March 25, 2007

Since I’m making my way through Stephen Greenblatt’s Will in the World, I thought this, which looks at the different ways in which power is depicted in William Shakespeare’s plays, was interesting and thought-provoking. (Coincidentally, the essay is by Greenblatt himself.)

There is one other key principle, which will take us back to … Macbeth. Macbeth dreams of killing his guest, King Duncan, and seizing power. He wants the assassination to be swift, decisive, once-and-for-all: mission accomplished. The lure is strong enough, he says, to make him ignore the threat of divine judgment in the afterlife, but still for a fateful moment he holds back:

We still have judgement here, that we but teach
Bloody instructions which, being taught, return
To plague th’inventor.

This is, I think, Shakespeare’s central perception of governance, and it stands in the place of any more high-minded ethical object. The actions of those in power have consequences, long-term, inescapable, and impossible to control. “We still have judgement here”—it is not in some imagined other world that your actions will be judged; it is here and now. Judgment in effect means punishment: whatever violent or dishonest things you do will inevitably serve as a lesson for others to do to you. Shakespeare did not think that one’s good actions are necessarily or even usually rewarded, but he seems to have been convinced that one’s wicked actions always return, with interest.

Entry Filed under: Authors, Books. .

3 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Nonanon  |  March 27, 2007 at 4:16 pm

    Thanks for the essay link, Brandon, I’ve tried to read “Will in the World” several times and just can’t get through it.

    Reply
  • 2. Brandon  |  March 27, 2007 at 4:41 pm

    Nonanon: I found the book a little hard to get into, but it’s very interesting and readable after the first two chapters. Greenblatt’s very passionate about Shakespeare; I like that he doesn’t come off some star-struck scholar who only wants to assert his knowledge of all of Shakespeare’s plays. It’s pretty serious analysis of Shakespeare’s writings as well as the times he lived in, but Greenblatt makes them easy to grasp. And he’s definitely piqued my interest in Shakespeare! I’ve always respected Shakespeare, but I’ve never been too interested in reading him on my own; now I really want to read more of his plays, especially his comedies.

    Reply
  • 3. J.S. Peyton  |  March 30, 2007 at 8:50 am

    I’m reading the history play Henry VI now, thanks to Will and the World. I never had an interest in reading either his histories or his comedies before either. After the Henry plays, onward to As You Like It !

    P.S. I too found the first chapter or so a little difficult to get into but I do think it picks up the more you read.

    Reply

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