{"id":3939,"date":"1964-03-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1964-03-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1964-vol-45-no-3-shakespeare-after-400-years\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:30:31","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:30:31","slug":"march-1964-vol-45-no-3-shakespeare-after-400-years","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1964-vol-45-no-3-shakespeare-after-400-years\/","title":{"rendered":"March 1964 &#8211; VOL. 45, No. 3 &#8211; Shakespeare After 400 Years"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Shakespeare is not a dead poet who lived                     long ago, but a breathing spirit thrusting himself into our                     everyday lives. In all countries of the world, in all languages,                     Shakespeare continues to speak profoundly to mankind.<\/p>\n<p> His poems and plays have made him an immortal in literature,                     but not because they are scholarly. He knew human life and                     human passion intimately, and told about them in a sensitive,                     lively and intelligible way.<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare, like us, lived in troubled years. Between 1564                     and 1616 much of Europe was ravaged by war, cruelty, self-seeking,                     loneliness and thoughts too strong to be expressed by ordinary                     people.<\/p>\n<p>He could not have chosen a more exciting or inspiring time                     to arrive in London. The whole country was in a state of transition,                     in a fever of nationalism. The people loved and were loved                     by their unparalleled Queen, Elizabeth, their seamen had sailed                     strange seas, showing the flag in parts of the world till                     then not known, education was spreading through newly established                     schools, and there was sprouting a new civic conscience about                     the needs of the poor. The middle class was emerging, capitalism                     was trying its wings, and every week brought changes and discoveries.<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare came upon the stage at a time when a blending                     force was needed. Eight of his ten history plays present a                     sequence of wars in Europe and the civil war at home, covering                     a century of intrigue and armed rebellion. These hearty tales                     of adventure and glory were calculated to inspire Elizabeth&#8217;s                     people in their new role as a world nation.<\/p>\n<p>Life and thought were speeding up among the generality of                     the people. There were essayists, even as today, holding forth                     against tobacco, alcohol, the habits of young people and the                     dress and primping of women. Control of traffic on the streets                     was a problem: a writer of that time said &#8220;In every street,                     carts and coaches make such a thundering as if the world ran                     upon wheels.&#8221; Men, women and children crowded the streets                     so that owners had to strengthen their houses to keep them                     from being pushed down.<\/p>\n<p>Physical glories were relatively rare, but the spirit of                     art and of language was fertile. It was an age when Titian                     was painting his &#8220;Entombment&#8221;, Veronese his &#8220;Calvary&#8221;, Tintoretto                     his &#8220;Paradise&#8221;, Caracci his &#8220;Fishing&#8221;, and Rubens, Van Dyck                     and El Greco were painting their incomparable works.<\/p>\n<p>It was Shakespeare who put into words, in dramatized form,                     the feelings, hopes, fears, frustrations and triumphs of the                     people of that Age.<\/p>\n<h3>What was going on<\/h3>\n<p>We of the twentieth century believe that we are living through                     a more tempestuous era than ever afflicted the world before,                     but let us set against our experiences those spanned by the                     half century of Shakespeare&#8217;s life, and we cannot be so sure.                     Look at these great events:<\/p>\n<p><em>War<\/em>: The Wars of the Huguenots; England lost Calais                     to France; Ivan the Terrible ravaged Russia; the Turks besieged                     Malta; war of liberation in the Netherlands; Pope Pius V organized                     a Holy League against the Turks; the Turks were defeated at                     the battle of Lepanto, the greatest naval battle since the                     fleet of Antony and Cleopatra was beaten by Octavian 1,600                     years before; the massacre of St. Bartholomew; Netherlands                     provinces joined together to drive out the Spanish; the Moors                     defeated the Portuguese in the Battle of the Three Kings;                     the Spaniards invaded Portugal; the Spanish Armada was defeated                     and scattered by the English fleet; the Edict of Nantes ended                     the French civil wars of religion; the Japanese invaded Korea;                     the Irish rebelled under Hugh O&#8217;Neill; Polish troops intervened                     in Russia&#8217;s &#8220;time of troubles&#8221; and were thrown out after three                     years.<\/p>\n<p><em>Exploration and colonization<\/em>: Manila, Philippine                     Islands, founded by the Spanish; Martin Frobisher sailed in                     search of the Northwest Passage; Sir Francis Drake sailed                     around the world; Sir Humphrey Gilbert took possession of                     Newfoundland in the name of Queen Elizabeth; Sir Walter Raleigh                     claimed Virginia for the Queen; Virginia Dare, the first white                     child born in America; the Marquis de la Roche obtained from                     Henry IV of France a commission to conquer Canada; Samuel                     de Champlain sailed up the St. Lawrence as far as La Chine                     Rapids, discovered the St. John River and Lake Champlain,                     and brought a colony to settle and found Quebec; Port Royal                     founded in Nova Scotia by the French; first schools in Canada                     founded, at Trois-Rivi~res and Tadoussac.<\/p>\n<p><em>Rulers and dynasties<\/em>: Mary, Queen of Scots, married                     Darnley; Darnley caused Rizzio, favourite of Mary, to be murdered,                     and was himself murdered by Bothwell; Mary married Bothwell;                     Mary abdicated infavour of her son, James IV; Mary, convicted                     of participating in a plot against Queen Elizabeth, was executed;                     Suleiman the Magnificent of the Ottoman Empire killed in battle;                     Catherine de Medici died; Oliver Cromwell born; revolt and                     execution of the Earl of Essex; Queen Elizabeth died and was                     succeeded by James VI of Scotland as James I of England; Sir                     Walter Raleigh convicted of plotting to dethrone James and                     imprisoned for 13 years; commission appointed to investigate                     union of England and Scotland; Guy Fawkes&#8217; plot to blow up                     the Houses of Parliament; plantation of Ulster, forefeited                     to the Crown by the rebellion of Tyrone; beginning of the                     Romanov Dynasty which was to rule Russia until the 1917 Revolution.<\/p>\n<p><em>Science and invention<\/em>: Invention of the screw lathe,                     the lead pencil, the decimal system, the knitting frame, the                     wind turbine, and the revolving stage; discovery of dibbling                     wheat to increase yield; Galileo&#8217;s treatise on terrestrial                     magnetism and electricity; Galileo expounded the principle                     of the pendulum and the first law of motion; the telescope                     made; Galileo discovered the moons of Jupiter; discovery of                     logarithms by Napier; use of triangulation system in surveying;                     William Harvey expounded his theory of the circulation of                     the blood; Galileo was directed not to hold or teach the Copernican                     system.<\/p>\n<p><em>Art and literature<\/em>: Michaelangelo died; Montaigne                     published his essays; Spenser&#8217;s &#8220;Faerie Queene&#8221; published;                     authorized version of the Bible; Don Quixote, satirical romance                     by Cervantes, published; Bacon&#8217;s Essays published; John Milton                     born.<\/p>\n<p><em>Expanding ideas<\/em>: Poland changed from hereditary                     to elective monarchy; public debates on religion thrown open                     to all faiths in India; reform of the calendar by Pope Gregory                     XIII; all Japan became politically united; Akbar the Great                     of India instituted reforms in administration and introduced                     universal religious toleration; plan proposed to establish                     a universal Christian republic in Europe; Elizabethan Poor                     Law, charging the parishes with care of needy persons; Treaty                     of Vienna gave equal status to Protestants and Roman Catholics;                     a royal charter granted certain religious freedom in Germany.<\/p>\n<p>Scanning this brief sample of the events in Shakespeare&#8217;s                     turbulent and yet progressive age we no longer wonder at the                     fact that what he wrote is relevant today.<\/p>\n<h3>A man of his age<\/h3>\n<p>Shakespeare was a practising theatre craftsman, a busy actor                     and author, and a shrewd business man. Just like most writers                     in our own day, he was not writing for posterity but for people                     of his time, to make a living, and to meet a deadline. Ford                     Madox Ford remarks in <em>The March of Literature <\/em>(Dial                     Press, New York, 1938): &#8220;Only two writers, Virgil and Shakespeare,                     in a millennium and a half, can be noted as having made large                     fortunes. Virgil acquired his by way of gifts. Shakespeare,                     by exploiting his own gifts as a theatrical producer, stands                     before us not merely as the greatest of poet-playwrights                     but as the first Anglo-Saxon big business man.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Some people think that it remained for our enlightened age                     to give Shakespeare due recognition, but that is not so. In                     addition to great popular favour and the applause of the court                     he had the satisfaction of seeing nearly half his plays done                     into print. <em>Hamlet <\/em>was a best seller, published at                     least five times during the poet&#8217;s lifetime. In 1623, seven                     years after his death, the first complete edition of his plays                     was published. This, called the most important secular book                     in English literature, was issued by his fellow-actors.<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare&#8217;s works quickly crossed the frontiers of countries                     and the boundaries of language. A great poem by Shakespeare                     remains a great poem in whatever language it is printed.<\/p>\n<p>This is not to say that Shakespeare has been without detractors.                     Count Leo Tolstoy, a great Russian writer and thinker, said                     that Shakespeare &#8220;is not merely no genius but is not even                     &#8216;an average author&#8217;.&#8221; George Bernard Shaw&#8217;s sharp tongue said:                     &#8220;With the single exception of Homer, there is no eminent writer,                     not even Sir Waiter Scott, whom I can despise so entirely                     as I despise Shakespeare when I measure my mind against his&#8221;.                     Dr. Thomas Bowdler issued an expurgated Shakespeare which                     met with no acceptance but did give rise to the expression                     &#8220;to bowdlerize&#8221; as a term of ridicule of censors and improvers.<\/p>\n<h3>A master of words<\/h3>\n<p>Those who care most for Shakespeare value him in the first                     place for his use of language, his verbal music.<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare was a master of all moods. He could thunder                     like the guns on D Day, and then in a twinkle he could turn                     to words so soft that they would not break a soap bubble.                     But in the proud full sail of his great verse he moved with                     the stream of common speech. He did not drag in unusual words                     like peacock&#8217;s feathers to decorate a fowl&#8217;s tail. There is                     no sign of strain or out-of-character acting when                     his players speak in great poetry. As Dryden wrote of him:                     &#8220;All the images of Nature were still present to him, and he                     drew them, not laboriously, but luckily; when he describes                     anything you more than see it, you feel it too.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare found the words to express our deepest secrets.                     His skill in placing one syllable beside another gives us                     acute pleasure. He put life into his plays not only with the                     magic of words but of thought, with an ear to the appeal of                     ideas as well as to the sounds of things.<\/p>\n<p>Some present day script writers strive to achieve that which                     arouses fear, and produce only what is monstrous. When Shakespeare                     indulged in monstrosities it was not for the sake of their                     monstrosity but for their contribution to the story. When                     he calls up the three witches or a deformed creature like                     Caliban he convinces us that if there were such beings they                     would so conduct themselves.<\/p>\n<p>His skill in transforming human character and action into                     art created a world of unforgettable people and phrases.<\/p>\n<p>Human activities are not mere ant-like rushings to                     and fro. The characters are motivated by passion, reason,                     interest and habit, and we are made to acknowledge that their                     actions and sentiments are, from those motives, the necessary                     result. Often, like Oedipus, they do not know their own promptings,                     but stumble toward their fate unconsciously. Yet they are                     revealed to the audience by what they say, by their manner                     of saying it, by their silences, by their actions and by what                     others say about them.<\/p>\n<h3>A vigorous author<\/h3>\n<p>Shakespeare wrote vigorously without letting the effort                     show. He scattered the seeds of things, the principles of                     character and action, with a cunning hand, yet with a careless                     air. He rolled the genuine passions of nature on his tongue,                     and put them into sentences carved with powerful wit. But                     he was a realist, too. He tidied up. Life is not all pure                     drama.<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare was not a great original thinker. Few poets                     are ( that is not their business. What he did was to give                     point to the things inside people and bring them out into                     the open. Someone has said that &#8220;Shakespeare initiated nothing,                     but he brought all the abortive beginnings of others to a                     triumphant conclusion.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>To all his magpie appropriations he added from his own experiences                     and the tales of wonder of the brave new worlds which Elizabethan                     sea-dogs were discovering.<\/p>\n<p>One source must be mentioned: Montaigne&#8217;s Essays, which                     seem to have suggested the character of Caliban and Gonzalo&#8217;s                     description of an ideal commonwealth used by Shakespeare in                     <em>The Tempest<\/em>. It was Montaigne himself who wrote in                     one of his essays: &#8220;I gather the flowers by the wayside, by                     the brooks and in the meadows, and only the string with which                     I bind them together is my own.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The Sonnets, the most disputed of all collections of poetry                     in the English language, have given sleuths and biographers                     years of puzzlement. No ordinary sensitive reader can doubt                     that these sonnets have roots in a real and painful experience,                     with their references to the &#8220;dark lady&#8221;, a disdainful brunette,                     but their biographical content is immaterial. They are to                     be judged by their poetic value.<\/p>\n<p>Judgment is given by the <em>Harmsworth Encyclopedia <\/em>in                     these words: &#8220;in the estimation of the majority of competent                     judges they constitute the highest achievement of the human                     mind in the region of pure poetry.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>A man for our age<\/h3>\n<p>In a period when the most urgent need is the need to get                     to know ourselves and the other people of the world, Shakespeare                     can help.<\/p>\n<p>He does not give absolute rules of conduct which we can                     apply as cure-alls, but his principles stand and his                     characters speak to us. Johann W. von Goethe, the eminent                     German dramatist, paid him this striking tribute: &#8220;All the                     anticipations I have ever had regarding man and his destiny,                     which have accompanied me from youth upward often unobserved                     by myself, I find developed and fulfilled in Shakespeare&#8217;s                     writings. It seems as if he cleared up every one of our enigmas                     to us, though we cannot say: Here or there is the word of                     solution.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Though we have progressed in science and invention, in speed                     of communication and in ease of life, human nature is much                     what it was. The aristocrats, tycoons, soldiers and common                     people are of the same sort today as then. We still struggle                     against tides of we know not what strength and violence. We                     still seek the national stability that will enable us to prosper                     physically and expand mentally and achieve morally. The way                     to success is foreshadowed for any nation in Hastings&#8217; lines                     on England in <em>Henry VI<\/em>.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;&#8230; knows not Montague that of itself England is safe,                     if true within itself?&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>About reading Shakespeare<\/h3>\n<p>New entertainment, new instruction, new illumination; the                     quaint, the curious and the unexpected: all these leap up                     at you from nearly every page of a Shakespeare play. Even                     if you are not looking for anything particular in Shakespeare                     you will find something.<\/p>\n<p>One does not need a specialist&#8217;s knowledge of the plays                     or of the Elizabethan Age to enjoy Shakespeare. If an occasional                     word or allusion is lost, and a particular bit of poetical                     dialogue remains obscure, the reader may still get the cream                     of the play by reading it for no other purpose than to take                     pleasure in it.<\/p>\n<p>One thing keeping people away from his works is that they                     have been lectured and expounded almost to death. William                     Hazlitt, the nineteenth century essayist, remarked: &#8220;If we                     wish to know the force of human genius we should read Shakespeare.                     If we wish to see the insignificance of human learning we                     may study his commentators.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When we read a play by Shakespeare effectively we stage                     it on the platform of our imagination. We can do so because                     he takes us so completely into his confidence. The characters                     may be puzzled and fooled, but the members of the audience                     never are.<\/p>\n<p>A particular device which Shakespeare uses to keep the audience                     a step ahead of the procession of the play is the soliloquy,                     a speech by a person quite alone, who weighs rationally, yet                     with passion, opposing values and drastic alternatives.<\/p>\n<p>Hamlet&#8217;s soliloquy that starts &#8220;To be or not to be&#8221; is the                     most famous speech in modern literature, with an appeal that                     neither repetition nor parody can destroy. &#8220;Because,&#8221; says                     H. Peterson in <em>The Lonely Debate <\/em>(Reynal and Hitchcock,                     New York, 1938) &#8220;it dramatizes for each one of us the baffled                     individual in the agony of indecision.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>How important the soliloquy is to the success of <em>Hamlet                     <\/em>is indicated by the fact that Christopher Plummer, playing                     the part in the BBC production in the old castle at Elsinore                     in 1963, worked on it continuously for twelve hours.<\/p>\n<h3>A man to quote<\/h3>\n<p>The ultimate test of literary merit is survival, which is                     the index to majority opinion. While the great military conquerors                     are but ashes in an urn, Shakespeare is still moving and breathing                     in his writings, in our everyday talk, and in the life of                     the world.<\/p>\n<p>It is not easy to go for a day without quoting him, because                     there are not many subjects of importance that he does not                     touch upon in glowing phrases.<\/p>\n<p><em>Hamlet <\/em>gave us: flaming youth, in my mind&#8217;s eye,                     to the manner born, the primrose path, it smells to heaven,                     there&#8217;s the rub, method in his madness, brevity is the soul                     of wit, cudgel thy brains, more matter and less art, neither                     a borrower nor a lender be, this mortal coil, yeoman&#8217;s service.                     &#8220;Pomp and circumstance&#8221; came from <em>Othello<\/em>, with a                     dozen more; &#8220;the dogs of war&#8221; from Julius Caesar; &#8220;hearts                     of gold, give the devil his due,&#8221; and &#8220;he has eaten me out                     of house and home&#8221; are from Henry <em>IV<\/em>; &#8220;make assurance                     doubly sure&#8221; and &#8220;the milk of human kindness&#8221; came from <em>Macbeth<\/em>;                     and so on through the other plays: merry as the day is long,                     laid on with a trowel, an ill-favoured thing, but mine                     own, what&#8217;s in a name? a fool&#8217;s paradise, elbow room, every                     inch a king, the wheel is come full circle, throw cold water                     on it, play fast and loose, the main chance, a nine days&#8217;                     wonder, a spotless reputation, something in the wind, one                     touch of nature makes the whole world kin; and so on and on.                     There are 4,000 quotations and extracts in the <em>Dictionary                     of Shakespeare Quotations <\/em>by D. C. Browning (Everyman&#8217;s                     Reference Library, 1953).<\/p>\n<p>Hundreds of books have taken their titles from Shakespeare:                     Crack of Doom, Tomorrow and Tomorrow, All Our Yesterdays,                     Brief Candles, The Undiscovered Country, Rosemary for Remembrance,                     Dear Brutus, Not in Our Stars, Strange Bedfellows, Brave New                     World, The Web of Life, Gaudy Night, The World My Oyster,                     Valiant Dust, and so on.<\/p>\n<p>These phrases and titles came from the mint of Shakespeare&#8217;s                     creative genius fresh, entertaining and alive, and they remain                     so today.<\/p>\n<h3>A man for all ages<\/h3>\n<p>Shakespeare&#8217;s plays were not only for his own age and ours,                     not for one nation or language, but for all humanity. He planted                     one leg of his compass in the Elizabethan era and then with                     the other swept the whole circumference of Time.<\/p>\n<p>His plays will endure because they embody undying states                     of mind. They hold before us, now and forever, a conception                     of human dignity, a sense of the importance of human passions,                     and a vision of the amplitude of human life. All this is embodied                     in Hamlet&#8217;s assertion: &#8220;What a piece of work is a man, how                     noble in reason, in form and moving how express and admirable,                     in action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a god.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare gives us lessons in capsule form applicable                     to today&#8217;s problems. <em>King Lear <\/em>may be taken as a                     tragedy of filial ingratitude, or it may be taken as a lesson                     that if you throw away your weapons some less scrupulous person                     will pick them up. A new viewpoint about <em>Hamlet <\/em>is                     given <em>in Outlines of Shakespeare&#8217;s Plays <\/em>(Barnes                     &amp; Noble, Inc., New York, 1945). Three men of different temperaments                     are faced with the task of avenging the death of a father.                     How will each man solve the problem? Hamlet, the man who thinks                     without acting, delays; Laertes, the man who acts without                     thinking, plunges; and the two tragic figures perish on the                     same poisoned sword, leaving the kingdom to Fortinbras, the                     cool-headed, balanced man who plans and acts in due proportion                     and at appropriate times.<\/p>\n<p>There are, too, lessons of tolerance. <em>Cymbeline<\/em>,                     <em>A Winter&#8217;s Tale<\/em>, <em>and The Tempest <\/em>are comedies                     of reconciliation and forgiveness and the restoration of lost                     happiness.<\/p>\n<h3>The 400th anniversary<\/h3>\n<p>This year all England is going Elizabethan in celebration                     of the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare&#8217;s birth.<\/p>\n<p>A hundred foreign ambassadors will raise their national                     banners at Stratford-upon-Avon on April 23rd in                     honour of a poet whose plays are done in scores of languages.                     Canada is sending its world renowned Stratford Festival Company                     to perform three plays at the Chichester Festival Theatre.<\/p>\n<p>All of this is in honour of a man who found the answers                     to questions that other men did not yet know existed, even                     to questions being asked four centuries after him. They are                     questions about human character and purposes, and he gave                     answers vital to know in one of the world&#8217;s decisive hours.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[44],"class_list":["post-3939","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-44"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>March 1964 - VOL. 45, No. 3 - Shakespeare After 400 Years - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1964-vol-45-no-3-shakespeare-after-400-years\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"March 1964 - VOL. 45, No. 3 - Shakespeare After 400 Years - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Shakespeare is not a dead poet who lived long ago, but a breathing spirit thrusting himself into our everyday lives. 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In all countries of the world, in all languages, Shakespeare continues to speak profoundly to mankind. His poems and plays have made him an immortal in literature, but not because they are scholarly. 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