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The Winter

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... And his pond fished in by his next neighbor, by/ Sir Smile, his neighbor. ... her faith is in 'powers divine' that she insists view and judge human affairs. ( ll. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Winter


1
The Winters Tale
  • First lecture

2
Shakespeares greatest romance
  • Late in his career, Sh. wrote four plays that go
    in a new direction what we now call the
    romances.
  • Not romance in the sense of romantic, true
    romance sorts of plays.
  • But romance in a generic sense, plays like the
    ancient Greek romances that deal with separation,
    long tracts of time and space, and finally the
    uniting of families and lovers.
  • And include strange, even unlikely, plot twists.
  • The Odyssey has been called the first romance.
    And there were a number of later prose romances.
  • Shakespeares Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winters
    Tale, and The Tempest follow these patterns.
  • Officially they are comedies in that they end
    happily.
  • But all contain the material of tragedy.
  • The greatest of these four plays I insist is
    The Winters Tale.
  • The Tempest is better known, but WT may be
    richer.

3
And maybe his strangest play
  • Contains Shakespeares most bizarre stage
    direction Exit pursued by a bear.
  • And his oddest scene setting The seacoast of
    Bohemia
  • (Bohemia the modern Czech Republic no
    seacoast!)
  • A mans sudden onset of jealousy for his pregnant
    wife.
  • And like all romances, seemingly improbable
    coincidences though real life seems to insist
    on such things.
  • And at the same time, some wonderfully realistic
    characterization and great roles for actresses
    Hermione, Paulina.
  • Even a brief role for a young boy.
  • Singing, dancing, clowning around in Act IV.
    Plot just seems to stop.
  • And finally, a recognition scene in which
    information that has been kept from the audience
    is suddenly revealed
  • -- and is certainly the most daring scene Sh.
    ever wrote. (Can we give it away?)
  • Which makes demands on our belief and we have
    to believe it.
  • What was lost is found, what was cast away is
    recovered, destroyed friendship is healed, young
    love is fulfilled.
  • And yet . . .

4
Mythic
  • Many critics have found the play mythic in a
    variety of ways.
  • The recovery of a loved one from the underworld,
    from death Orpheus and Euridice, Ceres and
    Proserpina.
  • Perhaps mirroring the seasonal recovery of
    natural life from the death of winter.
  • The first three acts take place in winter (a
    world of tragedy).
  • And the fourth act celebrates spring time, youth,
    love (a world of comedy).
  • And certainly the play is about regeneration,
    both natural and moral.
  • Theres a strangely religious sense to the
    conclusion, Ive often felt, as if the play is
    demanding that the audience accept something
    almost miraculous.

5
Dating, text, source,etc.
  • Simon Forman, an astrologer who functioned
    something like a psychiatrist in Jacobean London
    (I think we saw him represented in Shakespeare
    in Love), says he saw the play on May 15, 1611.
  • Recounts some of the plot, then takes away this
    moral "Beware of trusting feigned beggars or
    fawning fellows."
  • So the play must have been written shortly before
    this performance.
  • Making it one of Shakespeares last plays (The
    Tempest was performed at court on 1 Nov. 1611).
  • The text exists only in the Folio of 1623.
  • Its source is a novel by Robert Greene called
    Pandosto (1588), which didnt end happily at all.
  • The kings wife really died (along with his son),
    and when he meets his daughter, he tries to
    seduce her.
  • Then after realizing who she is, he commits
    suicide.

6
Ordinary life in the plays beginning
  • The little dialogue between Archidamus (from
    Bohemia) and Camillo (Sicily) is full of courtly
    compliment.
  • Well not be able to entertain you half so well
    next summer as youve entertained us.
  • Oh please, it was our pleasure.
  • And how splendid that these two kings, friends
    from boyhood, were finally able to get together.
  • And some compliment, and agreement, about what a
    fine boy Mamillius is.
  • All very courtly, friendly, ordinary.
  • Echoed by what follows in the attempt to get
    Polixenes to stay just a little longer little
    jokes on both sides.
  • Particularly enlivened by Hermiones wit if he
    said he longed to see his son, wed whack him
    away.
  • And Ill let Leontes stay a month longer in
    Bohemia next summer.
  • Prisoner or guest your choice, Polixenes!
  • And what their boyhood was like.
  • Very innocent jokes about the temptations of
    sexual married love.
  • And her teasing about when she spoke to the
    purpose before.
  • Cram us with praise, and make us/ As fat as
    tame things.
  • And of coures she is fat nine months
    pregnant!
  • The effect of her stage image and her rather
    sweet teasing of her husband?

7
So the effect of Leontes outbreak
  • All the more shocking in the way it breaks in on
    the bantering mood.
  • And then comes into his conversation with
    Mamillius neat, calf, shoots.
  • And then, in his angling spills over and
    infects the whole theater
  • And many a man there is, even at this present,/
    Now while I speak this, holds his wife by th
    arm,/ That little thinks she has been sluiced
    ins absence/ And his pond fished in by his next
    neighbor, by/ Sir Smile, his neighbor.
  • Becomes nastily physical no barricado for a
    belly . . .
  • Hes clearly gone mad. But in a way that seems
    entirely reasonable to him.
  • Which is exactly what happens in sudden outbreaks
    of jealousy theres no need for an Iago.
  • Camillo tries to talk him out of it be cured/
    Of this diseased opinion.
  • But must finally seem to fall in with Leontes and
    agree to kill Polixenes.
  • The whole episode of course is stylized to fit
    the condensed character of theater.
  • But isnt this the way marital splits can seem
    at least to those looking on sudden, crazy,
    unanticipated, making no sense at all?

8
Hermione and Mamillius II.1
  • Again a scene of utmost normality.
  • Like all Shakespeares kids, M. is smart, pert,
    rather independent.
  • The irony of his wanting to tell a sad tale,
    best for winter.
  • The man dwelling by a churchyard living amongst
    the dead.
  • And the pat entrance of Leontes!
  • Mamillius snatched away.
  • Hermiones shock sport?
  • She responds temperately You, my lord,/ Do but
    mistake.
  • And imagines some ill planet reigns (105).
  • No one in the entire court credits Leontes
    suspicions.
  • Antigonus ll. 155ff.

9
The child enfranchised by great nature
  • The comic dilemma of what to do with a child born
    in prison.
  • The jailer is puzzled, for he has no warrant to
    allow the child out of the prison.
  • But Paulina assures him that the child was
    prisoner to the womb . . .
  • . . . and therefore By law and process of great
    Nature thence/ Freed and enfranchised
    (II.2.59-61).
  • Paulina is one tough cookie If I prove
    honey-mouthed, let my tongue blister . . .
  • Her plan ll. 37ff.
  • Which follows in the next scene.
  • Like Macbeth, Leontes cannot sleep.
  • Has he in some way violated Nature?
  • He imagines that giving Hermione to the fire
    might bring back some part of his sleep.
  • Leontes perverse interpretation of Mamillius
    illness ll. 12ff.

10
Paulinas big scene II.3
  • Says she comes to bring him sleep her words are
    medicinal as true.
  • Leontes knew she would come to him.
  • Shes the only one to stand up to him.
  • Good queen, my lord, Good queen, I say good
    queen . . .
  • And commends the child for his blessing.
  • Does Leontes look on the child?
  • She curses anyone who would pick up the child by
    that forced baseness/ Which he has put upont.
  • So presumably no one touches the child.
  • Paulinas demeanor here counters every
    (male-authored) conduct book for women of the
    period!
  • And she becomes the spokeswoman for Nature the
    child resembles Leontes entirely ll. 95-102.
  • Good goddess Nature
  • She wont call Leontes tyrant but . . .
  • And only after she is off the stage does
    Antigonus dare to pick up the child.

11
The scene of Hermiones trial
  • She points out that her testimony can scarcely be
    credited since she is accused of falsehood.
  • Its simply he said/she said except that
    everyone knows she is entirely right.
  • My life stands in the level of your dreams.
  • And her faith is in powers divine that she
    insists view and judge human affairs. (ll. 27ff).
  • And in the oracle of Apollo.
  • Apollos judgment!
  • And immediately another judgment.
  • And another!
  • Leontes vows his change of mind and repentance
    all very simple and confesses his plot with
    Camillo.
  • But this is a tragedy and Paulina pronounces
    the effect I say shes dead Ill swear it.
  • And Leontes cannot expect repentance
  • Do not repent these things . . . Nothing but
    despair. A thousand knees/ Ten thousand years
    together, naked , fasting,/ Upon a barren
    mountain, and still winter/ In storm perpetual,
    could not move the gods/ To look that way thou
    wert.
  • Some sins cannot be forgiven.
  • But the play is only half over.
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