lfs to be
the only :rIal e ;n -.;hake)p:::tlre where he spelks of the rcdi~'
tribul 1on ' 01 'lches and w'lcre, by 'his, l;c untqulv.J:3.!Iy rai~l'~
a SOdL' ('c,;nomic Pl bIc'TI
Gloucester is haunhd by \',c \>tough: c-! ,uicide, But e'.(T'l
this thought \'<1ni('<; the imprint of qrcalncss. He rCni-.:ml.'ters
a fearful cliff ncar Dover. Fr~m thh, diff he drc:tms c:l: th!"'"
iag himself into the depths of the SCJ_ A truly monumental
im<Ig c which brings to minrl the tr,Jgeo:v cf the antient world,
It is not fortuitous thaI Glouc("<;~('r calh c-n the 'mighty q(l:;io;"
(IV, 6), More than once the lips d this m.1jcstic tr;.:.qk cL!
man speak of the "g(t~s"
"0 ruined piece of nalun:' Thl,; grcat w0rid $)-::111 '::' wcar
out to naught' GlouccsL'r ('x,1nims on h(;d!'ing ~1C -:;:1c1 \\":.,'-1~
of Le,lf (IV, 61 Here, in his sorrowful wiqL:'~" \:1(' re:l1iT'lc!:' t::-..
of Pro!-oero. wh(~ foretells t'he c'oming di":l?P'2;l:':lr.'~c ::: ~:1
thing~, eVt!!L "th" ~:j:~at q~~t,~ it.;.,;:::f" iTtL Tc~:pc'~ IV, 1,
The dctual de:lth of Cloucc<;tc:'. cf \\':c;ch we: 1-:1..3.1' fr~~:n 1,:_
'
(V ,.:>).
~'l~ p0e.lC
" :b L'
,\....,", -l'~r"" ,~",....".,1,
SI'!lll9.:l
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1.""'_""''': : - ' , - , , " ' "
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E
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He dit:d ,'n ~I ,;ud d en lR'U".::- l:'Y, \\').:1 .1 ~"1:. __ 1.. . - , ' ". "
"n 1,'"
.
' I,p',.
.
. ,
'I'
Tht: im;lgc of GloucL~tr' w,'u~J S(;~:~~ t:: .':: q'J.ltC' ,_L'.;-,' :
thaI i~ nl'l~~kd hl:\" ,J!C a kw t:',:m.::.1uc.:-nt. jn~Pl:'L'J, t.:-?,'~'-'~ ~:
hig11 tr,'\gedv, Rut Sh;t1;.\'~i'C':lrl.'s 3.!'ti"t;; i!ll':-~1:k"'~ F \;1:' !",'rc
'"
,~_ "\'" ~. Slnkc'H('\wev~'r str::mgc it m;ty b
s...)und. K!~'.i r.l~' ~"C , . "I' ..
,th m"rv l:l'1ghkr t I'>
.
,
,>peare's (l<Irkest .tragC( ICS-e91nsill'....'h' and
. t:,ltT~~p.:-nqb1c
.".',
,-,
'
h'
]ot,Glouc\'~kr !;\ug ,nnq ;It IS (I\\"n, L
, - '1
h
,.,
K t \h, n,..,"t ,1l".:-l',lbly
fi:ll s t c
.
.
He IS. telling. l W (0\lf
Cll,
.
.,
h- \ t ~ t ,"-all
]1;Ot1t IllS
am;\torv
conve1'~ation very
htL'..' to \:-.
<IS C,r')und'W0!l1bcd
'"
,h
'.
"<,,,
h(\\\ S \
advcntul'C''l'
. , hl"W hiS mIstress 1g'll\V
h d'- a hU~'-',Jn d f or h c1' I,d'
1\;
got "a ,,'n for her cr.Hllc ere ~ 1e ~da
rt': "the whoreson"
:.I1ld how, ;IS the fC<;Ult of gOL IO
, sec I'''fo''
u~" ';,." ."
iln
....
'e
0...
,\;
Id Th Cm,
Edmnnd came inlo the WOI"
.
.. , __ ,
_
",
1
t~ \... , kiln.! in (,'rj,'I"I!l1~ II, 9)
,,1
'. Thc' w,')r~\ '-.\1 tL'lbult . . . n I,' \-''-'h~ti,'l~ ..... f t' . . . ,'t,_ It dC'l> lh't ,1rptJr
hul In tlw p.lrlhul.ll' ~,-n~~ '-'f thl J"t!!
87
:
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po
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af
10,
aft
cplCurcan.
"0:
88
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gh
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pul
th,
tot
oft
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of,
writ
or
tw..
the
t .....
the t
rOm>
A. L
thla
well_
""'h
M. M
..,.....
In thl
will f
of artl
K.
S
G. U1.
othersIncarru
of the l
ate .. a
M ....
studt.
....
'<VIew
book.
valuab.
w .....
--
Sb_ ..
., (
t"'" n II .cide . cru (I' ) ~ ~e
fJ.vinq pc ... Ie- -\
~.
h' ks 01 Leu' d-ught
wh r prepanng t be r.: ...
P)G: l\,m"S
OJ
",:old. he
hl. 1r.. t
his flock and wh~ ~a< ,only ? ~ :.-'w I.on 1-,.-; le 1,t ~r:.,g hI,
sheep togcthc" lqam 1 1 k ,UI' -1 !J ~ 1 ) ~C~. ) ta
action and to resume 11~ ("we.
'.' .
.
1_
r ~ \\ \"0' tirne
t.
'~I\
aSide-' he
t 1119
, je ",cnt.
t \.!
fllrt'ldv lit th s, 1 1m s 1. )"'11.1g l: 1.
f y "
.V the 1d
t'1~
~ I,..
I n p" .... :1 --tl
l J<lln II dfo r
El1gall.,
1
mg l Iml')1
I I ' . ix.' \: 1(' vf tht: "'t\l1th I(
'r- u -il ~
c rlr 1]
t.
r.'
t r
.en..
ton on , -I' n.~'
Ire
- 'he ell Ir m ';e
f the
ul'
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f_. tl.e pC I ..:)' _I ~t- 1..-e "')ell ..
c ff w il ,'"t
t V
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r.
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,,
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pu'
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oil
Th.
ot ,
Writ
of t
twec!
the I
19th
'he ,
fOrn>
A. l
'hla
""ell ..
au,h
M. N
In th
'''''0
will
of
art
K. I
G. U
olhetl
.....
..""'......,
Incal'll
of the
M",.
Itudhl
book.
.. on
v.IWI.
Sh.1reI
Marc. co.rnp1ex, of course, is the way of Leu hirnse-If At
the c;gmmng. hI" IS an imperious el1th-oncd Olvmpi(ln ,.
s"'''ak
f im< ,If ~s .."Ie.
"H C I! o;.ulToundcd by. gl ..,morous
I
porn 1 :m] gcncr)l Idulation, but "!-tis heart IS sombre We
In w I,J, -ed
.
, nna! linc of Ihe traged)'
~
n( d ern e< ,.,honh
tIe
.
hlre'i ;llVn
urnt\ .. )u .... ,'A'" my, T11' "I' tIC qUi rio" reading. And
t
tl d~i
rbl)'
O)L Je1(ral!y a( }t('(1 b"eau! th, the II.:
(n
the 'qht nth c nturv \\ h nth! fat- of -,'h
\. n n read'
j;....
.
,.,
,'
mQS 0
.
p~" s to
was de aei
Jil'ei th t h
..
w
r"
.
.
31 t III th I
:>U cI
;lIV n t" th II 0
ve ,,. lbh r r -. ;II
th 'n t
(bl e h
:::1
.vh( 1
r. w l( 1HaIJy em ,de (I I, b
h
(I~e
.... lrCl ~I
p)kn)} E ~,r.,vt::
. c Y th
prov: ... 'St cc ).... mn:Jr ntof h II - d
. .
c
obsCI V"cd .,od t"h Jught Bul y; he
.. ... ~t:1 ,
I
v
n
h,\\'c 1( 51.;11 11m ~M! .... ,
t t'. f
.0. 71
['"Inl And. oN
1 '1r Kl1 . ht
l
lI'
tn pme lW v 11
the dl
d i ........
~'
r..J , Illt re f ,,,1
'":.. c
~c_ 'I-1 the
"y 1. nc 01
r
L .
I1g. The bl 1
f... \(
Ii ng.
".1.
I:::'
ii
,
I
H "
arcI the
exclamations: "Darkness an d dCVl'} s.I" "BI asts and
fogs upon thee!" and the monstrous, dark curs.c on th~ \\lomb
of Goneril (ibid.), Yet, a moment later, Lear IS weepmg hot
tears and is himself ashamed of these tears for, in his own
words, they "shake his manhood" (ibid.), or as we should say,
b
il
T
1/
"
'"
sit
T,
gil
po
Th
put
,h,
101
oft
Th,
ot ;
Wl'it
of t
twe<
the
Itth.
lhe
'
, Lear on Iv il"I'C,lI'S, if the cxpn.'ssion i~ allow
ut t h IS nc\\
t
'II
j
"IB ' fl' h s The theme of the old Leill' stl soune s loudly
al' c, Ul 3S c..
0' ,I j (I , 4) "'r'a k c heed
'
'h eson dog!" he shouts at 5\\.1 (
II C sh'II uses the'
,\ Oll
, h'\\ thor whip" he warns the f00 I ('b'd)
J 1 .
stna,
e"Are
, you our daug htel' 1" hC JSk 5 Gellen'I ('b
royal plural.
1 id.),
's 'rath retains its fonner. sombre nalure. Characteristic
torm.
A, L
"",
well"\
au,h
M, M
fn ""
.""'"
will
artl
f
ot
K,
S
G, UL
othersincarnl
ot the ,
ltaae a
M",.
ltudt ..
...-
_ _ II
.. an
valuabl~
world It
Shek ' v
they shake the old Lear. Probably this is the first time in his
Hfe that he has wept. And these tears seem so tormentingly
~h.1mcful to him that he is ready to pluck out his own eycs,
But cven so his old identity is already lost and he is aware
of the fact. "Thou shalt find," he threatens Goneril, and in
these words sounds the desperation of weakness, "that I'll
resume the shape which thou dost think I have cast off for
eyer, thou shalt, I warrant thee" (ibid.).
Uneasy, supprcssed thoughts pursuc Lear relentlessly, "1
did her wrong," he pronounces suddenly in the middle of the
conversation (I, 5), remembering Cordelia, Towards the end
of the first act, Lear is already on the way to madness: "0,
let me not be mad, not mad, sweet heaven I" he exclaims (ibid).
In the second act, every now and again, his madness breaks
out on the surface.
,A?d so we have already found three aspects of Lear: the
onglOal Lear, sombre and despotic, the "new' Le.:::, thoughtful
dnd more gentle, and, finally, the mad Lear
Speaking of Lear's madness, it is necessary to keep in nind
that, ,although Lear himself gives his illness a namc-hyslerica
passlO (II, 4)-this does not give us the right to look on this
lliness as on a pathological case. In that era there was but
d hazy line of distinction drawn between psychic disorders
dnd sto;my emotional experiences. Polonius and Ophelia took
Hamlet s stat,: to be a "madness" brought on by love. "Mad
lor ~hy love? asks Polonius (Hamlet, II 1) to which Ophelia
r~phe'': "My L~r,
dId 0 not know; but' truly,
,
I do fea1 it.'
S~ch madncss was not distinguished from mcntal illness .
" auco:' called love "the sickness 01 lc~oe 'Burton, in hiS
Anatom". ,/ Mel anch 0 1y (1621) drc::ws lbsol1tely
,
no distin(
3n
h -~n,..'ecn th e mc1anc h 0 Iy tTl. d inr!uc~d, fo. elCamplt I v
Ul
ppy love and ~1.thologlc 11 L_
1f'pl'es~ j( n
14
ny
h
TJ.e 11 t :"11 :"It r ne..:_ ~ itL os s S loge lal em
":.e" e .: f9
pi 'ciou:>. Lorn yom hovel. .t'..._t foe ana ..ra' ~. I 1dv'C one
pal t n my hf":]" t~at'
r y yct I..... lee
"ot",',",
This I. C 5 naOJt
m hiS ti. w th ... :t ""'Iv.'
J;
be
l~ eft bUl '1n 0 Wll10ul :l. fjgulo;; i! H Y <" Y
,
Olvmplan
: SI dOW" .,.,1] t'1c "",,1. j caltft 13ul t
.. ':l
~h~ mon o;;lt..., .cdr' gl":: e .. t t ulnph he '-. 9 la, b",-\V~~
a mati. It W~5 1< Wll10ut 11
rC:is\,;n th t N&um ~te
,daptcd Kill!.! r ~a t<o ".11: 11 ~_ ~s al ~ demand. c
1()
f 1
S . C{11 ~cnth c"t Jrv.
anstocratic pI Y e~ II th c n d O
omIt ~d the l-'art Co l( k. 1
n tJ"c I:: ~t :g< a
U~;ll <.l ~ VYC h v _ ,.1H.. "('gIll S ~ " I "
lm~ ~
,: :'.31
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u "
u
,
h wo i
f
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t:
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p
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, Ih W 1" I h , is n, 0 ,r.
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p;.
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hm 1at
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r.
wl.Ci' II
). YO _W
1,.
lInC'lUS
nes
......... -;,.
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1
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le uralgn.mcnt of
We 'I ~o to suppt;r
iD!.we' "And I'll
15
dlStOlted; this,
:l!.
I . . ,psylurvy_
I>
T
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TI
II'
p,
Th
pol
the
10
,f!
Th.
or ,
Wlil
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'-
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lhe ,
'onn
A. l
thIo
well_
"'eb
M. M
In ...
P!?n
f
wm
of artl
K.
G. OJ
othet.
In""",
or the ,
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.tepa
levie_
...
book I
valuabk
wodd *l
81 7'7 .
=__ ,
97
...on=
U
II'
po
...
==
at.
.....
til
10 ,
Ih'
lD~a~es
i~~ocatt~n': "~l~we
Romeo make~ hi!, firs~ 1.;:1l:-am:e !;adly. But this is cI !tlXuri
ous and shallow sadne,s. L"ader ~he gi.lr':J 01 me"Llnt;holy IS
hidden the same joie de viore whkh informs hi>; frit.:nd. the
merry Mercutio, AL.!ll" exdaims Romeo,'thdt love, whose
view is muffled still, should without eyes, sec pathways to
his will! Where shall we dine? 0 me!' (I. 1), etc, This incongruouS question: "Where "hall we dlne?" gives <lw,ay the
"nature" of young Romeo completely, of that Romeo, that
is, whom we see at the beginning of the tragedy. At that time
it was the fashion for well-be:'n young n::.cn to be in love with
a "cruel" beauty. Such an "idol - :s Ro;:.alioe. It is, therefore,
scarcely to be wonde',"ed at that Romeos fa~X:--:-:':lble melancholy is expressed irt fashionable rhetor.c :nn. What is
remarkable is that prv~0und ard s1gnifi';"'lnt motii~ keep
sounding thr0ugh this r:,etoric "0 brawling bvc! 0 loving
hate!" sighs Romeo (ibid.I, not re3Esing th..l~ he is spcaking
of the basic theme of the impcndl":'.g ::-:.g,.:Jy in ., hi.:h he is
already cast for the main r2!c, o' the t;;c:'l1C ,:-: ~atrcd ,lud
love.
The second appc.'lr,mce ~! Rcme2 :t~-!J.s :i~t.:c ~.) w::.lt ha5
already been s.aid. The mcLanchC'ly theme i5 shot through
with snatches in quite another key. "Shut up in r nson , kept
without my food, whipped and tC'rmented J.nd-Good den,
good fellow" (I, 2). At the same time the tragic theme
acquires the form of a gloomy r"reboding \1. 4) ..And, a~ain,
it is typical th~lt Romeo's speech, full of he.l\Y :?rc,b~dlD9S,
ends on a note of jollity. "On, lusty gentlemen I (,b~d.) As
if in answer to this phrase the dnlln strikes up mernly. All
this is vcry youthful.
.
.
.
Romeo meets Juliet. Here, the lyrical motifS beglO, First
lyrical enthusiasm: "0, she doth teach the torches to ,burn
bright I It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night hke a
rich jewel in an Ethiope's ear" (I. 5). Then, the tender sonnet
of the first meeting (I. 5). From this moment ,:",e h.ave to do
with quite a different Romeo whose whole bemg 15 coneen-
Id
-,
98
99
with
(V, ll.
eyes.
,
I
t
i:
1
""
.."
TI
Ii
po
Th
pul
th,
to
oIl
Th,
0/
,.,."
o/t
t h,
,oth
the I
10""
A, 1
th..
.....
well-
M, ..
In th
..."
WillI
ot artl
K. S
O. Ul
01......
Ineam;
01 the
atele a
"-
studies
...
..-.
Ie ......
baok. I
valuabL
Shakz p
"Iamb"oug~t;, This
of life. st~
lady.
l3
ai
t~ke
~p;~siii~~ ~f
~:ed s~~:n~~:~~gnfce.
~era ~~~i~~O~ v:~c~~e ~~eb ex~aims ~?j~.). Sh~ begin~ to' fe~;
102
some ~sliv:J1
that call.
Juliet. in this scene, i~ all .. mnli"lg. :1.11 flame ~haml
come to Rome01" says the lU~ bit1.
'B1istere~ ",. . lY
tongue!" cries Ju'iet in fury And. later. '0 .L t '" 'lei
was I to chide at lim!" (lbi=). ALl1'; hili; -,,,tr.:., '1 n;' in
common with the neek little glr who was - Y t 'on: y
obediently w~t" e.1I her 'lDotber's behl"'t'
Fr l' J lliet a tine ()f SCVfl ~ I 1~..-:_ set in ""- r her U)I
with ~omeo Lady C 1- ule. 'o~e md tr-',\ T"'i t ,/ ~er nlan
to have Rorr eo po:sc- ... -1 l -r the first tmu; '1111 t L
to
dis,c~ble ;PI)le her 11,t"t .. Ald vet anoth, t..;.
her
pall.lt:- wi h to n.:ry" to Par:- lIld 'Iuliet reI(t .ri~L
ill-conccalea ",01 er 'Now' y S. int pc~_ ' ,-L .... h
-1'Oe r
too, he sh::.~] lOt maKe me there I oyJ' ~. bri? ~I (I!" - ~}-e ha.
grown thm and pt ' ... f "1m II 1'- t . c ~~ l;_n .1.,-:- _1gb,
her Quick- tem 1 _ .I fathc' --.11 "1. - ~ gree'" _uuc-'ar. ~.,I
and "tallow-fal.~" (iNd.' ~utl-e has ..._~. u . ni~~l-'
inner strength, kr k p.":r S great. ':s there no. PIty 'Itt~ng
t
in the cloud~ th.:lt ChS 11 to the bottlm of my gne
Ilhun
But he SI "11 th ]~ :Jre1t alro. Whll the r'J>e '.d\,I~-' ~er
to mafl"y Pu s ,.,d he
left ,~uiL witho.!1 sur7'01~ :" ler
own hOO1(' n h c~ l' .s ",.-'lich ,ht! sh('lwers .:-n the 'l~rse, we
feel 1 hit;cr "I lnsu. pe.ec might, '_~nri~';~ damn~tlo.r... 0
mc-,t W]('I~. d fiend!'
'lord, fll- "':13Llbc shl. en .. s In the
..... 01'(1S
' ~IS(-' f<lil. '11y-t:"- h~vc.: power :,~ dH'
And ~e
do nOI dow t ;f'1 SI t: i' .... \dy t<J :lght to the c!c.~th Tn .1C
s..ttr' .... 'I 'n 10 FrO' L'turenc sell w'terc she Ji','c" frec rc'~
tc. her -1t: p~ -:P 5, 'rpc ,-~~ Cj:,~ pl~t kip! (IV 1
'.
t
;
1
"
'I
b,
,"T'
gf
po
Th
PU'
!h,
'0
oft
Th,
of
Wri
of ,
tw..
'h,
19th
'he
fo""
A. I
th~
Well
such
M. N.
In th
spean
will J
of art.
K.
he says that she will throw herself down from a high tower
:'ather than marry Paris (ibid.).
It is a hard struggle she htls to, wage. ,She conh,,)}s. with
enormous difficulty, her anger a~~unst Parts. She pretends to
her parents (with still gr.cat~r dIfficulty, c:f c~urse) that sht
is prepared to do their bl~dmg .. The culm,matlng moment )f
this struggle is the scene In ,,,'hleh she drlOks off the potion
given her by Friar Laurence. ~lt~ough at first she had
decided on this step without hesItatton, had clutched at the
vial of liquid as a drowning man at a straw, and begged
Friar Laurence "0, tell me not of fcarl" (IV, 1), now she has
to fight against a fear which has taken hold of her whole
being. Perhaps the monk has given her poison? Or what if
she awakes in the vault before Romeo comes, all alone
among the dead? But her love for Romeo overcomes her fear;
"Romeo, I come! This do I drink to thee" (IV, 3),
She awakes in the vault somehow transfigured, very grownup, mature, serious. She remembers well where she is and
why she is here. When Friar Laurence persuades her to fly
from the dark vault. she answers simply: "Go, get thee
hence, for I will not away." She speaks to the dead Romeo
without cries or tears, but with a quiet and tender affection.
as one might talk to a beloved child. Without complaint or
hesitation she stabs herself with his dagger, because there
is no other way out.
We have seen how Romeo grew up in the course of the
a~tion. But Juliet has. nevertheless, outgrown him. It is not
without significance that Shakespeare, having called hi:
tragedy "Romeo and Juliet", chose to end it on the words;
For never was a story of more woe
Than this of Juliet and bee Romeo.
putting Juliet's name first.
G. Ul
others_
incarn,
of the
stage a
M",.
studies
review
book.
.. an
valuabL
world.
Shak...
I "A l.ittle more than kin, and less than kind," says Hamlet
104
I
I
I
<
,
o
o
t,
II
"ro
"
or
ye'
I"1.C;"~ 1
_ l~ 1. JI~ly fb_
th s ~_me
h
L
the ..)ue en
,
"'-
c~
not
th
w<
'"In
M.
'po
wi}
or
K.
G.
"h
inC(
ott
,ta,
M"
stud
revl.
..valu.,
boo.
worl
Shak
..
~Ir.
'v
.. r
I'
.'
., r. ,is ,
-
~5
'" .-
~I ..
nol'.: :llng.
lrom III
'ou
cr'
~_
.'-
.'
, ,.
5 le.' .. ~g .:.:1 w
ne:n~!y d }; s lfler il n."
t'tcre
~ ~.
1'1
, .
,
f{
-.
t
,I),
wht:
.'.. .
l'
.. 'l t~
.... fl.l
.~.
1",;)1 di"~
.,
w ..
IV
1
d";"ldy-:-d.
"i,'~ r. (lV)U . r
SO to S)C.lk H llet's '-" r.:,tcry Rut t' j ' \
cnt)
thr.: l'niv . . ilv w .... , . .,; rc"n"': t!';..;,~. lot .. I taL j;;d
,.!-.crc icn"d.. fr.,d! ~'1d thl.- d (.rsl I! 10 I,nc
mid
(C~lll
har' ..... ::
1\..tl 'n .. :!
t('l
'11"
e ' tt ld ~
I)C
~I ~rH
That this is indeed how things stand is made dear from the
I
I
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o
t,
tI
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to
A
th
w,
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or
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valu.
wO<',
11 s W Ie
e I" now brought hcc to face with
_&
&
&
<'
, l'
10(,
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rh:.
,,
,,
,
o
h
II
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fo
A
th
w.
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of
K.
G.
oth
io~
oft
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M",
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stud
boo.
..vatu.
worl
Sh-h
"'S
108
n word~
t the (100.
be shut upon hun thaI he may
ow
h fool no whe ~ but in's own I:tou.c 'uu1 J, 11
ptav t e
eVl~:h!flt that he 15 aw: t'lai p.,iomus s e.l .. Sdl P[i 9 C'il
h oove ~tion with Ophelia, l. therwlsc there 15 equ.:.!ly 'J
e~s)lanatioo lS tu ","'ly Hamlet uddenly bgms tJ t ... ...", II
0 1helia, whom he ha-s /15t begged to remember~'
ns In
prayers, why he ~ir:s ~ ~pr~a~ her w'th c serr."ling.
h pocrisy (the word pamtings (Jlnd.j d~s not n :.n ""lJy
Ywder and rouge but l.lrries the hidden JI: antn'll of :1
::ask"). If even OphelIa. al~it unwittingly,
Jcm~ t on
nks of his en~mies, the~ "), Hamlet th: ~ ~ n lng 1 ft
f~ life. He ha. come to a com.,}cte dc-:tial of the W'" d. \..1 t
thee to a nunnery I
It has been rightly ... narke? . that Pamlet app ,1'5 )
in each sue ceding ~ene.n 1 dil _".!n" gUlSe to that ~n W'li.Cl
wc had cxpec ~d to e 11m Att:.. lIS explanaht''l 'Y th
Ophelia, we e '_ .ct to _'"
gloomy t.,~ ... tel uz,:"',.Bt't t
is a calm Hand!" who mee:s ur eyes. taL 19 ntl.. hgcntly
to the actors abl ut art. He 1S if' 11 0 l~;:
the
ere
of "dream" and. lought He is oow t_ .. ",
t
- ~c
c e
)'u .. calar p'ayas ':U'(C
I ut
'lO~t the f, .. lID -t)1 f
pIes of art. 1 .'lE fi 1aJ analys. s, ..: - 5 llam._ 1
::""-'-"'C
link wHh li.~, It s : r W c:eat JOY f
l-. - :t
5
W
_1 ~
.. 1
b<...ttle. In hI! repa __
1. 1 T\e
.... . . . . l"
He is in:: h'ol tv 1e K.r. ~E. ~r~ thl:'
...
-- ~
el-~ an w
.::!. 1"1 x- ..
PoIooius, th roWS \.. e, ..:-- ell -~"
'1 U
torncnt Orhcli who betr v 1'":._ <In-')t ... " " h ~. d r. I
witticisms .L le nl y -.., 'lP. :h.. tb ...~f
r.
0 i~1Ie" i f ' )
triumph for 1- ant ct.
K~
'-'I(
t:;
1C" fC" }'n \nC
the nourctrap W H ~ 'Iamlet h
prep--:T'f.'
.
'He 1
ium )hant 1(' victor ~~o ~!3mlt:~ ~re1KS lOt vo:. ~
t
,
'u1hrt
"eK-'
he . omp~
hi1l1sclf tal pia'
a.r.
verY
1
..trk 1 -11,:
(I I ,) A.nd, on this :: er~ :0 O~~i~~ !-.n
inte .. tin~ ii. c "l'C :1 wI:' :1 1ar re :Cl,,-;,d;st him he wiI'
't ml 11 Hdm' et say that.
fate;Jl e 3.1
'
hi;
:as
=". \
rc:a..-;
J,-,
i
I
,,
I
h
U
11
,."
A.
Ut
w,
OU
M.
In
00<
Wi'
or,
K.
O.
oUt
In..
....
....
orl
MOf
re .."
.....
... 1
o~~
~""'nlca
tlm~ In
d
this la~k ~f correspo~ cn~' .. ot..:~t:t::u ,- .. ';' .. ,. . erltou.:>~tSS
dramatic hme- .ther~ IS a ..... ld ,. e~;,( ->...h~~~~ T.Jit. Dak
of folk art. JUSI as 111 V}.lchc, .. ~ S~,~hJ-,..\ ... fi'" 'But ".-" the
Hour: "And -:leW t'1e Tungu. Nlel .~ lllq :. "
~,:, he
time Spring come-<;, he 'nay be twen:-y w~o "r., ws ..
~. _ Ii'"
may be fifteen....
Hated. fiery,
It is enough ~o (;?m!"l:-'! Eaml,.:. i" . t ,g uiel words
youthful soliloquy WIth :'le. :L:';~~~,ed, ..... sl~~n21 ~n ~1rder to
he addresses l0 LacrtC:; b:.01
ju~. ( II d In a fit of
,-"
AL
Sf AKEt;PE ARF
We 1, VC Ib)' we:!l"lf: ev. . .halution t;; sf!Ve....al of ~hakespe40e
C'"
crs. c ",~alYC'=s ~e ve glVe"l Sho,:",s how dangeroU$
It s fO a:_w static pc,-f:ralts of Shake r= :-: 5 dramalIf' pe
1I~t. I"hc method of Jyna~H; description is here esseDtial; :t
~ er Wloras, %aK. 1 ..~~
charactc i must be x.:.-:-.... ;l
th~
'ne Co the acvelopment f thc ac. on. Cil u:n
c s n: ,[! c: tLCll var:"1 and many side..:. "laral ;ers be orc
1C rye of the auruc-:lrc
onc'" - in we rctu -:l b t1::
w
)1 Pu 11.1.
"54
,
1
...,..
e a VI' t numl
I, scrilA: tOl.~h kespclrc t'th:s ,-r thaI
rellgi~n.
p~ IllCS.
Sl
vstC"ll of oDini,,'5 iu
anl. soc 1 morality :i. is
lOW <IS 1 repuL.11 .In, n~w ~S
OhliOlOP"y
mon.: . hiS.
s
:tl k tant,
01 ""arks ""hl(:1
nl
a 11 Jr'loldu of
Chr tian do. tr ne, lOW l' 1 suppurt( of
p... n s~ c 1. t
sCC
pe .sIble 0 fino quolll uns froll Sh L
;1] ~,
t
,un )SI e.v ytJ;ing and to usc 1cm t", "ll,;WC ~al il.1
.... f
r.' :1y c.r cvery c ;'l\; i\'ablc r;-" ot N
lOW
..I
~ui-l
II,. ThiS IS SI
r the in'"llc
'I thll .,h,1._
11
In
cti"q 111 H' Wf' th n': V11 il ty of t
11 e
al' s th mo. w,d("~
IV ~ 11 \ cw
lnd' ""
'c"
xtl n y I k y t'\
_mr 1. h ... pl1} 5 C.}Jn ":il
t
;>.
b~ th ~ oJ. thut h r. cr . 1
I'
r t 1pt til tJ dl 0 S v ':I ~I t <:.!>
r
1::
Wl
11 t U~ C lr
r
11m
L
1nt
m ut
1(,(
fl r 1: ~ (.\\
VI
S
1 p
ever,
llnlv
Id n t e 1.. ::1
1
,
q ,nake
S0
'e
t ....
th
.
,
,
1
'he f k
,~
,,, , h,
T
j,
1
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TC
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p'
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11 tr.di ..
TC
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fi 11
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"
'Ie n
I f.
Fin::
n...
li
of~
m.
:h/
;:Wle,
e!din
S;
Dzg:.;,C
the
P.
IS
,,
,
,,
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"
II
II
t>
10
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th
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su
M.
In
sp<
wI)
01
K.
G.
oth
In~
.ta,
olt
M",
stud
revi.
.
....
boo<
..vaIu.
wort
,/
day
lLcmpt5 care
'Ilq madf" 1 ) "onvincc us th<1t thl .
no~ I t w s nco so. C;upportcrs rf various c-eeds I:=~ to
Inh kl~S~ "1;"_ f r
chaMpion of tbe . b~lie,
P rticul: ,rly
S.
-n thi' fic1~ arc the Q.oman Cath("h .... We lr'l.OW t._t
acU~C/ sm h~s 'JcCOnl(; the # .. :tion 10 c:r""..lin C r'Cl:... ,:1 U:.~
C.t t 0 "por.... V ~mddl ... ass intell.qcnb ia ...be e is. the
concm
h re~ol~,
othin,- 5UMl"i'lOg :l r..1C ~ct tl"Iat Shi.:-soeare tM a t-"'~.,
n C \ 'nt"
''leo!
It lPP_: thal he W 5 n t '- 1<.... I(
turl
I!'"
""
.ar'y( Zl'",IOUS
prac -. cr, f th e '1".119.l'11 n t al'th "~'..:.Sl:tr
U.
.ct C t'lol c I 1(' (atha},c -=.t}! Wi. f
wa~ 1 e
..
d)
h t timf' .hl"" objec eot pc~ cuUon ll' Englan .
. .
t "E
- th s wc ' , 0 t 11 y'crtL!
~1I- t" us lIldlSi-Ut"
vcn
f c! m .,1 I !)art n
that
eligion
does
n
....
t
-.
y
:.y
U1'"1 l
b
a ekesp-~r')
, worr.
I.
he mc t ob1'~~.
'V" Shak"', arem
Sh
~o 1 -have 1, n- in'c f)-; nte.l \.o;.;t tht; _';"iou .ldlffe ntsCrn ~~s the grc."t~ \.o~ nT.J.tist. It; 10; c
th" f)e tal). d
'S'hnkespelre's pI ys ir Shakes :xc 5 t.:,
Wl'
n t no
<
b
cl
- fire'....
ara t:
''-'l
material C-:l Wh'_l.O ...::: con us.~ \.0
v. rks
Such que tions di4 no~ - e n - p1a} 19.
... ) t~
Whichever PllY of Shakesp_.re 5 v.'~ may 100
.
!! 1: ct
oerh:l the ... 1C "lIon.
11
al._on m
c . .r....
_ . s tl.,ought ld art. ,-' 1
mc:.jj:\I . sourc... _ .:>! SJ ~J ~ lr' t' :~~ !:.. ~ d _~c
tho'. c who 'lav
f 1.-.....
..
Loled - 0 - t: 1
- " 01
1...,
text, dissc_ ~ anu
,",-_yo
l
(""1..
~ ... S
tz:
Itt\!
tit:
="
'1ICr... ~ 3 ,I".")
-:::~
ti-
L'::'
11' )rc (.
nr<.
l'
1 t
t h IS gl"ntl.1!
COJl1f'"'.l
b'" (1
l ) 0'" ) the wise
dida( tit " hi '-op f u -;:.t(:_ \',- Y ..... It.:: tr~. .::'IQc.~e RoJmp~
Ulys~""< (TroJ.u .. jJ - l
. -~ ~t:
t ..:C:1.... , __ T,I~ thlt .. :!
l' to ttll tr 111' t . .
}- ~.m c
'~ gnndiosely soml','
infcctil)~ISJV mer
cIDPdles an
~~,. d 1 re.ldy answ_
!' . .
'-'.
trtgcdics were
_tc_ ly _n
~,pruvidf'd ~'V
to eve! v pratt, n "n .ll, ('~ '"l b O'tb- 't;;' ,-tv .)1 m~cileval
him"'~lf buI .. c,rCl_ ne Lr h
~
dO~'ll:1ti(:; ''It schoh~1 ')
...
~rc If works elll tell
It i! not thu
.~" W' Sl:! .,I"!
, p');.: tf'll u of a "' :n
us "If th_: UthOl ~lf''' ~ha. "p, ~.
~:t.rl11.
ndaf In :l1ti t
qUI. e 1(...' f
I
I
,,
,,
0
""
"fo"
Ih
w,
'u
M.
In
.p.
wit
of
K.
G.
olh
'n~
....
...
.. . (
oft
M",
stud
",.
boo.
valu.
worl
.....
t;
few
'h
wa 11 e d 0 ff f rom reality, Thcre
arc
abundanceerso'fn W ,ose works real life is presented in such an
man'f
t t'
'
heroes reall dvanou"
1"
I es a 'ons as III Shakespe )l'e, His
O
its e1ementsYan d l;e they are sUlro~nded by '1ature with all
Shake~eal e see. aft ;h~ ety, I al: U WIth all its elements. But
somi;; cxtent, ",e st'll r 11 r d III man an~ th":-tuf'!h man, T"
1
a sack nal nally Ink nai've ,,'1111'0'
wb
f:t:'
f:'
1al ai"."::'
!-t~gll l '
f ..
....
.
"'
I ,
I'~
t1..
,
,
sho\\~~msh
speak of ea~h.
For th,em,
o~ly
~hss
equival~nt
.
I
,,
I
""
11
"
to
t.
A
w,
.u
M,
In
.[><
wI]
ot
K.
G,
ot.
In"
ott
.ta,
M",
.tud
....
.. .
....
"'vi,
vatu
wor1
~an
,](/
They rernarkh with blttder lc~sd that ,thiS M.rmony has "cc 1
upset A... w~ ave al-e'l Y s<u ; ..:crtam contempo; 11V khat""
try to pr~' nt thl' as thou~h Shakespeare S l 19ic lttitude
to the WCJrld has It'S source In re.;ret 01 t.hc y1 .mg of 11S
medic val '1armon y .
A ;uffic ent number of Shakespeare 5 p!.Jys depH t ViI')Q
I)eriOds in the hic;tory of the Middle Ages, Not -nlv thr Ilis
torics. bul several of the tragedif'5 depict the Middle Ages 1S
ShJkespc.lrc saw them. And we may asse-' with full conv it
tion that Shak ~("pearc somehow failed to not' ce ar:y p'll'ticul l'
harmony in the ~.(c of medieval society. The mp.oiell cbron
ides. which he 'tnew throuQh Holinshed. w
carc_lv
cJ1culatcd to imprc:..s him with the hannoruousne s d 'nedieval existence. Not only the Henrys ... ,d the Richards, Jul
Lear, too, was a K ng of Ancient BrHillD One would L ve
thought that Shakt:. ,p....... -e mic ht have show~ at least onc
example of harmOnIOUS fc in 1~ past r. d 11" 'ally 10Ugl-_':
JS cert<J n sc:.'"trIal'S v u'd have us :X'i~ve
The larmomous orq:am. -ticn of 'if'" wa. Doth'n b.:t Z"l
ideal It I! d. 01 an d~'al thaI Shake ""'_ ll'e 1".._ _ t
S
lk
of 11 But their pic ure, .-f t:.. s i~::l1 ''';::V It 1" onc~' ~ for
L.le W~iJ.!c;,-wi1I"d an .... nl 'us '91;. "ry 'IT drelr ng i.'"
"
heal f bloody 3.ttle of.:: ~sto..
dy 1. It i anvth f r the
Archbi<:1c.p of Cmter,ury (tl ..;v v
sol,er
tician wh ....
(1- lWS a nLtu'" ot l~ d_
:>.:
~ W" 1 _1 LE . C 1.
Hottcd il OW~ pal tic '11
task. 11.: -!!!po C W I h i
~
Jlrther dnc:! incre s t.~ Inght _f tht:
19,:lom;
h 1
And t s. u.tc anot~
U'Ilr
.llf' \\"tc:: p.
P
~-. Ie
Tempest, dreams of n ic:!._ll ~::;,. -."1':1' L twe_l = piritu.
.Ind t.he physical -r"ncipies ,.1 ~-J]
We do not ir- y thal Shake 'C'_t.: lad
1,';) i.lI
~ ttharmoniou! Ii ~ Howev
thai Iddl w... .--- ~~ -::._ji..-;)I
Shakespeare does nol thin' of 1. as d !:"I'lletring wl!.l had
real cxiste I. ill i.e p.:lSI s\l '~,):t! S:-n __ ll:1g WhH~
.xisted in thc 'ontCT1l ~,'rary"lIt'5Cl1~ but ,'71ijr a~ J p1csLntl
mC'l1 01 the fU.ll'e "'5
('oal .;>W11.'.5 .... lic .. :lurnanity 1" !:~
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st'" lli and \:.. 1n l"roc gene~ 11 lc~~tdnc",," soc ety. Shake
ry uc 5 t. cs, the"
re, lre BIre ldv fre:> L feudal me "lb~
sP
not yet ... und ,y bo'LL Jf'"t:"' 5 m rali:-y
an SlIl d<
we no!. fin~ c.laract ers. In :3ne1 espure'
H' torle wh .. act ...c ~rdmg to the dIctate: of }o;~l1ahtly
h IS our? And do nc ShylO! kana othe 10v(."""S f wor d1:v
o~c\s show bourgc-: 5 self III
t? To these questions, ~.:
go sWi' must be both ves lO<... "\'11"" OL ourse. in the Clo.: lder
Hotspu {HclrY IV PL I} 11r e are ertain typical "catules
"f feudal man y. li bar~-:l1al v....;fu1n: :; and hi knigh1"y
"S510n fOT ful of cO~:'lge~'" not so m.lch
tni ~.. pliO
anY defimte c )d~ ~r mol"' 'it)' l' then nifC!:~ ~I n'5 of 1
hara~ter which ha!t Te Iy ''lC''"se n tlu aml ."ot oth:' W.l'
~f life. for, be ide. ~iJTl, we, fee pc p'" f~t' wh.,m
. tc' above the 'ldIVld~. Will and people
Y. le .';l co:: tl m
la
.
I '
. t
L
and all norms o! behavlou. h.a' e ong StDc!: C~:'5f~ l .. ve
any value or n ling what oever s. for instar ~ 1" 1 t2:~.
In the same way. le xt to thr noney !"~d r Shy ' 1 e_
thc merchant Antoruo. and it becoml,.s 0 _"U! t us lai th(.
mon1 l'inciplc:s o:.'"e 1< t fc:-ncd by the: ,~L 1 'Oll ., the
1
< aJ r-1... b ~
t ~11'
W
, : ; ne!
norIT'S 01 any n:}.r ti L 1 ar" _ 1
I.
- ,
chara, .Cl' "1"1 '1]
en:;.. Sh::t.k.. J<:ar:
ua
I f... t
nnl ..Ito. ether t I...!
1
';lldaJ r;"t. ~i \. 1 t-y
1 t~ .. sam
way l! his hn, r;<"i. lard'-'~ :u->: f-ar tl'
-- tr I-y)
bou. :Jf':':- t lal tv ~ e", i" 'If'
~ _I"'t'h ld nb ~ ....... 1 - ..:. 1 .
Thi! 1 "ot l "I
V tJ-"It w... w'
) c: ' ~hake >C:lI
heroes oct< IU~1..11 rep. _-13 1.... 'y E
.:: T" c;;:_ Y . "
:l
t t
v
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.he former T lli.........
v.. 1. ~
~ 11"' 1 a e ' ...-tile lew o,)n" w_s n( ~ )'Lt f-., 1. t1..._ C Mr....... r 11y "If" 10
que'ti< n i t'le .-,r;It;. ~ "v!=.. ~ i~ U,
1 1)1-' r-:
absolute n ty ar 1(.._ 1M t)' : .... ~::l t1..... Tl.u"J.:!_ 1 and
..
cl ... ss b. "O'"ll
-:: 11 s
131 ~._
r . .....1 _:i 1 ave ., .. 1 ...
.
f
tv'
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e
ore
at
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b f ,
f C h . -_.'
.. ":tu-:rCOl"to be s,- lal~l, 1 the .::.pOl..:'...: C... _.. ~.. .
way!. md . . ,1, tom .
. _
. --11 \ fcuJai 'Jel
r01' t'11. r('.'SO'"\
14 I:" .,. lr r.<Jbpt;.. '"I< - ~' ' "
the
licosity but lbu 1 "Llne l..~rnl .... ,..ur,.!:'" Af'" ::1 .X<h.... Vncss
I
.
., bou'1eon c,'.,'t0US
sJ.lUe W1y .~1vlul..
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ts t,) .''i<' 3.NlV.:!
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bul ,t}"lt.; abl ltv, U' .'('1' n .",...,:ncn , .... ;, c: .l!l. dfront tc
I'fit:ilatcnater
lOt(:.C - 11" .... rd( ,:t c. c .. ;:l
li 111m~1 ,Jignit)
c' thO' ex:sten....:: ,,1 . mO;'al
know
lf" ,\..
)ha~e
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111UI..', .l(-.:,~~J.mg to :'nnc 1ple
c;v 14.
t. n<1 ~s. bu!
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md. 1n
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:c n to
c usc of all the miseries oThlln'lm Hf'" ; .:l PI" C lv;)n tl'
stlmuluS W li( h impels ]:"coplc tow J s ll(l~... n Wit" In
thc ii tory King Joll J, th ... man.. 'h tr. dcs tit nt( t
Ihc t1t( ~~ not 11(; sccurily 01 hi! crOWl, Fa.ulC It-- OQC
:I( scrlbc~ .'11 .. s 'OUlll!! to tCfTllS W1' h 11 dCVII :1
~ 1,.0 1.
lOVY vcr,
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my I,
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,
c when he lYS 'ilt Old -' 1" w', t
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c ;lm:ttcd 1'"11 rc n II d_
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geois society in particular. Timon sees the source of all misfortunes in the power of gold, debauching men's souls and
loosening all the llaturallinks between people.
Belief in the indestructibility of the good in man, the can
viction that, given the right conditions, he is capable of
regeneration, did not desert Shakespeare even when the surrounding world appeared more than usually dark and tragic.
It was this \\'hich engendered that attitude of mind expressed
in Shakespeare's last plays, permeated as they are by the
desire to find some non-tragic solution to the contradictions
of reality.
Shakespeare is not aware of that natural process which
is able to stand up against the tragic contingency. For this
reason, chance plays such a great part in resolving the dramatic
knots.of t~e romantic plays of Shakespeare's last period. How'
ever, If thiS natural process remains hidden from Shakespeare,
at least he knows the force which is destined to turn life back
into its proper channel. This force is man. His reason, his
heart, ~is will must work the miracle of the regeneration of
hUl~amty, .of the renewal of life on a basis of goodness and
equity. ThIS thought finds symbolic expression in the image of
Prospera (The Tempest).
The Tempest is Shakespeare's poetic will and testament.
.. i~ put a gr~at deal into thi! work. But now we aJ concerned
wlt~ one smgle. passage in thir play Gonzalo'~ famous
speIch about the Ideal republi(
Gonzalo:s speech has been giv,-'1 vane us interpretations.
Som~ ".e m it the credo of Shakespeare him! elf. This seem!
) ~. 3n lOwarranted assumphl n We do not c nc;.ir'er th"t
the. ~no,:","lcdge of the deficlf"nlCS oj the -;ocial order- as 11 was
1Il~ll!, time reduced Sh.9.~~,~,.peare to scc\inC the" lution :n
di
i.11ready found a il. ..... 11 ",
d ~
sc ("'USf't:: se_ ~Gth ...1 I mswcr to the qt' b .... \\- ~ }o !
now '-;.nuwn to , J . h_
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<
rna]:sl c, ~edlc, r e t t;'" ~
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... xn
SUIVC .'cd
ontr ruch I""i C '
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They IndUlg( i 1]
1. t
f
,
\\ Ith
,
happinc':; 01 hum ll.y -u.: l ' 'I.. S"h.a _.pc I'"
._v J...l ...
that im ~"l1 ,rc w't.ich
ove r.;," \\0 L ) , n w
)Illy- on~
c " 1c1 th ~ n' a -:'
c
[}I.:rh<I)'
e .. b l .... tc JC 1 ~ i.l
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nt An: JU'
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kept to the old canons. More than this, they consider the
fact that echoes of the morality plays and interludes are to
be found in Shakespeare one of the main proofs of the pop'
ular quality of his drama. This tendency is directly linked
to the ideas of those scholars who seek to reduce Shakespeal "5
thought to medieval concepts.
Whereas there was once a time when only the dWerenr:es
between Shakespeare and the drama of the Middle Ages was
emphasised, there is now a quite appreciable list towards
the opposite extreme and the significance of thf' rudiments
of medieval dramatic structure to be found in his ar~ s muc\.
eXJ.ggerated.
In ShakesI?care's comedies therc arc many farcic~l motits
bound up With the traditions of medieval folk dramd But
in the first place, the farcical clement in medieval dram~
tsclf was perhaps one of the most important contributoly
fadors to the br~akdown Qf the peculiarly medieval theolog
II al out1o~k which the drama itself expressed, Farce was
an eXpIO!lVC material in medieval at1 for it was through
farce i.hat the worldly, lay clement pr~pared its infiltration.
In the ."ee~ nd ?lacc. the nature of the farce itself was changed
w,hen It ca~c 'n~o contact with the clement of Shakespearean
d, ,!~1~, Lo!.mg Its dutonomy, it wa<; incorporated into tht:
artlstu
-tion 'I 511a k esp( -:'e',
- plays merely l! ~e '1 _ :ompo
'
f" Ogl ~dle~t:. and ts _n .... idp.dnc s WdS shown up th 0U(1h
.,
~
uxtap 'bo,. 01 f <:I"e
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h and the her<'i\.
WIt-!
'. I :omanttc
cments.
f
,
d J.Q. expose false. r",,'TT\:!nl e
'om'nsr,mctim<:
tarr;'.,SCor:
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It les how up t hc lowness of the farc~.
'1 t
h
II l~
~K~l ~nll l( c"'unt,
thc c;.ignific:llll.; of the
e:t In ')hak'-- peare IS 'ost. ln4< thiS is what
OJ
I fc..
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th".,
134
cr
SI
nsibili:y
In conr\;. ,til n with
a'r "IV thc E ....... Ii h
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lal 1. ." l'
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ditil .... 1 fig1 rc ..
ir..l -t so.
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Shakc5Pc-re's theatre wa a great 51 hool of 'vlOg expencncC, e sch' 01 -f thought an~ fceling. But ar thb W S done
Jnobtrusivcly Shakespcar-'s t~~ !:..:: reqwred of l~S public
tlctivity of 10ught a~d 'Sensl ;v~ty
f~eling, lnd t~ helpt d
t.J develop these quah es. In this sell ~ the II litar an v<Jue
of Shakcspc .. :es lit for th.. p:l"lple wa an~ rem ns t-.Jdav
beyond asses! mc~t.
'
Perhaps the ~ is no m<"re convincing proof tJ"Ial sh3Ke
;peare was most truly ~ wril
Of'lC pe.:ple th.J.n th,. f that he believed in the ml.!11ignce of 'lOse for w"1om he
wrote, Hc did nol exhort them III 1 onacscclding maIm!':but soughl rather t bring them into communion with thr.
experience of the ife c" mankind as a whole. Shake ',:are 5
audicnce came to c 'e l! deeply about Ath.. l an~ 'lomf'
Egypt and Dcnm... k, as about t'leir own home town rll
past and nresent n:lted together ,lDd before the ~tec' tor
there arose the pl~ ure of the wholt.: wi,- 'W\. d. Shakcspca: ~
would have accepte<l ,othing 'CiS than thi ncl' 1~ would
his au~ ence, who baa become _ l, tomco t, ia. All ~e
world's c: stage," ths -yint: ot ODI" Of Sr- !- _ '"}t ar...
har'
:1('ters is lra. merely n idl
t"'Ot1 --.. 1"-..
''3W
5hakesp::.-~. 1 d-lma. It WiS as...
L St-il -po., ac
mol shed '" 1 bc:.~ t_t:rs \ :tcl. enclosed 1" _~-idual ' , :-, md
gJ.ve to caLl, tr"n 1~ "ppc ~lL.i 01 perL_ :.-.,: tl"H {; , t
wnrlr' III ,,'
S W llth ar_ '\"n-1t::.~ S!-ak_,:.arcs plays
brought the "lldicll( e nto <...:.Dl -" ...~ h. 1 Yo tl" t'L... 11 ~ : tht;
world at
!,;,e No 1(..:"1 b""; be..:. 1 '" -i'.,
t r.Jw Sbl~\':
spc<... ~s r
fft:,,~
? .s~1f.Jtr._-w .. ~...
lrdi' dual
Thi~ S 3. .. hOUld I " L:.lt \ c L t. I~" ,~r co:. ~t a
full Ippl~clatm . ~o" ,:.le'l S!':.( '.i"- ,.;>'
-t he;:-u.i
poopk to e::, 1(11 ... vr'i S. '_lIt 0.. L rn. nity TlI- " l~ . :It
important pl.:wrCS!I'': '" ,me:... n st.'" ,.-... , ~" pc7)uLI"":sm
People were bpl('L~ t ) ~ Tc,-1~ .. ;tio~ c :1~' fu') i'reldl~l c:
lite md, 11 J.:te -..:.me _n~, cot' :'lat bl('lO{i kr.~:l:O w:'uh boU:ld
them \.,' : 11 ,fc' 1o .... s tLo\... ~'loul t"L..c w,-r~o
Th.s in nv '"' Y :onl' 3dic~.e~ <1e n_~tic-:.li fct~ing whl.;h
1('lm~ate '! "h.}.~,p,llc S :"Il.- J s. T"is .1]'_' wa~ a :'rc:Jres:iivc
~tcm('nl " ~:, lit, A: t~.;.t ti:ne th_ . Jmc..)t:sne:..'; "f being
3 :1::11 t c'
-:.aLon n- .;]Jll P. 2~ .. 1:'" w:th fo:"J.de.1 ".:p3rat~:,:n
nd "_11 If'!t.:l 01 p:,~( ... ,~t"':":c Shclk:S"(,J~~~ ,.11CJtre ;n.,;;uLal
~d's ,Il! ill 'le"... w:t"- ..: f ... ..::!ng .):- :'3t:.Ot;,;.:11 .1:1d :!lis w.:nl
'lanr In ~_,'ld '"':tl: t:_t wdc" vi.w ,,: the w,"'ld ,. . f w~ich
w.: t lYe ':II cn !,.,' '~'ng,
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I d, n~ t Vr 51 t" imply th_t a profes lonal k.o ;'eJgt- of
the W c"' 1ft. d ts 04 land =!Clmqu
~
ncthi'lg
bad i" 11 1 The whOle thmg b t ~ pr_vent 'lIS know .. ~..;:::
from tuming mo
",p:w- te \; 14 1 JYta" n long(
..
the wood or the I -~
,
Shakes pear ~. ~
es, ' 11 e 1,' ~ Vr th ' 11 t-"'11 111
his wor1- , 0" re W l' rna." d '1,,1 11'" than 0: art. " d
;n ex cnl they w :> rtt,ht _hell" repro.::~ ~pr _ss Cl
cera.
f ,.
h
t
th ng f whl' '1 \.
also, arc c..\\ P ' \.lPL 1 1.: .. 109 t at
some,
.
h
'h
'
5"'..
life itself i~ $] lllr.:: t .,Ju: n t c wor _
re. ~
These er til w~ ~ ater ::.1t 19ht l:;y tJ-... em .j, t -"' . r
we could nl,)t c,:-pcr enc" u~ l" I.IC" on o. real It }, ~ II
not bcen c nvcye
- us t: u':' 1f" :':1::_ 'urn f the v
thl
highest arl
s 'ld:
We think me tal .,u~ 1 c t\.... ,lit
S~.
ll' I
~
1
r
I ""dt II
1
it lind try tc Illlper ~", ts a ,
1
o.,u.. , fa t"
thing. Blt et us not in ... c__
.,. f c '. cr:
'1 th t... '
lr')c t'tr aw ...... 1C S Of th: v 1 1m "'I" tan\.c
t' .
t"e
~
expres:-ion ::;"If w 1] ~ t!::
~"'t .z.n
c
was dedh.lld.
,.J
"'~e'_"
h
l'herc are sur h tr.
-'
..
t '
rulings m~ all tl'e :: c~se .. "'I _ t
,
;t
I VA N AN I S !!\It) V
LIFE-AFFIRMING IILM,\NISM
011 the Occasion of the ,IOOth ,1111lit'et,aru
oj tile Birth oJ SlIakl'sl'l'are
I
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A
Ib
..
...
WI
M.
In
Wi l
of
K.
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olb
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oft
M",
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"boo!
. ,'
valu.
wort
'b.,
..
Padua
N ' Verona ' .Mant ua, V
enlce,
to Cyprus or to SlClly,
to
avarre'l BohemIa. Moreover, even if Shakespeare by no
means a ways depicts the settings as he names them and
some land he calls "111 ' .. b
.
. d
II
yna
ecomes merely a conventional
ahon of that
. pnnclp
. . I e IS
.
fISC11 appe
f fi
. - .\am e I'.n9I an d even thl5
u to 51 901 cance 10 \ he way it stresses the variety ,- f the
t:on emporary war ld .
14(}
~
A humanistic unde' tandl 19 0: U" c. ~ p
the love f life and 1P. fc.:_ i11- C _:-""_.,.~ t"" t r.:. 1
ter
of immens }.! __ . ti ~
t th t
ing upon an
1
I
of Shake" peare'
91 tol1. ... ~. t- ve i:-"
".
Engels said that in If' p~.!~
al
T'
. t p
'-nattcr smnt:: u-x lJ-t:: wc_lc o. \,...... ty
L
=.- .
.1.):
'fi"',
.'
Shakespeare docs not take. ~ldcs wllh tht.: l'i.!bcls, but h
cannot keep silent on the, ~lhng and openly cxprcs~ ~d n
dignation of the underprivIleged and gives it true picture
of the moti\"CS behind the Jctions of, Jack Code i.lnd his sup-
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vatu.
Wort
Sba>
<
P"
m.ly never be Ie:!] sf:d, th :; 1 m of q,
"L,"
,...r.
_ "'y'
itscl \\.\t'1 c'l:tr..OIdinarJ now.. h e
t -,.
t.;:.
ity and Sf'\! contLdictions. "11
:':'"
gl ~at inteqlllY. Pamlt::~ F-nr.:'.. tl:_ ti ~
- J.~:-; in actic' [1.
WhCl
.::1 Shakcspi _ C takes his
.,d
l
.~~.
.a! ses: 109 'lC new.
urge 0:;
l.:l feudd 1 relationshIp, In Tin on IAt
social ~ondil onr foun~~:t ;" tho.
rs:
of Gold. ne~ III S Y expo .g ... OCVi ..
mis:..lluoPV Clgl ldt:: i y al "_
< t
or..
through"
11" _ t..;y fu....
r lr. 1m -!! (: P ~ le h.
of the int: t i1"l.. natic- ... f t
lui 1
1.
f
:-;
....... 3;kt. p_"
....
s<.J.ll( C
1, ... ne .,1
who1... w rk .
The :rc"li~ n' 01 '1 ' "" r I ~.10W"" ~
~n!Odio( figure 0: p . pero. \Ii) . ~ tJ-. ~~~ht . L ... v: Y ;;
I..
lal pme 5 (. f < ' ", n k nd .
. .. .l' .... r. n
, ..
1,
=_
'"
..
"
"
, h th
I y exposes the cynicism of colonial opprc.;,sion
whle
cpa
.'
f t
f Sh k
which was so characterIstic a cIa l~rc 0h'
a c.s~carc s cpot,;!)..
tist shows the }'c ahons II'S arIsing between
d
The rama
.. d""
." n th
. I
c
"civilised Englishmen an
s~t\ alge , U
.oscS'hamk IS ands
which gave birth to Prospera 5 0 f ty topla.
a cspeare's
hiS
forces.
,
I
,,
YOU SEE the way the King and Queen exchange glances. He
is on the throne, she is merry. If you were Hamlet, what
would you do? Put yourself in his place.
In the actual monologue there is nothing left for you to do
becausC. before the monologue, your acting has already ex'
presscd everything. Before showing Hamlet's hatred. you
have to show: I have come here, everything is upside-down,
r don't know what I am going to say. I am just feeling my
way, pretty uncertainly-as to how I should live now. where
1 should go. But you have already conveyed everything.
There's an illustration of illogicality for you. You have acted
illogically and already played something which is not yet in
the play. How much more do you need to understand? Your
father is dead, your mother has remarried. That's something
you have to digest somehow. But you have found out everything before the beginning of the play. And. as you have
already acted the "moment of discovery", you have nothing
left to act. Do you feel how the play is written? All the action
here is contained in the words. You haven't yet masread
this action through words. Today. I couldn't "Delust,ad DInetenths of what you were saying because your IDton'tiODS are
wrong. There are words. but there are DO phraseS What
makes this play so difficult? The fact that flu Ie 15 not one
word here which can be misunderstood with unpamty Tbuc
is a human thought and. if you have failed to catch tt.. tbcIl
you have thrown away one hnk In the play In aa
your 'Dte' pic
tation, the thoughts that fail to get througb c be U)tiiiUd
in their dozens. The diction, the pbrasiDg-are all .Iong I
remember you spoke in your own wonts and got the ......,...
across very well. But just now 1 didn t "nd.!; iZ'and a tid...
The moment there Is DO acdoD aod you. 101 B tbe
that the action is e:&pu7Ilcl ID wadi.
succumb to thc heUne that lOd ='IIt
beginning of awkward
...
it is awkward. because
difficult to canceL
~:TOIl9
,
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to
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of
IL
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of.
ALEXA~DER
OSTUZIIEV
ON
l .~l
,
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....
It
"1"k d"'
s~~usso:c~hl't~g
My first impression" a t h
I .had just read was s~met~i~Z ev goes
vatu
wort
dcmandi~~cs~
t
h
1 rC:;).:n .n'
.cvilw w'. II C'1 00....1:1
r e baY (J5tU1.hev q
o Till-; I. L O'
-J
hildi,h
-urlS on 1I d thl ~lin:J \: \: -:,;?
I:;~k
f"
lC) rcmamc1 wIth 'lim aI' u
fj
C
f"'C~t~vlng TIC t.... lYt' Ot'-Jc I., Ostuzh '"II l>e an t( -ire .m of acjl tI
u: plft ~n he st.zl?C 111 ulh. way a to - ~ 0 E: Je' ~- ')'\_l:m
81 j ff''' c th~t h I ~ murde r~
Later on, It r a
-\ be
11 m t., Ostuzh." C!. ~ n:.t ",\;: :::110':1
thl~ dream ana, llthough V(.~ ~ im :;a:l :1 '"'!: _1"4 ~ 5U _=:3.
in making it come tn.'. ~. wa I l" pll'ng f
t.b P rt all ; 1if
thin}l.lng about It. de,tlf n~ 1m f' wth t: - rei 1_ t" rI
interested eyc on the mte rnrc bon
t Jr. 1. the r.: - by ~thr
ostuzhev did not mISS onc rnore : .n:~ ".by p 11 nn '-IS
"I would go to se'" 5alviJ\1, ilo:_: and t~: Rl!c ... Jn t agt
dia several times each, ' O&~..lZ;P.V re~lj's, 'and, elch lime
ns
I would
compare their inter retal1C"1 of ,]e ~ut w t~ mv
own, always on t;t: ll)ok-out t - !:Jmf':t1..- ng :lf"W orne cOO
ditional touch, 9"cal 01 smalj mpctant 0 l1;nost .)0 lightn
to notice. Each
n:> I liought.:: fh~. !: _JI on ~h la th
questions which con~ iue.J t:c t.:.rment ffi :I.r'~ dC tim... I
came away pI ,foundly L lPPO' 11. d.
"They a1' made 3, gre .. t nnre, .", b) U'..
ling te(.hm
cal proficiency f L.leir act'nq, L.o1F cun a q 3,llJ t: t offset
the most "'Ifl::':' Vi". word! ,e;t lI"C and mi. n 51 ..... s. r. y
knew ;ow to make play v I. 1 11 spit :!ic1
- -p- tl r
make-up. All this w"s worke out 3.lmc", t y... fl ti( 1. Nt
only that. ~ut 5alvini, for in! tance Wc.; ~ er fy n 10 t\'e
scene of the murder of Desdcnlna lI'1t t tirnes
v I forQ.)!
that I w:-as '1 L.'C theatre and le'~ "f' tL: }rn.Jl1e1 .- ~ <.J
'They acted cllpcrhlv. But n( ,p of ]1 ~ ",'
vcr ~n
Othello who coule: be "and rught to L
'I'll a TI,_
('1'111(\
vC
was first and fOlcmo s1 \leiV 'landsomc. v v c::,ctl
v.'1
brave, very btlsl,.le' V, "t:;Ll 1n ~eneral. B's
'" hc1e 1m "
t
was suggested by
or "1l'"l1'~c tro. "" e "ntsV 109
t him
h s "t<~
\;.)IC''>
1'11s
was h uge, Ilcavy J"1la~sJ1I~ r-l! roov . n... .
t.., I
costUlne, even his PJ~ .ions v' ~ '1Uqc1nd 'tHUr l"l ~~
they did not makt:' nc like Ot'l.('11u A I thl~ WJ.! v. 'VO~I'
cally dcvclopt:'a, v wy straight :II'" ard, olJyd wth rem31.
"bie
lositv II tereSI 19 met lW,-om c l'od t ..'/l! :lol nv
vir~
Othc. 10.
J.nd '~"-'I
,x,_n
It .u')(. little
,'0
. le- rI h
Ild nc:":,
f t,._ ~
'roo C'
- Ih , ,I
I ~O
-,r:
~ ... II:
the
rc. 10:..:0
li n
,
o
"II
"
tt
10
...tb
Wo
au
M.
In
w,
'p<
01
K.
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ot.h
on"
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",v,
boo.
.."-alu,
-,
wor'
r many ye
IS 0
p. il ~takl
01
bigness to
,
cn!,?r, ~hIch ShakesJ')care ha 0 S o~ that .inner bigness
sh
to )./:y, The c('111 ' ~ :'If
rovld.ed WIth charactc1
C !'l
OllClJO' mne'" s
.
. nveshgation had to )c
. . . . tllon :~~ 'l\;. hV i::.:;st that ~h~c~~;bTlcal wo~td. This did not
c >ounds ~f th c other \. 1<:: lCters l~(n consIs.ted in isolati11'.
0,
' e
__
'S 0\\,. :If'l'''SOnalit
N confimng hi n within
'-_ d ,,_r...r/, w~ '.) show V 01 at all! The prollem,
pc pIe -. ~ hIm dn'- th"ln ~ thellc src'ahons with the
-. e play -:.d f the~-~n ~b~1 Uf 11
on the othe
m. 0 fi 1( thl;; r lJe on
th!
"teJ
Ie:
"
n the carc'jJ
.1-1; 9 nd
"
e
.
b. LO
I n-;1, 'artie jIll y, Q th
m
,
, "
--
" "
S"I::'':'''1
.,
"("Ine
11 dh~
.Ip 11
n
.ti l' b orb
y th tJ. Jy
~ ~e ... h
"" rdin~.
w
tl) P JVC b
h np alt 'c
1('
0,
a,
.w....
.....
3.1
;uls
"
erIg
n~
tf"
h ...rd
.~ hl!~mmis'
flt
can
prisoner of war, 0 bscrvatlons 0 re, ahons )ctWccn man and
man, first-hand knowledge of thc bitterness of seeing hum
dignity set at nothing, all this had planted in
heart the seeds of his future burning love of man and of h,5
no
b,urning hatred;
in. the morality dictated
the prmclP.les . of feud~l relatlons~lIps, Othello, in spite of
his humamtarlan leamngs, sees 10 the enslavement of the
conquered to the conqueror, of the weak to the strong of
the serf to his master, ?f th~ soldier to. the commanding
offi~er, a temporar~ SOCial eVIL an unaVOIdable attribute of
socl.ety as he kn~w It: However, a profound faith in the inner
pUrity of man, III hiS honesty, in his instinctive desire for
goo~, I~ads Oth.ello to champion the cause of this same man,
of hiS nght to hve, t? think and to feel; to champion, in fact,
th~ cause of humamsm against the laws of feudal relation
ships. But Othello's conflict with feudalism is of a some
what abstract nature: he is opposed to the principle involved
r~ther. than to ~he people who embody this principle; in this
rah' ~n marrymg Desdemona and stealing her from her
~~n~~ sl hous he. throws down a challenge to the feudal
p.
Ip e of mamage between peers' but not to the pas~,fthat~hapolho9ist of. this principle, th~ old man Brabantio,
W om e remams on the b
t f
h'
h
istic of Othello's s
. . es a terms. T IS C aracter
abstract ideal' f truggle 10 Its turn goes to form the rather
of which Sh kls IC natun:: of his humanism, the shortcomings
.
a espeare eVidently realised."
. HaVing reconstructed th
biography Ostuzhe
e rest of Othello's "ante-Shakespearean'
Othello's ~tonny p v comes to the conclusion that the mainspring of
abilities and his un~~gr~s t~oU9h .life could only have been his ,wn
"H .
es ona e mlhtary tiJlcnt.
avmg served as a I
'
Republic of V .
s ave-soldier in the armies of the
stairv.ay of th:n~~iit~thello has ,nsce~dcd the whole weary
:.l w;>.y, thanks to h' ry and SOCIal hlernrchy, having found
P:;tnci.ans of the V IS ~ruly doughty abilities, to force the
fc:' the reprcsentat~nChafn Senate to suppress their contempt
Ive 0 an 'infer:ol race and to sec him
of
Othcl1~,n
les~
,,
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01
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oth
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....,.
oft
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stud
...
.or'
....
bool
valu
rcar~d
7,
, ),
b;
first ,-nd
remost.... 1 taie"lted miFtary lC3d
indisrcns ..ble to '" great Il"ar timl. )OWer,
C"
all
!Iy
C
1.--'
. . . . . - ..
c"pc
~ thl que ole l,
tC:lll;V
ill SWC!' i!. 1- the
~ th
Do
,e'
vit
th~t
11-
ttl
~
>y ..
a.=
-t
mi.
'Bul ilC""C ~n
w .. (ltCa "': 1 1 efy !>ubtlc lnd far
.... m .. tr... lghtforwOlrd .. k to ~il "::11 _tf' all these 'e:turc~
.
1
1
,,
""
"
[,
A
......
tb
II.
In
...
WI'
01
K.
G.
otb
I..,
....
.....
oil
II..
'a""
hAt
... 1
being sensitive ~..,) ~lS ' .. elings and ..:.~le ~o understand ~;m
aturally and Inevitably eXL.'1angcd firs1. J .. :;p...ct fe tikin .
n
'-1 :to answ~'1ng lov~ a~ ~h~t of
g,
",nd then l'k"
I. 109 ")r as ar~-..1
which he 'lI~seL was the obJc..,t. In this way. t:)( ,hna(t I'
~: the love
wcc~ Desdemona ,1Od Ol'lcllo IS not in tl.C
lost ]rtuitou' lnG t
~own l' the uiav u~ X:-~,~S ~o .
already J,'eply nrooted. It IS "'I ry :mp~rtant (0:' the " 'or
to C ";lveY t'1i '")1 t, fa: only 0:1'1 c~diL~n t.h ,t they u-1d
loved one lnothe r fOI ~mt,; tim... ....Juld they kn ,'v onc
another W'1 enou~h. ft.. ld this " I .... -,U. .J, f""r oth "v/i .' Dc
dclllo nas eVe'Ui.lton .. 0 1 Cthello wt11 lack t;he l:nJ of ':..lth
The ,oundles!
hli. traSledy, h n!.:e
particular emphasli>
tfuln
Ostuzh v
:1
...
.' ,
t the
s of 0th !.!
I..
trlh~'j
his f .. ture
1:"
v:"'eTl'
. :....~t;.1t the
Shake.peare. Othe'lo
humanist :)hilosophy :rlJ.kt's hL..
dem O( ratH; 'elntngs natu~ll and. ~ndeed. inevitable
mind,"
Ostuzhcv accords quite p,uticuiar significance to Othello's nObility
of character.
,,I
,
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....
...
....."
....
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of
K.
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oth
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158
H.
"'siC h.
givel
1.1
or do,
0: =~"V em
. - kv_ h~'
'In the cour"e of h15 li:e on i:.C st.1g(' clll .h",,,r :,a$ t~~
transform him:..,,!! into :1n:1V diirefcnt parts. into lnJ.ny
different images. Aml'ng thcst.:! ,ne pJrts WhlC'h .I:~', in varying degrees, unsymp:tthetk to the actor himself, p3rt~ h.~
which he has to <ldapt himself with a greater or lesser degree
of compromise in order t..> step into the shoes of the ..:har'
ader he is i01pers~~natin~. And ....,nly once in a lifetime docs
,111 actOl" encounter <I part which is cX.1dly suited to hls rJngc
::md t('mpcl.lmcnt. In :-ouch ,,1 ~-ase, :md .:mly in su..:h a casc,
is the ador so .Ihle to identify himself with the man he 1S
!vprcscnting ,mJ t~"'1 pcrmc.ltc himself with. the .other'S pc~'
""cnality that he ,cases t~~ ad him and, qUite Simply. hvl,;s
I
)~
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ott
...-...
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IS
,60
"KING LF-\R
Sl~ctdl
".
I )1
'ar T
tOI III:
State JI" Ji!.!l T
I 'l.kxamll.' r
the
JiI.)
\1 5C)lV
Ill't
p.,)~ Ie ion c II
"
...
mage
Ir
,u ,
t1:
thl.. .. oldienc...
"MY dt!"rcsl WI' h is f" I-c ~ meml ...
-"tching Ostu...'lev n the pal t of Olh_'k sn th t I ould
~h~n teU him wh" till rcm~ :ns t, br de ne ..
"
~on
,I
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,
"II
1\
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f,
A
th
W<
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M.
In
'P<
wI.
of
K.
G.
Olh
incl
.ta,
oft
MOl
stud
no...
...
....
or in expressivene
)r In t bnie !l r=UI expecte:1 and thriJ1: .n
":1 r
A parttculal Jhc' is a 'corC :: t t:
. 1
y
problem of naL ... lality in ~t:\:. he s
t "1"t"" _ ~~
I
f
profound analy. IS to which Osh:: 1 v h '-- ~
characte. !j u hin. to ~ judi .h p.~..... :i ~
rag! dy a' i. tl 1ged:y... c 1~I,lSY,
U~_ll _
1.._. J,
'c
"To show Othel 0 ~s it c_' u r:\I the l~n __ ... t.' ~I.. . -v
"would be to impuvc . h tI,d n ld ,) tl.:- l ; , ~t ~vl~",
---
c-
.<
]L onli to
,_:'VC'"
tht:
plot
boo.
oy jclou v
valu
warl
,_
"
amlf
,c
I:
..
A
"He~e,
where reason and passion have entered on a profoun~ IOnher conflict, Othello, this wonderful honest Othello,
rematns onest to the e d h h k '
h
last time h th
h
.n: e c cc s with himself for t c
act of ju~;: e d t ere 1~ true cause for committing the stern
Here in thi~ '::: ' ~s an unpartial judge, he finds such causc.
end: 'to showin on~h~g~e, all ~y efforts are directed to onc
J.udges 10 the audience all the inner
purity of Othe1f
not kill Desd 0, parti cuJarty at this moment Othello does
h
emona he destro
. .,
must die, else she'n' be
ys a s~urce of eVll (Yet s e
tray more men), and, for this reason
16Z
1 d because we love
'The Soviet people love Othcllo, as
0,.
through all
man. Life in our count'!' is devoted. to enh~r~~ill care for
its policies the realisation of a SOCIEty w I~oth the tragedy
man, for people, and teach the lov~ 0 man the noble Moor
of Shakespearc in itself and the Th~g~ 0 f hy he is so close
make the same demands upon us.
IS IS W
II'
163
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All-Russia Thcatrlca:
Le"lingrad-Mr' )W 19~tl
ALEXEI P )POv
Si!, Kf"',PEAR Am
boo,
..valu,
....
worl
'.IEATR
EVER Y YE.AR th" 50\ 1_: t'l_ .! q:ve m~re ~d m( ."] time
to Shake , ,uc pl~y It 1 n'l cxas-er ti( 10 'V
t, 1"
th Soviet Unhm, 5h , I c:, 1rc ~~
-1U11"'1
C ond holr.
la~d. It w ) oflIy n Jr, th_t the R d }. n .' n ktrc in it
""1... mg Sh d ( ~ell
n hould hav t: tlJ we k
t
;;c .Taming uJ
tIle
Bour;JC'" 1~
"lUI
rn .. "lei 11 :1 1
two centuries. bpe, adapt nq 51_
,10 _
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dards <I 1d to their own linl 'Cl 1,)' rI
1
ideal. We ,onsidt'"it -:.:r
k t
t
.
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foolish n)t on ,r t the pi y T e cc
(~r I,.t~t K
1.
~~
attained a !;U"")1 eme 1ar ~(J 11 (
JI!.
...
absolute 5011 tic n.O 11 -ro-'lcn ,,{ .. :.. C"'l.,let y harmc,ious humaTl per ::mality 5 anI '
~ ':;: 1!l ~, ... - so If'"'y
h we (I s, "Uqrr 1<I]
."<.1. ore JIJ,,"'R:'Ji'
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fir : W ~ pldnn~d , put lO the ,lay with the ::;i .J!ogu('" Thf''l we
~ /II 'lat t gets 11 the way 01 .he basIc ideologicll conception
w'lIcb \\"C C ~~sidepd the play 0 convey ;\Od whkh we desil cd
oU' pI' .:lucH.o L' emphasise But why if it bOl1t:!cd OUI
theatre die: 1~ not bother the authOl?
We '1a... : ",0 answer to this queslOD. 00,
1""~ , S 1 l Jse for the theory thaI '1e P<' . 01 ~IY z'S ~hake
p1
SI')C rc wrote it has either been lost. 01 that in gen
11 t We]
nevI' Y; 1. i1 Jown bUl x'sted 1:- a ser c, of tC. 8 1 npr.:>v
S.1ti('lns :; n the commedia de1f ortc. In l)C' "1 W fi'ld SUI h
a.rC(. "n.
'While this i~ going on P':mtaloon i1 ke how
"Ie 01
0:' \l;hat a1' ut is leI"' 0 thr. improvlsal ~n of th
etor Sly pC.lk twice in the flrst let dght at the b~inning
" 'l( pi.)), and, 1ll the l'tllai'1ing 10Ul altS, he r. ,~ nothjng
tr Y Lit 111 And so we were wcd with the l\tcrnativ . .ther
t.., ret
infO:
lhlilicmal wi! v ,nc,; "in 1(" sty'c 01 chake
r ]1 ~ from
mr-" r <! 1( lei 01 keeping SlY tit; 1(' 1'S, ~
"ot hm
~ fil\. re ~f pftolvlT'im!: w thin 1(' pia:.
It would, d r r
h vc bc 1 r- 51. ~ t<'" n t ... ;11, nk
nr r n l ' c the ... re ... n u n Slv W ,,1(' lav J(
Jr1 W Y "rou~ h tt"l
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. Id detract attention from the general philosophic statc\\OU, abou' life which the play has to offer.
menS
'hh
We treated Shakespeare Wit
t c. greatest respect. Having
decided against the prologue, we. trIed to make up for what
we had lost. Sly lends a fine pleb~lan ?otc to the play. Having
discarded him, we at the ~amc time mtr~duccd half a dozen
"Sly-like" servants-the re,tlnuc of Pctru~hlO and Bap~ista. This
army of servants, orgamcally \~'ovcn Into the action, work
as it were in the very tone and tImbre of the absent Sly
In general, a production's freedom from textual abbreviations is no proof of the respect in which it holds the author.
just as the number of interludes and pantomimes introduced
bv the producer does not necessarily indicate any departure
f~om the idea of the play. The whole question is as to whether
this is done in accord with the basic thouqht of the author.
Let us now return to our actual work on the play-to the
question of how we set about practically infusing it with the
atmosphere of the Renaissance.
The Renaissance was an era of extraordinary vitality. AI
this period, art had spilled over into life, had flowed oul Olto
the streets. The people had an ear for the verses and !>ongs
of their poets and composers, the people themselves pla'\fed
and sang. Sometimes, theatrical action t.,~c:amc C:I part of every
day life. I mean the "practical jokes" in Whll..h wllOlp neigh
bourhoods became involved: people agreed b wecn t}lc.-:n
selves, for instance. that they would persuade ~ome laivc
clt'zen that he was. say. not a doctor of medicifle bl't an
impoltant count. Of cour!>e, this provide co< rmous amll!'"
"flC"lt kit round. although it somctif)'lC$ c'lded tra(:.JIc(!'l y '.lere
W
C1Si'S, for example, when the victim o~ sut.." d 'leg ull'
t re.:odcd to have gone mad). It is oot hv
"lance t lat t'_s
o . .)m was reflected in morc than one of Shakespe:: ,,'S day
be fullbloodedness of life, the richncs') of manners and
cus~oms and the artistic flajr of man in the Rc,aissance
peno~-thes~, to OU1 mind, arc the ingredients wit'lout which
It s Imposslblc to conCClve of a play 'Jy Shakespnre .. t
t !gCdy "'r (:omedy
1\ few words about manners and custows.
.: &:':1C t-rwduc... the reproduction of the man"le1'5 ana
ct: .oms of al'"l ... ~=::h n the tht..!tre is assodat _d w th 1 davish
n . h
t ld~
ili~ f ev,,- vc. v 1i. ~ Den), 1fT the f lJl 101' o~ vcr im.'i
~s
pe 1. lch rod!'
1 'I.e t) pJay t ... :11
nd 111 t 5 L 11 ~Iy f... ,Jr.'. \\ .... : To real It..ltre. where~ ,
.,
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.
rom t~e )o"ul
l""il~ whl\. 1 I . ' k~sp ... lre
:)( ,np'lte<1
the tre
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(If ell ~
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In hi~ hou!e I
I still think this. And regret that I did not h.ave time ~.()
tage ,"ncarnations of Desdemona or Ophch;l.
'
I
rea lse 5
And so, after long rchcarsa Is, W hc~ t I1C IanguJ.gr.! of tho;
's already mastered and technical frt.:cdom has be
d ~c e ,
I' b 105
'
.n
achieved. the search for Ju let. C9 "
I sought. in movement and 10 plashes, the most din:ct ways
from feeling to thought. And Shakespeare's text touched off
Oh so light a loot
Will ne'er wear out the ('uar/osting fiillt,
A lover may bestride the gossamer
That idles ill the wanton sUll/wer air ....
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178
ther traces attal,,:hed J It. The motht:. use..i the'll " I e Id~ca ins for the tittle boy ,,) that he should 'lot rm C:Wl)' or
Ing rc
b mp himself,
UH w far he ran, ;ough, how ~ ~ lh~:!~ of hl'l time l
M~rc powerfully, :no:C vita]'y I fe!~ I'lf' P"',::~-..:.!it}' of th'
laywright The glcltnt ,) 01 "lls w~rks wnich 'lave : .. t
grea t P
..
I
lived the Ce"btuflCS camel :.ve.,
My Julict ecamc even .. OSf ') 'ne
inspiration.
WaS
(,. 'lOT:. ok
~l
4;
19M,
INNOI\.EI\,JT 1 , "()",1'
'YI
SIlAKESI'~"\HF
IN MY LIH
d landing by tradil il
r .lJ'I
1:: m 1 '1c I) VII n md
I
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the
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riQht
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from that. (
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vcrythinq 1 1 er
.
r: elTn -. GL;o C tL~t
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like 10 a 11 11 . ("
y tLc v 11 nl ...
II you wl-tich will 1 ,r' 1:._. n
.1 .~ 'Y
fr I~ t1-11
rcer vc
)t,c 11tL th J- '
(Here hf! p... u
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W ~ would af" II II 1t r ".31 '
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~pccch w th 'I U IJ"II Jcn <it'
,
h
r 1 Tl-I wlet them I 0 lr-:1
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pal tu u'al' Y 1. i ~ C1
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hat wa' w t t ~
In t'1c )Ul ~ of th
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10 3.tt 111.... ---.
f c t, ugh1
VII( 11
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NIKOLAIOJ(III~OI)KOV
( Shakespeare,
,lid, dungeons.
t Ie worst
,
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182
bUD"ani~'
~ams
fig.htin~i.
~re3J1l'i
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wi~,
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ahe~
th.~n
.)p~c:~tn",,"":
llaa~
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or
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inc
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rev
bee
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woo
Sba
from
h . ht and
f to
h c\!a
ua e at one
rt:move,
as It were,
Elsinore a ~lg ~ t e. future, the life of the Realm at
. :; full ofs nhone.s o~tn Ide, :lOd the life f t'lC time' Hamlet
uc aspiratIon).
However shrouded i
.
,
HamlEt this future Wi~ -nlst", 1(' futUl :-nay appear to
BelinsJ v 1f' h
sUlly come. In the w rds f
a '" nrofound 'Jnders l]1r1ing of t:hc c""ing
V't
ti
I'
en c: 1
B ,.
'r
'~4
-Ire
rti}
'ly
1
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-lit;
C'S In
t'1e futu! ~
.
'
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1
time is out 01 0'11 ), -"d
clo.
"
this life-and-deal'" . u911 t.. 1.
world of Claudil. s
.111 . t 1
,-
thoughts of hUi lar ~p'" 1
t
,
took up the fight. :i p..
- f J
Claudius" an~
~. n t t- r.
~
him! elf w'1ich w :i( h y c .. }" L~
Hamlet w( uld nol b( f.'l111 ~
g
How dill (.l11 this '1apper)
~ ,
I c
To begin Wl1 ". h= s, .... C 11 .
11 tr
c ar .1.:'l
the road of tis d: . " . , , lr
1
_'- f e
beauty of lifl.; peot ~ 1.:11 rc
'0 ";":.c
The catasi ophl' which )..
'- __ " al'"
~s,
,d
of hi!' sfll'it W'I'
und.1P \\' th tr ,
. r' , ., t]'.
deat)'! o! h s bt~:;: n -:\ the J f.. ...
t,e.
t
this fir"t lo l' l' t lph_ 1
1
u d ('1
t.._ tt.
Iarmcl the 'divi 11" thinq of fc ~- .
19C5.
This
tt
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himself lost ~lld l?~ely in this vas,t world which had beea
a prison to his spmt. He had put In to the coast of Dc me
standing on the deck of a sailing ship and, instead of ~mark
um
ing pennants. had seen the castle decked out in festive
Before the tears just shed for her dead husband were d ags
her cheeks, his mother had married Claudius. Shame. Himryl?n
Beast I'mess. T rcac h cry. He takes it lIa
'
han. Degra d ahan.
all
deeply to heart.
And so the gulf opened between Hamlet's fair dreams a d
this new experience of rcali ty.
n
Something aceuned like a sudden change of key. A
though the Haydn-like mood of the "infant clarity of the soul~
had been superseded by Beethoven's music, which releases
and sets in motion all the levers of fear, darkness, horror
,,
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and sorrow.
Hamlet began to look more and more fixedly into this
world inhabited by Claudiuses, Gertrudes, Poloniuses
Rosencrantzes, Guildensterns and Osrics, fluttering blindly
about his head like evil bats.
Every day, every hour, Bamlet sees more and more of the
falsehood and ugliness of life. The Ghost, his dead father
tells him of the terrible crime committed by ClaudiUS'
CI~udius has treacherously murdered Hamlet's father b):
~Olson! Ideals, hopes, dreams, illusions are reduced little bv
httle to a state of grandiose collapse.
.
The .sharp contrast between his ideals and the rottenness of
h~e bn.ngs Ha~let to a t:agic awareness of existence, facing
hIm WIth .the dIlemma: eIther to fly from reality, or to over"
com~ all ItS fe~rful distortions by the power of thought and
of w~l1, by action, by furious struggle, Passionately, in great
anguIsh ,of soul. Hamlet seeks a way out~ "To be, or not to
be: that IS the question."
At. first, he is sunk in despair. The pettiness of life seemS
to hm~ predestined and not to be overcome. It seems that
therled~s no ~vay out from this stinking prison which is the
wor . Even m death there is no rest.
Hamlet seeks a way out.
Here is one way-Weltschmerz, sadness, bitterness, sceptiC
sm: ... These do not lead to the future give no key to the
~~~ce ~~d ~he ~aws ofbtl~e struggle which is taking place They
_
~ ea grow
md .md empty .
fake l:_ony~ Hamlet puts all people under the magnifying
glass 01 11,' trony and iarcasm. Bt:~re him there ar~ses. in
186
,
t
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pel.lo,)lty of 'lPut lllj
I; n
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tender and lal\o' . ~ '- II ...C '
,
31
colour lnLl t'1e' b( d 11
Ie
,.
with pnn, uu t he 11.
melancholy, II vinC'l 1\ ~ ir
1';.
ell
generous anq4 "' _ fig t4.;
1y t!-_ t r~
t tal"
It would be' w nt
'l' \OW
, g.
:II ~ I
". t
(how nHny i, 1ll1j
\\' 1I. ~
"
mi<: ~1 11 If! f- "'l:
till I! l. , tl,
AI \\
lCJl t
vf l:Jl" e" -'9
hi..: c... p_cll v fOJ h ')1 m
l'
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)u: GI C
tempI;; tuOUS :lna r di 111 fl"w
I ....,'
will ~o l.\llV ~Iaea 1 ,l. l( t
'"
p<,ge ",nly
n h 5 l( J._~L"
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tongue, sword;
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From morning until ~Ol ning the bitteJ wmd blows dirtv
black. torn clouds across this world. cloud~ wollrn wiu.
human tears.
The very air here i~ ?oi".oned by the ~ypocrisy and Clnt
of those who are Iilttmg he:l.vlly on the ne _k d the
people.
..
People are cast mto thiS world c.S ':lto i;I crnc hIe. from
which. aftcr they have il been melted dow"]. -.:Qgctllet t
hoped to produce convelllenl lit e l ' ople of mall mol' 1
stature and no scruples.
Here, in. t~is p.dson. of the human spirit, all the pr; on
cellars are Jomed In an lmmensely complex labyrinth n whirll
thought can easily lose its way.
It seems impossible that it should ever find -ts way Jl
of the dead ends of this labyrinth. Thought is caught s :l
a lasso. on a silken, invisible tnre ld which is neverthe 1f>
firmer than any iron chain. the th eaa \;. falsehood. r .~Jghl
is dragged along the back-alley .. of ne.Jieval SC~10 astie im
and cynical practicality, along the prison ;o'-ridIC , of falSe
concepts and phantasmagoric ideas. Truly 1Pl JIC efforts
are required to break the perfidious silken thl': 0 md to
achieve the freedom and depLls of c genuine cognitiC"l ...1 :he
world. based on a passionat<> !'.ein.l for all the: - re_ ~f
the "mechanism of life. on suc'1 an understanding ..,f 1.
induced Hamlet. ;ternly and ruthle.;::'y tu cO"ld ~ t.
In "the world of Claudiu! ' all is po' on__ by f 1 .. 1C
and everything pc suades tl fal"e ide s. not tr<.r~ Dough
to contend with its )wn, gr":1.ter t 'seh .Here "cmpyricist.. like t"'c if1L. '""11y CO!lec nu n,:.."c esc
of what they have calIf' '"cu. RatIoncjsts iL" f c ~pi,.J
spin their webs of thei
W:1 5ubstaf1 l e
"s '"If' of Sb ...
speare's contempol aries wrote of th-,sc '1.10. in th
'l.tt~npts
to understand the '-'lorlc, become entar..,!"'d m l"p lC ~s v
their own one-sidcdnc: s.
Here. like shadow!>. nnantasmar r (; u':l~ md c -:I.e ~ >
pursue thc pl'isOnf'l. closing n on h m \ n nor,- pprc
sively than the stone wc:'ls of Ehll arc
Hcre, people have l"st lhe lif1c of c nunum:;:!.! on ,ctw~ n
"the mind' ,lOd 'the ob eet"'. Ev y ling jra\\ 5 nan 0'1 0
arbitrary lction and to un( ertainty.
Thought is tretched oul is onl 1 ... _ ...ibove tht.: ~rth
n
and there it s A splendid inmensitv wi110ul fcun?3UO
This is the world w'1ich Bacon ... ,-"l1~'- ,d t.,;:l latvnnth.
,a
Thought looks for a way out. looks for some new road
differing from the roads o~ err~r, so that the spirit of m~
might in freedom exercise Its nght~ to, a true knowledge of
the world and of the way to reorgamse It. .
And here, in this prison, knowledge ~s often condemned
to remain barren, the fruit of wIsdom rIpens slowly,
It is an axiom of this world to try to make it fr Jitfui in
argument and barren in deed. ,
.
Here every high thought 15 at once seIZed and borne
away ;r blown out by the wind of gcnc"ally accepted opinIon.
,
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9'
he .;hlid ()f his lye, y"unQ. tn. f'Xpcr: 1( :1, 11 h rt :;ope .lt
OU , dyna011L; I?C! lonal
C"C:' t U
lien cn _ ~~~. h
lar ) waJ'lr"cr :C' rc h{! h' ta foot 1 ..... ~ qbt
...t
The-. ~ I' nJc 1 t k d I '1'111' nd f l-- ~
..... '\. 11
vill i! Gl .. '" ~~r'c I o' y
cd JJ 1
It
contracl'L. '1'}' th:)l'. '11 onl J n U'" I):
th
n' .~
of his phil(,'SOI h}, f fc ut]( in t,
l t
the wi.
d
chu Ol: C or by 11' n~: Jre
r: _ , ~nder
Belinsky laid the r U'ldatu c f 1 UP
standing of lIaJT'lk'
"Wealwe <;5 of vill. w }c n .
t .,,) lS ~ re 'J.lt
of disilllegra.io.1I, 10t by rwtU!f: By I tu '.. 1- role
tl 19
charader, hIS II n c 51 le ... '1, h S uCl<1 n f1 .. .. f mgc hi
passionate autbur' ts n h'
)I'l 'cr 11
n WI L t" DC .\.
his proud contempt 101, 01 1 r tr -i f r l.. L;
JI
e tal"ll~n
r ght .c "1al r \.
.
It w... nc"" sal y
1~ ~i' v
$: v
"l find \.. 'nv ""'l( ng
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e,c
ql c t
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boc:
nowl {'~ 01
\
p ... r I..:ular
"l f 11
1~
{am ct hI life Bu1 f.
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Sb
flll
Y;I til
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195
Land for
Wool was needed for the. new industries.
.
d
merl\'
d
under plough was turne l1~to grazmg grolln
for shceThe common lan~s werc forcibly usurpc~ by the feudal lan~'
owners. This rumed many peasants, latd waste lands and
houses. Many peasants becam~ hom~lc5s .wanderers. Begin_
ning from Henry VII and endmg with Ehzabeth and Jam
these homeless pca~ant5 were subjected to .terrible pcrscc~~
tions and cruel pUnIshments. They were whipped, their Cat!
were cut off, they wefe branded and killed.
.
Holinshed asserts that, in Henry VIII's reign alone, seventyt .....o thousand people were subje~tcd to the death penalty.
The life of the workers? Marx wntes that we can sec "the
gulf between the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries ... the
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err
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"
finale slay.
l~ wor
dJo \s...from lC p ....isonc_ up
SWJld oand LV forc'ng ~~m~l~o?e maid that l- amiet I~ in.ct:e
AI .CI' all that II c::In
.
f .. rcmain' '1at e
" t'1at hc al.._ little Ncverthelt. s, 1]1 t~l. 'off . ~q le:l.Ly
ctrubts md heslt tes a gre. t dcal. putsuent~~' iV~I_S ~ction
fa!.s nto ct.mplc~e pesslmcism , idf~1 Shake peu hl- elf.
"ccause as Romam Rollan sa
1
'he refl~ct~ ..11 the
vulsi.,ns of" the ~fr Stude'll! of Sh~Kr..:
Well. what doP' ]t. ~al e r ... ~~ ~d~a wr!.1 iamlct em'
peare have much t ,c.y abou~ ~
Htth- < bout t}.e <11.
bodies, about hi!; ideal
ut t f"Y ~~Vll live nan, a l:1an )!
a
that Hamlet is first and fOI '1l0S1100K tr'lt'1 n the fae en ....
ntdlel
who dl c;; ot c_ tC'
h'
"ut al ,the truth
Only thc uth about
t:: ife l.oundoo~illm~~1f in thl faec
it,ut 11m I
II
11 t drc ~1
to If An/ he ,oldly
kes
f e re .u"re::; 1 :lrc'"'t ....c 1 f un_
'''''lve of t'1 ~'il ~
h' , 'f md hl~ Slowne s,
,m - t.he wil. , to
1{j
h l .h. 1~1( I' n" ':1d
1 h1ms, f i l
I ) h .. " tdt ...)O
'1(' mel tt"l_ l_q;.
H,::
.,
He
kef
t
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.
...
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II:
'IF
It.
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...
of
.
Taken together, they are Hamlet A '
to Hamlet, and we are left either w'ith ;hlt-nel~he~ adds up
of Saxo Grammaticus' Cesta D
e enelgctic Hamlet
written in Latin around the y all~~~~l, or Historia Danica,
the Amleth of the novell bear
. ' or by his twinspirit
e
1583), or else with the w:ak.;\,,~l:~ls
Bclleforest (1530'
of the period when the bou/ .. am ct ?f German origin
powerless to shake off th
g~olsle felt Itself completely
regime and Freiligrath excf . yo de ,,~f the. absolutist feudal
amlet IS Germany",
Shakespeare's Hamlet b alme
these.
ears no resemblance to any of
Shakespeare's Hamlet i
spirit bursting its w
t~ a great effort of the human
at. the cost of pain anaJ blor~duigt. all ~oubts an.d hesitations
IS mmd and hiS heart burn
brightly and he carries' h"
the acut,e contradictions ~~ hi~msel~ the will to overcome all
The hfe of Hamlet is h
age.
tions. the basic princi Ie; ~f story ~f. a quest for the foundafor the key to th
PI
. OPPOSition, the story of a quest
wo~ld. ~rom far e o~.f.P ;~~tton a~d the rcorga~isation ~f the
which. m its turn
entel s a new period of hIstory
.
fart, and here he .isseems
faced to prom'IS~ peapJe but httle
comwhose threshold h t fi
by. that bitter school of life over
Man analyses t~ a ~s.t heSItates to step.
beating fUriously ~:~;r~~ of the epoch and, his own heart
f e pulse of the fevered world.
. He gains kno~led
discovers himself as !~l~ the world. He discovers it. He
ch~riot.
Pfi1e~
0: ~tself
(Romain Rolland).
YVe do not "wallow" in suffering and disillusion
but arc
'
for
d
proud of ovcrcomin9 them. We are full of a mlratlon.
the heroism uf thClught and soul which overcomes dualism,
doubts and hesitations' h0wevcr hard this may be.ulan
Andd we
re f eel compassion for the experiences of a great so
Joice in its rebirth.
" risonn
Let us then set wide the heavy doors of the ~
world". take (:lUI' brcwell of the infinitely high blue eave .
199
198
o~ly ing~i~~
Juggernaut~,
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to v...":V
Giora~no
'(le
r~n.
hunt 15 up.
-11 pI OYC
,?
the "Ichm
Wht WI I t be 11 Ie to distin- 1:,1 the II fte l" n_
Will J- 1m e
L 'tine!. t'1(~ n~SKs of br~.'''';;'n
"our .... ~
,load hangmc~ '?""
beauty and Plur !y thai 1i tr lC cncmL re detked out in
W"n Ham ct sec
1
tIcs of I valty
h
the golden m~n
d h tt'ly mdi s r 1C C:/ut .~e s. nm 0
Will C;lau~lus an
alrnc!!y perc .. nf,'! t)- ligr.: Qf Itt.
reason, lIl~pn50ned r 1P( re it is ~.., late W 11 lIS .,. mmll
and rcbclltously 1st.
h
"n " 01 hL oo:",~~ nts: L..._~er
succeed in discovc 101:,. t e l
'l:
thoughts?"
bl deli ~ lt~)V an~ cunmngly to
W"n ClaudtuS prove a e
1.
1 "m 1..:;::
~ th futul e in ~:-a, pers,",~, " ! l l ! , e~ 1 t 1e
deceIve
e
f human u. 1 19 la' c
thousand! a f ye'us
human conscience,.
-I
~f'" Ie
0- .
verything here S
II 19 t", ~'.-, k
E~,
iIt.~ve
Reaction s pr=":.lrng
_ -I' ' . .
: ... 1.._
This criti,. 11 epoch h::.' pr~, a
" enh
r.. mr ~
Hanlet is encirclt :l ("'lOOp Y s of
~
. ~._h
.. -: .
traps ll:Jo ~ d'~' ,r- eyes 1110
, .,
sl :uned to l i uttcrn 1 t
,
Maliciou.... irol11
C~Wl - c: .. :'" ,
eyes, eye, -f powe~h
k ~-t trc
J .w'
,hosphore ~n4'e 1 c
f'icnds and exp("l _n"} [u....
th ... _" fl."" _ ~
.e
The st uggl(' is " l! ~ 't l tl '~
refined than th'" ba-I-' \ 1(' e ~
.ow
er
The pponents d't: t _rr Sl _
the . n" r 1. 'ow m
"
fylo.1"I
In noble pndt. now
1
,.
')w s"...
Tl._
~
nnt
h 1.: V I~
the str 1igh t- }(lL C t e n~ .. l'"
S n_
now .l: sinn(rs >cck ng 1 Sl l .
, ___ 'g
"
Pletons,
Evc''Ytn.1 K l~ .... ,101'11 19. \' rvc. _ .,.'"
__ ,! e '" p. n:1L - :---,,0
.. , r.
OliS
r.,
--
dE..
"1, "'.
It is)
iq'
111( Wl:b c
nt
on
t"t'OI
"
l(
slJrren,.y
1
tiO'l here
~ on~ , er -t;,..t~nc ev
I" t r. no
""h:o.. 1 --.'c 19 3!. ste,:'
tk,I nl ep Ibc
It 1 ,
"' cn
ntlv,
.J
bu ' 'y'"
eye \'Iv 4.._ ' P
. t . , _mesS, k 1P " :--' -V S 1!cima
bOlior- " gimlets, l'1, h' rc v.; II 1..nct.
wit't lr ... - 01.( ry V
. "9
-"
t.
c:
v'u t ..,n .
.)1
'
.
ears
forward like the Juggernaut car 0 f hIstory.
crushing
jaile~
and captives alike.
But the victory goes to the C.1ptivc~.
Like a burning torch, lighting the gloom of a tragic life
Hamlet. eternally young and eternally alive, passes beyond
the borders of his own existence as a lasting reminder to all
,
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GRIGORI
KOZINTSEV
KING LEAR
THE STORM"
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-X).;l. ,nvJ!; . al sc. n to be c
..:onv n~n'J,
f..
,e.ldc~~ Ih. t they . -:- am c:11y cert.; In 1 -_~t! of th work
...
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.... L.
.
.
"--...... '0.,. , : C
. ~e 'I'V" . 'C fin.:! stra I a
~. s ra I of v T n(.'IIT i,p t
_:1~"Yo
mgs ap
~
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.
and peculiar to that p ay a one
sholwl.n~b' I sets took on shape as the I)oeti< d( ve OPfllPnt
nVISI e d t f
v'~-d 11
went along. They were compose n
C~nVd\ ~
.
aint but of words. Sinc~ ltV only appe l re tn t t: magma
~.
. ' bl. pictu e w
able to e y ' 'nd lj )oI1( r
han, these lOVISl C .
I
t If' fanta
of the tho! re to infinity to transl rn- t
to I I I
ca1. to merge nature with the t:: ,r on: " ne
The v s::.' buill t'le s
It had :!- lite' 'lp. aur'itor nl t 11 specta!' . ne_:" S
'.he ~l1th,.,r w. u'd inb r1" Jpt t'lf
Y lOd l<k th
) ~ '1P If' erstan 'n
mal. me ~l L''1 t W's l:. ~""'1 I
,'0 A n
..lrthe de" orIfl' nt f t'1f 11 t, n T It: luI ~
. f
n
~ - 1d lnc _,1
11 to
lU\.-iel"} "> to Imaglf'e 01 "'9 (,;. .
of L.c I)hy
,.-rnllonal charact( r n.,t rc 1 "'-t:i 0 th sal j ~
": 01 He
..1'
'n ~ n Ir"")' r CV' .. 1C
would addles. t hc c! j!'l(
"1":C
.... :; usuallv nown l! { '1< 11 r I:'rolO '. I ',' In .Jnn
lln!=lY'lI ... rJmpC'.
Slmple~.
'rm 01 t 01V L"
.' t..
'1 0 Kmg -[U" ,
of handling the df" C1' pi on f t ~h~N 1~ t.fr f il _, .1(
murder r he "rpe ...rmr I, f If' \ . . . ',"
nv~ "lor
d'
'c"r~O'"
background wa~ skt::i. l.f' III '~C"d ~he- c Id ,.,f
1'.ht.
I-n"e V f ~ n the 1"" f.
the charactcr~ t wm .,"> dt'" (,; 1P
the blast of win(1 Alh \.; ~'cw}
lA
s .:lid r:
.~:tJ.
c n2 ked th the no'
W:!
I. ,,1;
-I
~ c. 1te lOn
1
eSllhli! h tlIflI :\rd ~la("c t-ut d 0 he P!C
_~ ou of n"
, onal tc"t.; .... f
scene 11~' t\!u the
,1al \.; ).
Klr
L.C:l1
.:t . 11;
Y
I . \. iO
n W " ~ f>.l. 1. hn~',a~
Ullt.... He
. '
plav. 11(' pll r ....f lal re
W. :< '
th th~ t nuti( .~, I.J
mrtiC-. we ' C' I .... ~,,::ncl.. .:l pot on "\; \
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206
Pl.I'
0;;;
_.
1S t'lC SL r 11.
collate t he time
sequence 0 f tL'h
vanous
scenes. Ccrt
suggest that thc action is taking place 800 YCillS ~n n,,11es
thc titles of Count, Duke and Lord transport liS t C. ~I.i!
another epoch. Oaths by Apollo and by Juno do notO .qt:;,1
with thc rank of captain or with the herald who su tie lip
the knight to single combat.
mIne
Each feature is sepa.rated from its neighbours by whe!
ages; any attempt to umte them leads to a confusion of centu.
ries and of (.ustoms. However, all these arc mere outs'd
references; it is enough to look into the essence of Whatl :
happening and thc outlines of the age immediately begin ;'
take shape. The chief figures arc already set out on the chcss~
board.
"1 thought the King had more affected the Duke of Albany
than the Duke of Cornwall." say? the Earl of Kent to the Earl
of Gloucester.
The King, the rival dukes with their followings of COuri'
ers, the united state which is on the point of falling apart
again. Beyond the walls of the King's palace we are given a
glimpse of the scenery: wild heath and povertY-Sl'ickpn
villages, stone towers upon high hills. The castle rules avc)
the less firmly fortified strongholds of the feudal brigands:
all around is waste; rotting, straw thatches, poor hovels, thc
gallows and the wheel '01' quar:ering are somehow essenti. I
details of the landscape.
The people who have gathered at the Court are uneasy
Gloucester's bastard son Edmund is debarred by Jaw from
any hope of the inheritance; the entailed family property will
accrue by right of primogeniture to the elder son Edgar, The
younger brother has been away for nine years. He has
returned full of envy and malice: his aim is to ruin the le~al
heir and to step into the shoes of his fathel', who inspires hIm
with nothing but contempt.
The Duke of Cornwall had secret plans to do away with
the Duke of Albany, fearing his advancement. From the conversation between Gloucester and Kent it is clear that the
King likes Albany better than Cornwall the feud which w'll
eventually le:td to war between the du\e" is 11ready matUling.
. Of the three hr.!.) to the throne, two' '{egan and GOllenl
.late the third, thel] younger sister Cordelia. They lrc Jolou'S
of the King's tavour '.e .~aughter and irC af I ::tiL alone; aBol l!'r'
thf"Y <Ire rivals in the 1ivislOn 01 .11" inhe ~it, nec.
of
,
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w'"
Sho
ZOo
.'
-.
f
;~v:.rs'
C~;delia
Franc~
by
andAmilk
Bur~undy.
..
neW of
gl'ouplng
<;>f pohtlcal powers depends on the match.
Even before the KIng has pronounced his doom, all these
,
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Sho
aJl~
ord~
n1.:~l.
'~ly
ange,~c.
~.r"cd, ~hen
~auqht'
U'
a satlrlca
and precise nature, th ere IS
whkh ~"C
Tol
stoi habitually employed. I~ the same way he .ridicules the
church service in ResurrecllOJI and the opera In Waz- and
Peace:
t
I
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..
III
"On the stage there were level boards in the middle and
on each side stood painted pictures representing trees.
Behind was a sheet of canvas on boards. In the centre of the
stage were seated maidens in red bodices and white skirts.
One. very fat. in a ""hite silk dress, was sitting apart on a
low bench to the back of which was stuck a sheet of green
cardboard. They were all Singing something. When they had
finished their song the maiden in white went up to the
prompter's box, and there a man came up to hcr in tight
silk pantaloons on his fat legs, all bcfcathered and bedag.
gered, and began to sing and to wave his arms about."
The satirical purpose is obvious and the thought is
expressed clearly: only in a society of parasites could such art
be thought necessary to people, in actual fact it is not even art
but a kind of nonsensical spectacle. The key to the technique
by which Tolstoi parodies everything that happens on the
stage is this: he carefully catalogues the materials of which
the costumes and decorations are made, the appearance and
the gestures of the actors. The only thing he leavcs out of
account is the music. Yet this is the very foundation of this
branch of art from which cverything derives life and mean
1I1g.
AU that was necessary for him was to block his cars and
the Singers and dancers were at once transformed into costumed idlers, stupidly opening and shutting their mouths,
waving their arms about for no known reason and senselessly
shifting from one leg to the other. Art had vanishcd and all
that was left was painted cardboard, a stout "maiden", a man
in a silly hat with a feather, and the prompter's box.
Tolstoi did just the same thing in paraphrasing King Lear,
In the language of an inventory he told ovcr all the metaphors and hyperboles, retaining the while the imperturbable accents of protocol, particulal'1y unsuited to Shakespearean vehemence. Having given a detailed account of the
facts of the action, he missed out everything which makes
sense of the scene, apparently not having noticcd the inn~r
thread of development. nor haVing wished to hear the poetic
210
1
the thoughts and feelings d the people
~ub tcXt. )n( ~o d outside the ,,,"'pc d (:lC paraphrd~e and
involved rcmla;~c "c wor,is .md c-:,...:nlc:. The w~;ds of p~etry,
all that WdS e ~ t l 'neir sense and the eve.nt became a
, hi
.C-t
llrose lO'l,
rcto l d til
.
nd;1.n improba c onc at Uld.
1 0 ceu
triVia
. ' rence,
who ,)J.ad ,an C"ltcePent undentan dmg 0 f mu,
s c,
The wnler,
dc~1 in ""rdC'!- to p!";":e that art, ....~en empty
rctcnded t~ ~~
W3" not necessary to pecr!c, In tht,
~f cthicorc1!910Us .\ ~~:~ deVl'.:lJn t.) this idea. Tolst-.:l C.:Imperiod of hIS p~~SI
ehy to Cl ploughman who had deCIded
pared a man wntl~g P~ng steps ,15 he b!l;:.wed the plough
to cxecu~c fancy w~~cr com,lderect ?C,.try nothin9 but l.mmC'rAt this time the . . the
int 2 view f-:-C!ll w'hKh he
a1 indulgcnce, ThIS IS
. : : no place for poetry 111 hiS
told King Lear. There :t'to ' affc~~\t1cm d a bnt.:cr
rC
All
that
l'cmalnen
were
_
account.
trying to plou~h, r
.'", daughtr; s l.2ve fo:, her Llth.l w~
The expressIon o. cal:_.
.
e 2f the inheritance' to
not intended
deClde the ::x;c::u~ot sparing :~ t::Xpl~to?,
allotted to her .. Sh~kes~ t the dh"isio!'! i.;; lb.'~1.dy fi.~,sh~d
detail to make It c e~r befol~ the begL"'!!!!..":; of t~~ .lo... c:m~
and done with some hme
;tL the ~c:.I't>~':-S :5 L'le fina.
.
The ~~ne
.. K L
-I
~!l thel!'
court occaSion,
.W,.:l t up ""L"I
"
~'
.. _
Gloucester, havmg xr.e .. "h,"'in the dlYbJOf'!
ceremon Y.
V - ElV ." "lm
-h.i
way to attend the c:remo~\ ' ~ . :~ 's~' weig~c.i tb,l~ C!JnCSh,
to
f Albanv,
And V~Il: our PIll less lL)VJ'llg ~o;ifJ to pubiish strife
We l;al1e tlli!: ll~ur a C(:ZT~:wcrs, tJwt future
Our daughters st.' per
May be prevented nllW .. '
.
".
. Olit
son 0
]11
,
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....
Ir
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of
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011
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....
of
oil
II<
...-.-.
1ft
-'1 y.
each of them should tell him how she loved him and fi
comparison to express her love. The eldest said that n\a
loved her father as much as the most delicious of sSe
,,
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In.
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....
..va'
....
....
ot
M,
.tu
hoc
01~
hl~ s~ubY
dU~h~Otw~C~dc/
;h:omJ~~~'
n~~t
I~~~
~~ili~~::Oft
s~:
~~~t:~d
~~~~
K~~~r
fr~~
d h r and he fcal s a
5 C
offerc
c,
"
,_
unne l
far away., d f psychological Jush ca
but even con!ra
This km 0 eare--not only unnecess~ry tv Dar lying of
sary to
was nt
theil ouI! 1'1
dietory to I.
ht only of the sa va 10
ed toc
~e
kings who t,hO~9
tht:: old therne has cha~g hp\r-: be"-:'Il ~
Shakespeare sIcard bF'p.n dividt.'i bptw~en I
kingdom has a rea y
.
f- 'e elld, but
he "love test" bega~
. t m to the tradil .,~ c
~
" 'tsclf IS ;1 le u
. ru 1( ant
Tht: "teSt 1
1
d a cifferent 519
-~e central
'.
new p aCt; an
f
':1 comes
wor loman
f t f" younr
it is wen a
- d a of the
uc
""'he answ- 0
W
h
T e e 1 11
ditional theml.
1- '1'1lel::
__
meanmg 0 tl. . tra ffr V 01 Monrn uth L, n l. lighl
c
t
dau~ht fro!'1 Ge~,
crve
:; inte~pr(. a
Sh~~~S%oncePtion-he
~1V:nof
de
_J
t
t
I
t
,
f
.
~
t,
w
of
K.
G,
0.1
inc
of
st,
M(
...
..
stu
bot
val
"'01
$h.
(
h
country t e
~ ~ but t-.,,:... :ll: featu
~s ~ ano t1..'IeTl a9'
the age ".f S~akedP~c..
play are mi ged with the ~. lIS
(the one mdIcate tn
thf'
time.
d h' shi ft of time anCl ;cen ?
tl"d
show up conteml 1'<1 v l"-'
o WI I<.'~ea
contrast.
~1... \1 h_ 0 of onq 19 . . r us he u
The story "It ~ nlY c t' .. diftf . 11 ,UJ.lI'V .
,'bee!
111.;
th
~ y"
ac1.in a n( w 19C an rI 1 " , (."
. 'n\'ol\'cl
lf!
. ' . 'atln(e
became In 1m ~ll.. ~ , ]ti."''1~
d' fers from all
and oppos~'d ~"' tIl" r t~ of 11. 13t ll_~ Lear bt thosf>: who
In r.:: tall"1 ......1 ~<l i - t lpart. not . ~.:~ Ing
t.ho~ e ah,ut :tIm. it s s
I
216
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val
woo
A troop of
h~rse
!')Cl~~e ....
V."11 1
Cj
l',
these featurC:111
b
~l ~ru1' !N:' 1
,1world, ~hcn we lo~e 0.: .;'. c!d:_ ,:' . . . 4 &e 1]
Lear h~s understood th
f' tl"""
am d \. 1.:. .: ,)1. 5
rules the world, bUl o,)"~\ hlr=.
!
'J.
~"'i
his own forner "ulf' w,u . ..
.. I.. ,:1 ~ r
\.:.
cn -th
In the WOS1 t :1CH
1 - />I!. W'- 1 h_ hi~~e ';J
abstract idea )f powe l , u. '- ey... er , t IJ'I to '"
.. 1
formerly \..":el~e-:- Now, !U( lI; rble du:e d
unreasonablC,rlm n ...
1" 'atioo~\. ps of
)~ e
m~sery . reflect ~he ci\car reign
L
t', 0" ~.'.n
misery I' the _)ul
1 ."" f"
,t
j. c~ of
.
dy lies not only
.
l.
'" hcl~
I '-' I
h
e
T c hilge
i ut U"lglll- 11
'.lO li\c.J
daughters havt:: tenl.
I..
L "'... l:l\!.1l on s...
re .c
tL - I . "
d 0 001 S. lor.. .. t'
his rOYill ll'<1 I C; t y I' cen. teO'
t rr")r:11
only b~ VII' U
power st,ong
, hI
_
II lad ~n
tive onl,r a t'1(" w"ro. 0
m t1:'" Klf'
I
.l.'n s
True fe 3.1
1. h
_0;;
1. i iipp.l: In( \,; c.
on1v. the ext
ior 01 pc pli..'
J fo' hi, 1. '"'"hi.
.
h'
h
and .._ .. ttl n lp
h c
I) 01. at.;
1... ,x,- uS!On
A Lli _ lit ... 'l,\;'"
-"1 .':d ... n hi! 11In"",, tv
1 r
1. ttle w,""r10. ha d eel
~ \""1.,'
sb
\-or ..
,;1
dd
'L
'/~
took f:ho~g~t
had
~c~scd
to
mil'~or
~s
life
,it was
~?d
he
p~c It l
knowlcd;su~
,
,
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Me
boc
q)
_01
Kin~
~o
~'lr
happiest
day - t Ila. t swcetmc
He answers
~s
::ld tine
C~;lt" _
arc morc
n:
1:
fact t.hat ~hc hero docs not. ~nly com~ to know reality but
t
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,t
...
..
....
Ir
of
It.
G.
011
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II<
MADAME GREED
l leI ord
::;.<;
"J
O:rh'
.
'.,"
".
of
""'.'
.....
..
....
....
of
1('
cuth.
~!l11 re
r.
t
.ildar..
t (rc
-.
p.
;- ... & n!..*l y m
Grec_ 'lac' c. lptcd 1tL."1 U'
lr -:, c
:l d 5
Jrn:i to p ~
en Y met w t~ nagL
wer...
'!ads
for
1
1.
-:It
Ii" _
I.e
C. 1'" L f L~,
C
I"' II rc
I top~'.J
tlng one'
'f't.. e
1L
flAM I.E
"i,Jt'lcI,, 1m
.
V /{ 1/1111
IS/
'or
M"y"l~
'aWl I V wm
t<:.v
19
r (J II
T 'rc A,f()5
I)'C
II
~l
t
t
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)
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01
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C.
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...
........
.....
......
ot
K,
bo<
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,ur
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b
of
K
G.
ot
'no
...
'"'
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...
01
M'
otu
bo<
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woe
tr...
...
i!( ('
'J
(m th
yf,.~fi
r. C
I X, h
_riG. t\
ti-:~ In
D 3.r.:;
",
N. lltk.
pp
v
rtL c
n
l( King W'lS U lfec .... gnt. 0.1 bl c. cve
.
~t
r.;;
11
<:""'d
e :1 k ng. ic \.. rcn \ . . . J
thc 1:001 LId hill.
k W:~ III th n9 bUI Lc s S.lal oW <
1,;
,...
r ... Jtre
')
,Mge! needed the stolen robe. for in any case he Would ~no
..... It again. He was ,,,.. ring the end of his journey N or
be DO lODge! said that he was different from others he
wille to uda. stand the,t he, like all the rest. was but a men
This was the end of his long road.
The ,..,.al of the story was that. in order to find out the
true wotth of things. it is necessary to discover ordinary
h:
lIfIe.
to lind out all those things which had formerly
"-
lau ll .
- Cordelia show I
in
IONn.., , "
...
my frame 01 nature
farm,
.0
For/ilting lood to tf
Filial ingratitude is the ,",At
time, the
And so. for the
duced into the
Now Lear
precious
and of fine
yet to Jearn
The King in
he ceme
to
was fOICIId
).
J'i:'".t
And then, before the King, .who has. touched on the lowest
rung of lifc's ladd~r, there anses ~he Im~ge of another kind
of injustice. Deprived of everytlllng, famt f~'om weariness
and despair, he at first feels the hardness of hIS lot to be the
same now as that of a great. many ot~er people who have
been through the same expenence of life as that which he
himself is now undergoing.
From his own particular problems Lear's thought passes
to the objective and general.
The eyes of Lear come to rest on the Fool. Now his jester
is no longer an amusing toy but a man in no way different
from himself, the King, feeling as he feels. Lear has under
stood the measure of the other's suffering.
When Kent suggests that the company should seek shelter
from the weather in the hovel, the King sends the Fool in
before him.
,,
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or
It,
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01.
In.
or
IU
II,
stu
....
..
...
bo<
vol
w..
e
I
d handy-dandy whICh s t
. thine ear; change p aces; an ,
In
'ustiee, which is the t h'l"
Ie .
._
J The thief and the justice are not to be ~Ol i a~.... f
n
A cur breaks from his c~ain a'1d fhngs h~~~. ~r)on l~!
ill-clad man. tries to bite him as a beggar
I P
, I L - sees .;( cur as a syml 0 .
from the fierce amma. ca.
"h
ht( heh~ i the
'There" he says to Gloucester t au ml~fc .'
,
f
h't
dog's evedl0 IJ .t:
:treat image 0 aut 01'1 y; a.
d'
r' r 11" "W ~ive
The word "law" is part:lCU._ ly eccp IV .
dd.drcsse~ its administ -tOl
dv
han"
t
t
I
t
.
..,
..
II
23Z
ms
I'
,t
notice.
, m'~ t~ ; , ,:-\f\I'rh;~l..::cd
h"JITl""""\
'~ ..... ,
I ~
1
At thls poinl. m..:n "J:"tI ~,. 't:le
, "~': l ",:'~.~ '~";"n .:'~ in,iiddua
. t~, ....,h."
a!; a unity. The .:xrl.!n,n~~ ":",. . Il';
. ...
sorrow with the sC'r:' ow 01 ;.nlLl,(,:l.S~i~ h.J.~ "Cl':) life ;1' it I'c.111,
", 1,
c1 VI- 1",'
m:l.n.
233
,
t
t
I
t
,
t
.
~
tv.
.,
It
ot
K
G.
0'.
in,
ot
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..
....
to<
box
val
Sbo
,34
,-f.
'0.1.-1
,,;'w
peol lj
Hi 1( t:
c>
."
th'
What was the reason for thiS reIgn of asses ears? Greed-
I
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.
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01
K
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01
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01
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....
m.
be<
-so.
. .I
order.
In the sixteenth century the number of books devoted to
the glorification of Folly increased. Old Mother Folly herself
mounted the rostrum and announced for all to hear: "Folly
makes the state, is the prop of power, religion, government
and justice. And what, indeed, is all the life of man, if it is
not a prank of Folly?" This was Erasmus of Rol.crdams
III Praise of FolIy-a book of militant humanism. The thought
was pronounced openly. It was shown most convincingly 'lat
the contemporary social structure only existed because ~e
majority of people were fools incapable of I ercciving Ie
essence of state institutions, the very foundations 01 wh t.,
nade a mockery of common sense. In as much 3S all LiS
.:ontinued to exist it must mean that ''''e world w~ s 1"llled by
lolly.
Rabe1ais wrote: "The World is vilelv abused.
. We SI'I; ~
our Souls to keep to the Theologues,' who fOI Lhe gre:1ter
-art are Hereticks: Our Bodies we comrrit to the Physicians,
who 'lever themselves take any Physick; And lhen we n
tnst our Goods to Lawyers, who nevet q( to T lW :1gain! t
anI" mother'
Folly and madness lcse ire _he loundJI ens of ocic'v
. d oes w~lK 3houl th:o ol'b IiI e the )u~
-r"'l"- V 511',
shncs eve yw\zlc say' the jes, . 11 Twcll~1J 'Vioht
Unaer 'le sun of {ollv everythlOg
grow1ng Isid( ou:
A"h
~I
."
.,
e w..)r.1, 0] t~e tInt" ~e;lg, is w31k lL drounU 0':1 5
lap ~ hC3C _ownwud. n King Lear th S IS th'" theme t the
~ ' h
..
_. s _ng, ] ~ i.!plct::. are :1 p_:'lliar corn c echo 01 th"
L a -) pu: 1] of he LXVr S )nnet
Th he - lC~!S _:c ~.lT fro." em~-i <= play of DetTY nonsen
c trcn...-l of inl - puns and wittiL. me; introdUt ~d 10
II
I stumbled whpFI I
(!lW
pI qzw wh w: 11 ,;w:::.
.
h
lUJ'ltarU" lI'CV tl 'C n , ~
MadlT"t.n rul'" "nd t'l.e :;! W 0 ~ 01 50cie ty r 1
~ iI lin
bI" d 't th
llJ to ce: 11": ITHU n~w,
, pll:P 1111
10 1
tV
d
1(0"1,; Wh .... l S
b ,c.,fi mpr' by r l'rr d pal h
rnOl 11 tv nd rir t-t arl,;
t 1ere cx~ct'y nd ID v.l.c. ',W
wn
"
"
ucc
uo
'1own Il!>1 d (' ... ut dll
n }- j.;.,;tUo.I1I,)nc "11 ana
rl-I,;: C"ll
t h...... \I;.::tu ne
"
t"f I "'II 1 WI ~
l lP tl1np'
>
I\"')1 P
I
In
t
1T'<:1I 11 .
nuth
s,
ct
n
C ldi.1 o...al
A'nda
~p
ot"-nC'.
p~ t!'~ 1 ~ Il'Y t ' the Dent!' r,..
f the tr ~~cif l~
on
1 tl.,.. ~ 1.
n wI-! c' t~ lC~ n
l-_ U
ace of
ing the worst place for a man. Behind the bolts and bars
man is no less deprived of liberty than in his everyday life
wh?r~ t~e lib~rt~ of his existence is, seeming ~nd the l'eig~
of Injustice wIll m any case fettcr Ius best aspIrations, feel-
,
I
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val
W01
Sho
'40
'lfAMLET'
,9 8 I 0
Sloetdl 11
ll~.
I
, Va ~ ltallgO T' Il tl', 1l,fosc
AI "51 IS{lC Ral' . }i,.1
I(./(
III
11
, .,
llle
The st~gc life of the Fool ~nds in the third act. 11.~ dis..1p
pears without trace, and neIther his final w ds 101 le
,,
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1
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.,"
w
of
K
c.
0'
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of
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SIN
lines of the other characters give any clu(' as tl '1r rt. ::011
for the disappearance of Of'''' of Ie .-hid '1al letc' n tht:
middle of the play
Besides the unusual ndinb, 0' the n~: there i. 1OO:1er
str lUge t.hing about the dl \'c1opmcnt of ....If' 1m ... ~ w' .'1
ha!s o.)tten lttr lL ~~ the in"c e t f I. "11 lal). r :! Fo 1 :md
Cordelia nCVf'l meel. T"lesc rgurc'S ire in so_r. nyv_~nl':
Yo' iY interd~ penden,
)0 sooner dope (.01 ~
di..- ..r
,.,
lhc 1"1 (.)} ipnCar It I! nough fOI COl ~ ..I .) re .lrn ). U....
Fool ., Jisal pr'lr
51 mp. Si,;):',-H<:.. S h -vc pToduce.-l mal. 1- to
~ 'L .. t 1.e
wo PQr~~ rn: y h.lVo! 1 een p'_ycd b}' on and L"lf> ...::'!.~ (...J.J_
A. pncti(.;ll comp1k3tion W 5 C'ub<tih;,,'-''.l 0: o.lii
:llC'K-
,-.1
:) Cd rv COl v
x -lanC1tion
I.. Ll(
The
11
":l~ ~
~u Ir
V'')('"
f.
1.
,u"n_
(J,
~d
41
The adjective had fallen away from the man, the eOlllnar SOli
had lost all meaning.
In this are the reasons why the Fool 1Il110t nlLet Cord r
Thc Fool's cap cannot be clapped on the head "f thc Q C H.
of France. The father and daughter who havc Coli last r U~~Tl
.:ovcred onc another ha\'e no par' in the guild of fOOls. t:: IS
f
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val
....
Sba
Madness ,..,as the ne~t step from. Folly. ~ht.: Fool's c.:luplch
were always on the bnnk of detcl"loratmg mto the muttet'm
of madness. In those days not only fools but madme'l to~
were a form of amusement. Men of fashion enjoyed 'xpe:litions to the lunatic asylum; they would go there -"is if to tne
theatre to have a good laugh at the grimaces of the mel
tally ill.
Clowns and madmen were outcasts. They were not even
regarded as human beings. They had no place in societv.
They were outside life. They could earn thell living oni y
by transforming folly into an entertaining kind of
disease
The inhabitants of Bedlam lived by begging, t :lmping
the roads and trading on their madness. They wc-,.; t le mOSl
miscrable of all the beggars. A man could fall no lower~ot only were these people stripped of all rgJ ts. bUI ~
reason too .
The heIr 0 1 the house of Glouce"ter take' un I../"'e .... U."N~l:l
':~m of such C:l man. In the pc.:._ t of Edgar. the ,,~reme) l
~11C I:luman ..:ondition meet in one perse n ~ 1 lC r:ll.h mara 15
tU:::lr.d mto oJ beggar, the courtier int('l (:l t ....m
r,~ I . ~nsfor-:nation is effected before o~r vc 'Y c Veo W h
~:~onu hmg !..pced. The case with wh ch lIS c'1angf'
n
(""';..:! eXl:,tcnc.:: to another is effected '5 thr- cs' ennal
"nt(.ll
of"Tthe SC1P.
1 fl" h I '
.
I....:l.
Ig t. t l~ enougJ- til l'
th~ ex "IenSlV
q-~ "11~nt, (I ~l1tV the fal'e, tc ruffle lhcd cf l11v
r
<'!d
1al. lilt!.. l.:ngles and In th
h
tan":s a half-W'tt d'
1 P~ lce OJ 1.C cou t d~l1u.y t e
Poo' tom has 1 C . ragbamU'ln Edgd
~,c.: 'pcJ.rc.
come mto eing
Ai alw ':J With Sh 1 ~p ,
-d
uJ '
<--.- cal ~ ..... mdg~
!':.
""""lan" r - I ~:l
. rr ti- :gmtkant . S ~I t'
'
t ex,
_.J. lC"'l 0 th"_ m_ 1
,",u'P
!Sex.
t v.-
"I F0
:>
ill d len I e
E1gd
''1c
...."'(OW
,
\..I'C
0PT'OSI C
'"
\. ..
,POD
~.
t 1
"ne5
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Helc he 's'
l11Q I.
T::-qc~'ler
Sh'>',pe ltC, I 00, 1, .'.5
II mal 11
t'"-IS
deml wu'l
i t Lell
h
.... ~"
.... cJ,.... Y,J, .0 wThorn ~'1f;;; hum_,ll ts ,~d .mg s .... ch 1~ pm:':
...
... ' . prus.e
....... h
b
(. v~;, ::l('W wo~'ds ~ , . t.: l~. o~, 0 wur n ird( c t a
~ rel t : c in' :u.;.. l' ures ... f Lrecc~ -I
R -c fr ~
'.
e 1..I:"\n~.w
l. k
'... c c-ngl ....
C li . \ > ' "
' i . e Wl0
10W~
"
V 10 ....r.n
"
t
wh
e ~ L... ltt".:ne:l _ th \:: mtu t l( cpL s o.
cal.,
PI oJ ~. M,ran"' 1 e m ..'~ f thc ~ph~
.
.... ~nwr'
\.."
"-~e" p ncqyr c tu 11f"l
h' "
01 the beggar. more than this? Consider him well. Thou owest
"Is man no s'lk thc beast no hide, the sheep no wool. the
the worm nfo I 'Hal here's thlee on's are sophistiClted!
t no per Ulne.
.
"
ca
th thing itself .. ,
,
tripped of all his "lendings", of all that IS
Thou art e
S
5u,ch is' .man
natural,
inalienable property. M oney, croo kedl y
not hiS own
fine facade it hides the essence of man
. d. creates da 'lk All this" seemmg comc1
15 nc..hmg
game
mess
n
under vc1:et :t GS~ld' can buy thc law which protects this
but ~ gal m~ ~!;, soldiers and exec~tio~ers protect t~c nch
sccmlng. Ju g I thing which distmgulshes one of he ew
garmcnt, thc, o~ Y
Ie
from the maJ~l'lty ~f ~~~~ti~n and gratitude all the.:: belong
Th' . the pnce of <he
Love and lespec ,
'n
but
to
the
garm~nt.
IS IS
not tu t h c 11M ,
garment.
11 v luc an ehe IS c)unte
has lny
~
f 'cople hell
O nly the :Ioti'ing
. b
ht the aopeal anwe 0
fe ~ fverylHng IS oug,
hilo' oph( s 'lave th ught up
. ne s for money , 1~ g' eatnc". 0 f l .I::: g<u,"
......... ' nt
W'"
3, 11... ~'
10C Jr.
IT'llk(' ul1
'Ull
'In
The storm has torn the King's robc fro111 his should
and he has become th~ sam~ as . all other men. And :h~
majority of them are lIke thiS bemg who has Just appcarc e
before Lear-Poor Tom o' Bedlam.
d
poor. bare. forkt animal-here was what the reign f
Madame Greed had made of the \'cry concept of man
0
Metaphors involving clothes and the naked body
.e
common in this play. In the way they arc contrasted
possible to catch an echo of the medieval debates bet 1 IS
naked Truth and velvet-mantled Vice. But that is onfcen
distant echo. A tragedy is not a morality play. Shakcspc~.~'~
metaphors do not express an argument between fixed con
c~pts b ut a ~~ dd en and complctc changc of condition, a
\'Iolent tranSltton from onc statc to anothcr The
t'f f
h'
h
. . '
mo I
C angmg clot cs-very frequent In thiS play-is important not
only for the stor~ but also as an expression of the instability
'
of the characters constantly changing worldly for~unc
T~e storm has br~ken into the littlc world of man. It roal'
unhmdered
o\,er thiS
TL-14 Chaos
I
t
1
: now
' undefended exp.nsc. n na u~c 'ccomes one with the chaos in Lcal S thoughts 11
oses hiS rc~son, The rhythm of the storm "cnct ate) . ttli"
JulWlrd aCh.on. and thc train of thought, and the develC"'n.
?I cnt o! feelIng. The whirlwind sets evcrything In IS see
In 'notlon'
.. nc
. '. ro aI'S th roug h.ItS cvcry part.. It we I b- h-':l
\th\'h,odle of worl? lite"lturc anoth!,,1
u
. e 11' act of K1llg Lear
Evcrythng in this at
.
de"ree These co 1 C IS tense to an almo, t unbcar INe
~gon:seL! by ~h~ r~ne a~~er~ken by, the storm rc nc~ on!y
stolm!, arc "Iging no 1 t c.. colld, In cach of them spir 111 I
Iboul ""
F
ess \ 10 cntly thm
'1'''c c en -t'"
"In or on the hc th
h
- .
;:lC t'C :5 3c,u~dy a bush: ,were for many ..,ite
roun
i )gC'thcr whom life has
or shcltcr, only those II e met
nrpe Here ,Jt arc (ug/ ast oU and deprived of namc an'
In the5c ... cne', ~~1 ~~;e~ un cr s~nl ,"n, e of death.
tU':'":1rd 'n< de oul n ,\..
. elaLonshl],s betwecn pc . ple 11
b. cfere. The OUfdwed
. 0 :l1ng
Ed IS as it s eCIl!, noth ing s as
Wa
-na~kc..: finu'
f ,'"
,gar meets the' x led 'I( nt bOI\.
~ 0 ~'::l1val C
d
,.1CS ":1 sa"1:;: r,....
h .
on emned to dC<.l.i') GIOll('es .. r
' I ,~"'. F...;th'....... ! W.O,
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n
.
cr .11S tr "I!'og .
e ,~' - lr. as tho h h
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ricnci;! Pf'1k. '
1". J. ... n bl
ug t ey lal! .,
r'
cI
a ~ f' "7. ...n A ~nadm~n : '~ ',.. TTle
IS -" t ,mad, ~ n ,-nd 1 '-'01 "I,~l. :::.. 1--hl1os, phy With ~ p: - lei14 S ihe c: :'IU'TIenl. JS h .. ...: I
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"
be
te11.ll,
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b,-'
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th:'beke.spcarc Saw not only thE' eVI: 01 the old w('r1d, but
stlal aspect of the new. He knew that tilt n'edaJ ,.olJ1cd
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con~~ "1
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t..ltir~ly,
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p.1,; 're.:f 11' t tr .........om..
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the only
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Gloucester:
I I e 1/0 way, and therefore waul
110
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or
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st
the
J.W t at t C ..wer o. _rs 5 U..U
a9.110
. h
.
bmit t- the l1Y er
sU The starn ngcs no
nli 0\'
1f> 1It..:- II'
I cd d
Gl uccster, .lU over tLII angry one f I.e~: Ihc c! n:~nt .. f JII
o t hC',o-on
wi:.' th(' r,rr y' '1l..manL n~g".al
tllCC 5
'
The gcntle~ar whoIT' Ken~. ncc~ ~ ..c 01'" t1 1 hIm t
.>!. t.
LC.1r.s beh.1V10Ur 01" the hr._ 1. IlC Ij C
might of his dcliJ.n('c
Kent.
LL
"
,/
...... t:
St II es .1 t"e 1; .'e we ~ f
The to-all.!- ~ro . Jn/L
-."
n' n
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q' c~
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might o~ thIS ~nw .r" re ,- ,n:: ... ~ !J..... 5. tr._ ~J,dl;~'~ c
personalIty :~auy tu SL.lDdp
the social order
_
d . . . . .:;1:-"(' cl! .:. '\(. :J,
c ,w.o;..
0'
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he l'lSCS
agmnst
::11U' lL, ......
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. - h(,!ud-,<,)~
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judgement, lac k '11fT ",I .. '
" 111,')'.
.t1" on the' w::d ~lr.", .:IU ''-1
He p'"1,'11CS to: '11 hllh .. lll(..,
t t"" "',~,-' \vlunU.l v
,,~~
.. JI:,~mp ,.-",
.ld be
to :cbcl. Far f'om 111.1kmg .".W ~, t\.,~ 1::, l:~"lf "~O:1
from the ',,',ts "f ::'C he .dr;,,..~, :~:-,~~ . rhJ.t ~hin~J:=: mlgh
c: h anged. He 1~l).' l IC\\:' .
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I" ,I.,c Llnri.nl'
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Ll ,"I. c .
Centuril;"' hdve ~ . I<::Sl' d, ,lnwins'
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r IS Caesar).
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C POSS1 1 Ity' 1 reas( nable and happy ex.sl
en C dnakes l~f"lf felt f("r the 5rst time, he hannony of these
~~nbc'" Th.e premonition is sUI VE: V v:J.gue and musIc . the
..
lOt IUlted ~o convey .It
;'S
aslecp.
~II t
""C"'I 'I of ~;~ scen" 1
The lyrical clement u s 11" h
'er ,bowel
delnEd
1'
ndtscara.
spedal kind of Yl'lC1S~ ~
tone 01 she'tered softness or
Tle image of Cordeha IS no
..
in 3. t nt c_
"d d
. s (ordeL' I. .lVIng
iisembodle
reammes..
f mail tl! Queen c.. Franc 1.
breast is pr~tectcd .by a hIY1:("",,1 v f her c'l~;~_ ( ~. c ose 0
at WU, she 15 fightmg. The p rh thm ot W':UdiS mal li
the tense feeling of the ballad, ~e y f1
leI. rhe h _ 1
b . h the Images 0 en I.
f th
,1C colours far from rlf' I ' d . 'd d from le
und 0
c
quality of Cordelia is not to be. IVl a ~celing of inn r fim n .
Vo;; :se, the vehemence of expr
.Ion'th singing of thOSI
gAll this bears little rcsemblanc~:~o s frequently compat,o.
with whom Lear's youngest hel.
t c nly a daughte s 10\ e
The theme of Cordelia ~prcs~~ ~~l'f!: the truggl~ of ~an
fOI !ler father but omcthmg fa,
gb t l' -, nnl 'lly
,
nge't u~u
1
.,
against inhumanity. V1.1 5 you
fOUl u.I atl lC
the heir of the King la symbol 01 f
a grelte, Cl',ll
o
a
J
"htor
Sh,}-"", peate), f:he s tf'!'- 10
er
s whu'h nan h!s W on o!'
She s a guardian 01 lo~e llO 1 U
me 1.
Z6'
G;n~l is
:oul:
K~)
tb
moment of hannony
briefOil ~owever I ttle may remain to live. lear
Ip ce as a WIse man. He has understood
262
ex
)..1 21}
Alexandr' Bb~ Wll ! ;,reat p::.. Aftc ..':te Octobe: Re-;" l'
tion, WI:1J(" n' pl. ed lome of the highe t lights of BloK S
poetrv. he was ....nong those r",...
.. _~lVes of the cauclted
classes who. toge"her with Y_lOm C.O:Ky, put all their l"~"-l'
ing and cxpc- ic,ce en t..1C servi.:- o~ the pc.. pIr n urCler t
y
I
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M:!..'UJ1l Gorky,
eparing foreign
of
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-::n'lli
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tion
woo
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ANATOLI
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AVL
h
early
years of the Soviet state, Ac:a d
ellllClan
. una,," arsky
was an expert on Shakespeare and had done much research
into the playwright and his back~round. HIS ~r:st works"on the
subject date back to prcrcvoluho~ary da~s. I he l~st, Bacon
and the Characters of Shakespeare sPlays , on .Wh.lCh .Lunach
arsky was working during the last years 01 hI!; hfe. was
published posthumously (~hc translatio~. is from the text as
published in the journal Llteraturny KrJt!l~, 1934, No. ,1).
Lunacharsky's numerous articles on Shakespeare mclude,
"Prince Hamlet" ("Prints GamIet") (1922). "Excursion~ into
the World of Shakespeare" ("Ekskursii v Mil' Shekspira")
(1923). "Shakespeare and His Time" ("Shekspir i Ego Vek")
(1924). "The Solution to One of the Greatest Mysteries"
("Razoblacheniye Odnoi iz Velichaishikh Tain") (1925). and a
number of others. In these articles. we see Shakespeare port
rayed as a great humanist by a committed man of action. a
man of our own time. who turned to the best which the herit
age of the Renaissance had to offer in order to make this best
work on in our day_ "There can hardly be any feeling on
which Shakespeare did not touch." wrote Lunacharsky in his
"Lectures on the History of West-European Literature at Key
Moments of Its Development". "He looks at the human soul
as if through a magnifying glass. dissects it to open up the
most vital features. but never says what he is thinking about
any~ne nor on whose side he is." Lunacharsky laid part:cular
stress on the realism of the great playwright: "Shakespc[.- ~
unnot go out of date. His time was one in which a man could
:lnd scope for the expre! sion of all the many-sided ness of his
.leing."
IVAN AKSYONOV (1884-1934)
G.
01
LUNACHARSKY (Il1i~-llI3:J)
Iva~ ~ksy?nov-Soviet writer. translator and public figurewa!; jlstm~Ulshcd by the wide field of his literary interests.
He SaW active service in the Civil War and. during these same
e :u >. was working on translations of the Elizabethan drama
~sts. In 1930, Aksyonov's first book on Shake,pearc. Hamlet
In
1934
11 ;hort
-+i
play!
Aksyonov's;J cI
-'1~ din" f .. ~'lumow f)ubliCltir-:t S},al~e,pe'Jre (Mt IIC w, 19:'J
.:-n thiS 'Jock IS t.akn tb
11 cle we h.. ve ehos""1 publish h
&<
A A
the S ;.ret T
:r m
liter,ln' s~olars. trom HH) ) lq: 8. If'
1
r 2._ e
University of Peter bu 'J Le mg-ral I.L~ ar' r 1Q'
thl
study of Shakcspc_-_ I :l~ th-.
11 ~ t A c r rr. v s
academic interests. Hi!, I ~ k lv rc'lrsLa 2 pi: 1 V. ..>
published in the U.S.A. u,de _.~~ tit~ ~n..k: D'ate A ~(JfXJ t
Interpretation, New Y rk 19.)6. n.. 1D part, _ Ucm. n
Dcn ocratil Republic (Das Wer'-z Sh:J7; r; -_, Berl:". 1 ~!>.).
Smirnov is ". Sr' the authol .: t 1m 1
1
' e T)C
! -1
to '"It rely xtolog1' a1 C; 1 .. on (f cnl
:;til 1 ti
t
tuu.ie, f Shakcsp~ lre apt: .. nQ
W
1 -, ~
..
United St....tes. tl Soviet
~slati(,' Sf' -;,
-1
Shakespe'lfe
SlY"
Ir
t
b ~ ~
JI
puhlished po t'lUmt \.:SlY'
1
r
ogcth( Wi '1. ... S. Di n v
A. A f t
dited w diffe.~ 11 edi" n .. c I e r
=. _ W L ~
:.pe Ire iJ'l Ru ;ian'" lJ'l
tit \ ~~:)' ~
1
I
, I l'
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I l 'I'f.il'f.grad fir.
t
UIIll'nSJ'eLa). 1946. ~o_ 1
I:le 'ate A
S.mrlOV W1
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to !,nak e51 ue r
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Komtanl n St.:midavsky (real name A,exeyev). 'e phA ~.d oj the ,>ovict Union, world {, mou! pI 'du 'er. ]( tl
nd thcor~1 cia] 01 the l~atr, bC;:Jan lis .te!
re t.'Ift' ~
t'1e C ld of ~hp 1870s. From 18,,:; to Ib98 It ... v... dl.
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11 Me CvW '5, t: V f. rAt :10~ Lit ltl~", I Jd r th
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GALINA
Galina Ulanova th
d
Ar':st of the U '
ee3en ary SOViet . 311crina. People's
u'ungrad Acad~!~" ~egan he'f stage Cln~~'n 1928 II the
e3.LI.; 0 OPC-l and Ballet. Since
dO
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lev
,!
No 11.1904.
IC
CV
K"Y
C"VI"
Innokcnti 'lml k" lOVI i.
; n (.~ :'">.
in the title' role 01 i c: it t
JI -1 t t _ (J
Tire ldir l wh 1.;'- :_Ii
..
Theatre n Lc:rll l~r d in 1~, :I. f e \.
.y to dnl .qu_1Iv
c h, 1. "" t1 1:._ ~
, 1 .
he stage lnu on ,. One Year ct, lia).
III honou o! ti.r ~Cu'tb V'" Or;:
, c'
~hc 11m- :tirector G. Kozi.1.t_
L
collection) maac a E'rr f P , ~_.,.t
Studio. J Smo'- unov!-"y J<I} '(l
'for the p]{~mierc of thl:: In 1 _.
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GRIGORI
BII3L'OGRAPHY
Crigari Kozintsev is a So~ict film,-dirccto,: and script'r'ter who has been working 1fl the cmema StUce 1924. To
\\1 and to 1. Trauberg thS"
him
e OVlct cme~a owes one of its
most distinguished achievements,. the trilogy The Youth of
Maxim (1935). The RetuCll of MaxIm (1937) and Vyborgshaya
i,
o
1926)
AKceHOB
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Wc"efllip
1564.1939.
ACHIIHrpa-l-f..loCl'Ba
1939
.
(Slwkespeare 1564-1939. A Colle.:tion 01
Articles. Leningrad-Moscow. 1939)
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ACHItHrp'-leKOrO YIIIISCPCII"CTiU, 1944, lIblnYf" 9
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, AbHbll a.'h H x,., 1,}47,
::11 a 6
'Shakespcne on 1e Sovi{' Stagl" Ttj(!"'
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K
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C~.fI'PIiOB ;-\.
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1960
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ILLUSTRATIONS
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"HAMl.ET"
Hamlet-Vasili KacJud
Produced b e d
ou
Dicecud b Y K or on Craig
Y onslanti Sl .
Sulerzhitsky
n amslousky. Leopold
The Moscow Arl Theaiu, 1911
"HAMLET'
Ham1~t- Vasili KachaloD
IAerl~s-Rjchard Bokslar1Jky
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Sh,
"HAMLET
Hamlet-Mikhail Chekllov
"HAMLET"
Gertrude-Olga K .
Claudius-NihoJ . ~pper.~~ekholJa
The Mo
OJ
assahtmov
produced
by
Alexander
Cheban,
Vladimir
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HAMlET'
'he pray
produutl by Nikolai Okh! )plwv
Artist-Vadim Ryndin
The Vlat'irnir MI yaJtovsky TI~e. /If 0'0II1 1954
/. SCt'lU Irolll
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'HAMLET"
"HAMLET"
Hamlel-lnno~lIli
HtlmJe/-Boris Freundlich
Polonius-Yuri Tolubeyev
Produced by Grigor; Kozintsev
Artist-NaUm .... Itman
Smoktunol'sky
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"OTHELLO"
Othello-Andrei Abrikosol.l
Desdemona-Vera Yanukovu
Produced by Nikolai Okhlopkov
The Realistic Theatre. Moscow, 1936
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"OTHELLO"
"OTHELLO"
Othello-Alulki Khorovo
Produced by Allah; Vasadu
The Shata Rustaveli Georgian
Theatre. Tbilisi, 1947
Othello-Vag-ram Papazyon
The Cabdel Sundukyun Arm~n lr. Dramatic
Theatre. Yeuvan. 1948
Dramatic
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"OTHELLO"
"OTHELLO'
The
Zakhari
PaJiashvili Theatre of
Opera
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"KiNG LEA.R"
Th~ Foo/-Veniamin Zuskin
Produced by Sergei RadIo!.>
The State Jewish Theatre, Moscow.
"KING LEAR"
L<:zt-S%'JIcn Mikhc.-'s
Mos, Jill
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"KING LEAR"
A scene from tile play
Artist-Alexander Tyshler
,
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Lear-Nikolai Mordvinov
Produced by IritzQ Anisimollo_VIIlI
Shl
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'KING LEAR:
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The
Vlktor Kmgiup
Tallinn. 1955
Th.Ai>t-,
....
of
Drama,
Cleopatra-Veriko Andzhaparidu
Produ.ud by Vakhtang Tabliashvili
M Kate M<1.rdzhmishviJJ Georgi2n 'T1u;
)[ Drama. TJ,iJiSJ 1951
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'MACBETH"
"JULIUS CAESAR', .
Macbeth-Millhail TsaryolJ
Arlist-Boris Vo/kol'
Th Moly Till 2tre, Mosc
"t
1955
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'JULIUS CAESAR
Artist-Victor SimoIJ
The Moscow Art Theatre, 1903
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Artist-Pyau VJ1yams
Tl1e Bolshoi Theatre, Mosco"'. 1946
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;"'TWEL.FTH .NIGHT"
alvolto-MlldlQ'J CI
Directed b B ,J
1C1dwo
"TWI.fTH NIGHT
,\ SCI!/zC Ir011l the play (Maria-Sofia Cit/lsill'
;,,0 I
Sl d'
Y OTIS SlIslliwuic/
II lO of the MoscolU Art
,.(11'1:,
tava,
1917.18
Fool-Sergei Obraztsov)
PrNiuccd by Sona Giatsintova .1I/ti
t!IC
V]m/illlJf
G(ltoutselJ
Artist-Vladimir Favorsky
The Second MoscolU Art Theatre. 1934
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