Monday, September 16, 2019
Christian perspective in Webster Essay
By close consideration of two extracts of your choice, assess the importance of the Christian perspective in Websterââ¬â¢s presentation of the Duchess.â⬠à There has been much debate over whether the Duchess of Malfi is a character who is essentially a victim of her brothersââ¬â¢ tyranny and the corruption of her court, and whose downfall is caused by such, or is responsible for her own negligent and selfish actions by marrying a man she loved but in doing so abandoning her princely duties. Certainly, Websterââ¬â¢s borrowings saw the Duchess as little more than a whore or a strumpet (much like Julia in Websterââ¬â¢s version), but modern audiences, with modern sympathies, have preferred to see the Duchess as a heroine who is sacrificed for love. The two passages I have chosen to consider neatly contrast each other in showing how the Duchess is susceptible to religious corruption (III.ii.305-320), but equally, how she dies a Christian, almost a martyr (IV.ii.210-239).à In I.i, Antonio, the Duchessââ¬â¢ future husband, recounts a description of the French court, the King of which has ââ¬Ëquittedââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"his royal palace | Of flattââ¬â¢ring sycophants, of dissolute, | And infamous personsâ⬠(ll.7-9). This depiction acts as a yardstick by which we compare the court of Malfi. In fact, the entire presentation could be taken as an abstract concept presented visually, rather than any actual occurrence ââ¬â however, the effect is the same either way. Unfortunately, we soon learn what becomes of the King ââ¬â in III.iii, the corrupt Cardinal tells us that ââ¬Ëthe famous Lannoyââ¬â¢ had ââ¬Å"had the honour | Of taking the French King prisonerâ⬠. This shows us just how powerful corrupt courts are. It strikes an ominous note, not filling us with the most hope for the Duchess ââ¬Ëstarsââ¬â¢ or fate. Against this backdrop of sleaze and rottenness, the Duchess hardly stands a chance ââ¬â and so we come to our first passage (III.ii.305-320). In III.ii.305-320, we witness the Duchess, having confided in Bosola not only that she is married to Antonio, her household steward, but that she has several children by him, is persuaded by Bosola to ââ¬Å"feign a pilgrimage | To our Lady of Lorettoâ⬠(ll.306-7), under the (clearly ironic) pretence that sheà ââ¬Å"mayâ⬠¦ departà [her] country with more honour, and [her] flightà Will seem a princely progress, retainingà [Her] usual train about [her]â⬠(ll.308-311). In fact, we know that, on arriving in Loretto, where the Cardinal, by design, awaits her, she is shamefully stripped of her princedom, as is Antonio of his lands (III.iv.5ff esp. Stage Directions), and her train, bar a faithfully minority (a sign of hope for us all, displaying the moral rectitude of the few), desert her in her disgrace (III.v.2-3), for reasons of politics, fear, and uncertainty. Clearly, the pilgrims who witness the banishment do not judge either Antonio or the Duchess harshly ââ¬â rather they sympathise with them (ll.32-43), so perhaps we are meant to too. Having said that, however, they have not seen what we have seen previously ââ¬â the wise though portentous warning from Cariola, ignored by the Duchess, that ââ¬Å"if you will believe me, | I do not like this jesting with religion, | this feigned pilgrimageâ⬠(III.iii.315-18). The Duchess is, by any means, not faultless ââ¬â to suggest that she ââ¬Ëdefies the evil in her court and her brothersââ¬â¢ heartsââ¬â¢ is too generous ââ¬â indeed, despite good intentions, good receptions from onlookers, and indeed, sympathy from the audience, especially the modern one, she is not able to over come the evil in her court and in her brothersââ¬â¢ heart in this instance ââ¬â she falls at their mercenary, Bosola, and, of course unknowingly, gives in to the ââ¬Ëevilââ¬â¢ ââ¬â she allows herself, in her own words, to be ââ¬Ëled by the handââ¬â¢ at ââ¬Ëhis directionââ¬â¢ (ll.311-2). The Duchess is after all a tragic heroine ââ¬â her personality is therefore susceptible to the genre which dictated that she should be realistic, like any other human being. The root of ââ¬Ëthe tragedyââ¬â¢ can be traced back as far as Aristotleââ¬â¢s Poetics, which sees it as a form of drama ââ¬Å"in which a calamity is brought about through a flaw in the character of the hero or heroine, who through a flaw in the character of hero or heroine who, through suffering, achieves a dignity and self-knowledge previously lacking.â⬠The audience feels they can identify closely with this character, which has human faults, and the audience is thus sympathetic ââ¬â even empathetic ââ¬â to their case ââ¬â and should experience heights of emotion such as pity, even horror, at the Duchessââ¬â¢ death. They should emerge from the theatre in some way ââ¬Ëpurgedââ¬â¢ by the experience. According to this theory, Tragedy is the great dramatic form which shows human nature as unchangingâ⬠¦ only increasing the tragedy of the Duchessââ¬â¢ life and story further, especially because we, as a modern audience, know it is based on a true- life story (recorded in Painterââ¬â¢s Palace of Pleasure). The Duchess is motivated by ââ¬Ëseeking wisely to prevent future sorrowsââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëlamenting those in the pastââ¬â¢ (ll.319-320) ââ¬â in other words, she has good intentions, but by themselves they are not enough to dispel the power of the corruption which surrounds and suffuses her.à While it may have been established that the Duchess doesnââ¬â¢t really defy the evil in her court and her brothersââ¬â¢ hearts, it is more possibly that ââ¬Ëshe makes a good endââ¬â¢. These are separate things ââ¬â it is possible to fulfil one, but not the other ââ¬â and evidence for the truth of the latter statement can be found in the second passage, IV.ii.210-239.
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