The Winter’s Tale -William Shakespeare
The Winter’s Tale
Introduction:
William Shakespeare
was a renowned English poet, playwright, and actor born in 23 April, 1564 in Stratford- upon-Avon. Shakespeare was a
prolific writer during the Elizabethan and Jacobean ages of British
theatre. During his time in London, Shakespeare’s first printed works were
published. They were two long poems, 'Venus and Adonis' (1593) and 'The Rape of
Lucrece' (1594). He also became a founding member of The Lord
Chamberlain’s Men, a company of actors. He remained with the company
for the rest of his career, during which time it evolved into The King’s Men
under the patronage of King James I (from 1603). During his time in the
company Shakespeare wrote many of his most famous tragedies, such as King Lear and Macbeth, as well
as great romances, like The Winter’s Tale and The Tempest.
When we review the drama under discussion we arrive at a definite conclusion that the play The Winter’s Tale is neither predominantly a tragic play nor predominantly a romantic play. It may be regarded as a tragi-comedy. Before spilling ink on the elements of pastoral romance in The Winter’s Tale it appears appropriate to discuss what pastoral romance is.
Lexically
the world “Pastoral” means portraying country life or countryside
especially in a sentimental or romantic way. Etymologically the word “Pastoral”
has been derived from the Greek world “Pastor” which means “to graze”, Romance means
a feeling of intensity and pleasure associated with love.
The
world of romance is a world free of reason. It is purely
imaginative and sees life through magic casements. In pastoral romance we have
a shepherd and a shepherdess as lovers. Their lives are free from affectation,
worries, corruption or any indecency. The characters are also different from
us, as they are denizens of not our humdrum world but
imaginary and colourful world of their own.
Romances are
the last plays of Shakespeare‘s dramatic career when he himself was
approaching his second childhood. He had already written comedies, tragedies,
histories problem plays. He had thoroughly explored the world of human pleasure
and pain, and perhaps concluded that life is only to be lived, not to be
thought of. After a great innings of writing all the serious and dark plays Shakespeare gives
himself a holiday.
These
romances of Shakespeare are structured on tragic pattern but they end-up as
comedies. In The Winter’s Tale the hero has a very
serious tragic flaw. He is jealous and acts
rashly in jealousy. This is fit subject for a tragedy. Leontes, the king,
almost goes mad in his jealousy and develops an acute inferiority complex. It
starts with a court scene showing the ideal love between friends. The love is
destroyed by undue suspicion. Then the scene shifts to the countryside and
Perdita comes forward as the romance queen of the remaining
part of the play.
“To speak of Perdita, now grown in grace”
Equal with wond’ring”.
It becomes a pastoral play when
the scene shifts to the country-side. It deals with the lives of shepherds and
shepherdesses in the country-side. There are songs and dances, spring
festivals, wakes and fairs. Shakespeare has given a world of colour and sound.
It is all festivity disguised. He simply wants to entertain and please:
“Present mirth hath
Present laughter There is nothing hereafter”.
In Act-IV of this play we have all those pastoral
elements required to be called as a pastoral
romance. The scene shifts from the suffocating atmosphere of Leontes’ court
to the countryside where one can breathe fresh air and witness the
ship-shearing festivities. The wooing of Perdita by Florizel has an intense
appeal for young readers. Florizel speaks of his love in terms of ancient myths, citing the examples of Jupiter, Neptune and, Apollo:
“Became a bull and bellow’d; the green
Neptune”.
He
describes Perdita as “Flora peering in April’s front”. All her acts are
“queen’s”. In his eyes; when she dances, he wished that she were a wave of the
sea so that she could dance forever.
“When you speak sweet
I’d have you do it ever ………..
……………. when you do dance, I wish you
A wave O’th’ sea, that you might ever do”
Without her, life would have little
meaning for him, even if he were crowned the “most imperial monarch”. Perdita
loves him with an equal ardor. Her grace, charm and beauty lend an exquisite
touch to the scene. She waits to have Florizel “quick and in her arms”.
Significance of the
Title of The Winter’s Tale:
The dance party starts and the Clown
dances with his sweet heart Mopsa and other shepherds and shepherdesses too
join in the dancing. Florizel catches hold of Perdita by the hand and begins to
dance with her signing:
“But come: our dance, I pray,
Your hand, my Perdita: so turtles pair
That never mean to part”.
Perdita is shown presenting flowers
and garlands to the guests according to their ages. There is a whole
cataloguing of different kinds of flowers. Her speech is exquisite poetry,
richly sensuous, evoking all the charm and beauty of the English countryside:
“Here’s flowers for you:
Hot lavender, mints, savoury, marjoram,
The marigold, that goes to bed with sun
And with him rises, weeping:”
To complete the festivities there is
the dance of twelve satyrs. The comic episodes in the play
pertain to three characters – Autolycus, the old shepherd and the clown. One is
amused by the clown’s trying to calculate the total price of the wool obtained
from the sheep but giving up the effort because the simple arithmetical sum is
baffling to his rustic wit. The manner in which Autolycus gulls him at this
time and robs his money is also very amusing. Autolycus’ description of himself
as a thief and pick-pocket is an instance of light comedy in the play. His
posing as a courtier and robbing the old shepherd and the clown of some of
their gold is also very funny. The talk the old shepherd and the clown after
they have been elevated to the position of two king’s kins further add to the
comic interest of the play.Act V provides
touching scenes of recognition, reunion,
reconciliation and forgiveness. On the old shepherd’s producing necessary
evidence, Perdita is discovered to be a princess and is united with her father.
Leontes is “ready to leap out of himself for joy of his found daughter” and
thinks wistfully of Hermione. He asks forgiveness of Polixenes for the for the
wrong. Then there is the statue scene where Hermione is found to be still
alive. Hermione’s reunion with her husband and her daughter is an even greater
event. Hermione forgives her husband, embraces him, and then invokes the
blessings of the gods upon her daughter. Finally Leontes announces his decision
that Paulina and Camillo will get married. Thus the play has a happy ending for
all, which every comedy must have. The grim past is forgotten
and a new life begins for everyone.
Nor are the pastoral pictures in
Act IV of the play devoid of realism. In fact, Shakespeare, in this
play, does not give us an idealized picture of rural
life.
The sheap-shearing feast, the merry-making and dances, the ballad singing, the
roguery of Autolycus and the gullibility of the clown these are true to life.
Indeed, if there is any idealization in the play it is to be found in the
nobility of characters like Hermione, Antigonus and Paulina. Also it is only
the character of Perdita that has been idealized.
Conclusion:
To
sum up The Winter’s Tale as a pastoral romance there is a
confrontation of the country and pastoral. As against the first three
acts wherein we have postulation, hatred, jealousy and envy- here in we have
love, harmony and sympathy. With heart-full of exuberance the hero and heroine
indulge themselves in romance. The pastoral is
highly idealized to such an extent that whenever we think about the play,
the pastoral part resurfaces in our mind overshadowing the
country part.
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