Wednesday, February 6, 2019
Women as Instigators of Tragedy in the Works of William Shakespeare Ess
Women as Instigators of Tragedy in the Works of Shakespeare It is the in truth error of the daydream She comes more nearer earth than she was wont, And makes men mad. (Othello 5.2.112-14) The lunar month is practically seen in literature as an allegory for love, virtue, and chastity. In Shakespeares comedies, especially, the woolgather is personified as Diana, the Roman goddess of chastity. In these comedies, the foolish antics of lovers (literally, lunatics) usually occur chthonian the auspices of the chaste goddess, the lovers behaving like hounds about her feet that snap at apiece other in competition for her bounty. The moon as allegory for the fury of romance helps us understand Shakespeares view of romance. In the tragedies, however, the moon support represent many things at once Diana, the goddess of Chastity the cyclical personality of Fortune and Hecuba, the witch of insanity. These figures, as their names suggest, are feminine. The tragical heroes often refer to their wives as the moon. The wives are often seen as possessing, at unlike times, elements of the various associations with the moon. I assert that, by examining the several allegories of the moon to the principal women of the tragedies, we can see the multiplicity of Shakespeares attitude toward women. Often in the tragedies, the moon serves as the allegory for the changeability of fortune, the fickleness of women, and--as a result--the apparent motion of madness. For this paper, I will systematically show the various allegories of the moon present in several tragedies. Then I will show how the multiplicity of these allegories is alike(p) to the multiplicity of the principal women of the tragedies. Several principal women of the tragedies are ... ...ators of the downfall of the heroes. Would the heroes feel come to such a tragic end without the women? By noting the references to the women as formerly chaste, now inconstant, and always fickle, I argue that they are the cause of the madness of the heroes. Othello kills his wife because he believes her to have cuckolded him, resulting not only her death, simply the death of his comrades and himself. Lady MacBeth urges her husband to kill Duncan. Because of his love for Cleopatra, Anthony meets a tragic end. Similar to the moons ability to make men mad, the wives make the tragic heroes mad. Othello, as this papers epigraph suggests, would certainly agree. Works Cited Hankins, John Erskine. Backgrounds of Shakespeares Thought. Hamden, Connecticut Archon Book, 1978. Shakespeare, William. Othello. Ed. Alvin Kernan. New York Signet, 1963.
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