SHAKESPEARE:
CLASSICAL PLAYS: TROILUS AND CRESSIDA, TIMON OF ATHENS, JULIUS CAESAR,
CORIOLANUS AND ANTONY AND
CLEOPATRA
This
document was originally published in The Cambridge History of English and
American Literature in 18 Volumes, Volume V. The Drama to 1642, Part One . New
York: G.P. PutnamÕs Sons; Cambridge, England: University Press, 1907Ð21.
With
the classical plays, we come to a new and very interesting group. In a sense,
of course, Titus Andronicus belongs
to it; but nothing like the extreme earliness of that piece belongs to any of
the others, and none of them is mentioned by Meres. Two of them, however, are,
internally as well as externally, of very uncertain date; the other three are
of ShakespeareÕs very meridian.
For
Troilus and Cressida, a license to
print was obtained in 1602/3; but the players objected, and it was not
published till half a dozen years later, and then surreptitiously. It is
extremely difficult not to believe that it is much older than the earlier date
would show. Some of the blank verse, no doubt, is fairly mature; but the author
may have furbished this up, and much of it is not mature at all. Instead of
transcending his materials, as Shakespeare almost invariably does, he has here
failed almost entirely to bring out their possibilities; has not availed
himself of ChaucerÕs beautiful romance so fully as he might; and has dramatised
the common Troy-books with a loose yet heavy hand utterly unsuggestive of his
maturer craftsmanship. If it were not for certain speeches and touches chiefly
in the part of Ulysses, and in the parts of the hero and heroine, it might be
called the least Shakespearean of all the plays.
Timon
of Athens, again a puzzle, is a
puzzle of a different kind. It is usual to resort to the rather Alexandrine
suggestion of collaboration and then to put it as late as 1607. To the present
writer, the first theory seems unnecessary and the last impossible. There is
nothing in Timon that Shakespeare,
at one time or another, may not have written; there are some things which
hardly anybody but Shakespeare can have written; but that he wrote this piece
just after Lear, even with
somebody, not to help, but to hinder, him, is not, from the point of view from
which the present survey is written, conceivable. The play is as chaotic as Troilus,
or more so; and, except Timon
himself, it has no character of interest in it. But Timon himself must be
ShakespeareÕs own; he has so much of good in him, and might have been made so
much better, that it is impossible to imagine Shakespeare, in his maturity,
turning over such a character to be botched by underlings, and associated with
third rate company. On the other hand, he might have written the whole play in
his nonage andÑas in the other caseÑhave thrown in some Òmodern touchesÓ to
freshen it up and get it off his hands. At any rate, the two plays (which may
be called Greek) stand in the sharpest contrast to the great Roman trio, based,
in ShakespeareÕs most easy-going fashion, on NorthÕs Plutarch for matter, and, sometimes, even for words, but made
his own, absolutely and for ever.
None
of the three was printed till the folio appeared, though licence appears to
have been obtained for Antony and Cleopatra in 1608. It is usual to select that date for it and
for Coriolanus, and to put Julius
Caesar seven years earlier, because
of an apparent allusion to it in that year. Internal evidence does not,
perhaps, supply any valid reason for such a separation in date; and, as they
are all taken from the same source, they may very well all have been written
about the same time. This could not have been very early, from the complete
mastery of the blank verse, but might be anywhere after the close of the
sixteenth century. All three are masterpieces, but curiously different in kind;
thought there is an equally curious agreement between them in the manner in
which the author, at one time, simply arranges the very words not merely of
Plutarch but of North, while, at another, he will add or substitute passages of
absolute originality.
Julius
Caesar has, at least, this mark of an
earlier date that its interest is of a diffused character, and that there is a
certain prodigality of poetic passages put in everybodyÕs mouth. The titular
hero perishes before half the play is done; and his place is taken first by
Antony and then by Brutus. Nor does he make any very copious appearance even
before his murder. Further, the marvellous Shakespearean impartiality seems to
take delight in doing the best for each of these heroes in turn; while the
prodigality above referred to furnishes not merely the three, Cassius, who is
all but a fourth hero, and Portia, but quite insignificant peopleÑMarullus,
Casca, CalpurniaÑwith splendid poetical utterance. The magnificent speech of
AntonyÑall ShakespeareÕs own; the great exchange of mind between Brutus and
Cassius, both as friends and as (almost) foes; the dialogue of Brutus and
Portia: these, and many other things, with the surprising majesty and interest
of the theme, have always made the play a great favourite, and deservedly so.
Moreover, its central interest from the point of view of romanceÑthe death and
revenging of CaesarÑis perfect. But, from the point of view of unity of
character, which is ShakespeareÕs general appeal, it may be thought somewhat
lacking. Brutus is the only person whose character can supply a continuous tie
rodÑand, except to those who take the old French Revolution or Roman
declamation line of admiration for tyrannicide per se, Brutus, admirably as he develops, is rather thin at
first. It may plausibly be argued that either he should not have required
CassiusÕs blend of personal and pseudo-patriotic hatred of Caesar to ferment
his own patriotism, or he should have detected the insufficiency of the Òlean
and hungryÓ conspirator. Practically, however, Julius Caesar, is of the panoramic, if not of the kaleidoscopic,
order of dramaÑits appeal is of sequence rather than of composition.
With
the other two Roman plays, it is quite different. Coriolanus is certainly not deficient in variety of incident, or
of personage, but every incident and every personage is, in a way, subservient
to the hero. The ordinary descriptions of the dramatis personae ÑÒfriend to Coriolanus,Ó Òmother to Coriolanus,Ó Òwife
to CoriolanusÓÑacquire a new appositeness from this feature. Menenius and
Volumnia are no shadows; the Ògracious silenceÓ herself is all the more
gracious for her unobtrusiveness. But it is in relation to Coriolanus that they
interest us most. The sordid spite of the tribunesÑtypes well known at this
time and at all timesÑhelps to bring out the arrogance, at its worst not
sordid, of Caius Martius. The inferior generals set him off. And that
interesting, and not very easy, character, Tullus Aufidius, whose psychical
evolution Shakespeare has left in obviously intentional uncertainty, furnishes
yet another contrast in his real changes from enmity to friendship, and then
from hospitality to treachery, with the changes of Coriolanus from the height
of Roman patriotism to actual hostility against his ungrateful and degraded
country, and from that hostility to semi-reconciliation, at least to the
foregoing of his vengeance in obedience to his mother. Most of all do the
various mobsÑthe mob of Rome above all, but, also, the rank and file of the
army, the Volscian conspirators, the officers, the senators, the very servants,
of AufidiusÑthrow up against their own vulgar variety and characterless
commonness the Òheadstrong beautyÓ of the great soldierÕs mind and willÑhis
hatred of the vulgus itself, of
its malignity, of its meanness, of its ingratitude. He is, of course, no
flawless character: he need not have been rude to the people (one cannot blame
him for being so to their misguiders); and, because they committed virtual
treason to Rome by banishing its defender, he was certainly not justified in
himself committing the overt act. But he remains one of the noblest figures in
literature, and his nobility is largely the work of Shakespeare himself. What
is more, he has provided Shakespeare with the opportunity of working out a
Òone-manÓ drama, as, except in inferior specimens like Timon he has done nowhere else. For, even in Hamlet, the single and peculiar life of the hero does not
overshadow all the others, as is done here.
Great
as Coriolanus is, however, it is
not nearly so great as Antony and Cleopatra. Coriolanus, personally, is a great figure, but rather
narrowly great and hardly as provocative of delight as of admiration. The
interest of his story is somewhat lacking in variety, and, cunningly as the
comic or seriocomic aspects and interludes are employed to lighten it up, the
whole play is rather statuesque. Antony and Cleopatra has nearly as infinite a variety as its incomparable
heroine herself: its warmth and colour are of the liveliest kind; its character
drawing is of the Shakespearean best; the beauties of its versification and
diction are almost unparalleled in number, diversity and intensity; and, above
all, the powers of the two great poetic motives, love and death, are utilised
in it to the utmost possible extent. Even this long list of merits does not
exhaust its claims. From the technical side, it is the very type and triumph of
the chronicle playÑof the kind which dramatises whole years of history, solid
portions of the life of man, and keeps them dramatically one by the interwoven
threads of character interest, by individual passages of supreme poetry and by
scenes or sketches of attaching quality. Here, again, Shakespeare follows
North, at times very closely indeed; and here, more than ever, he shows how entirely
he is able not to follow his leader when he chooses. The death of Cleopatra,
with the ineffable music of the words that follow, ÒPeace, Peace,Ó is only the
strongest example of a pervading fact. But the central interest of character
and the side portraits which accompany and enforce it are the greatest points
about the play. Nowhere has even Shakespeare given such a pair, hero and
heroine, as here. Antony, at once ruined and ennobled by the passion which is
both his [char] and his abiding title to sympathy, which completes his
friendship for Caesar in the earlier play; Cleopatra, her frailty sublimated
into the same passionÑboth heroic in their very weakness and royal in the way
in which they throw away their royalty: there is nothing like them anywhere.
There is no palliation of fault or of folly; both are set as plainly before the
spectator as may be, and he will imitate them at his peril. But the power of
romantic tragedy in this direction can go no further.