



William
Shakespeare
Shakespeare, William (1564-1616), English playwright and poet, recognized
in much of the world as the greatest of all dramatists. Shakespeare's plays
communicate a profound knowledge of the wellsprings of human behavior,
revealed through portrayals of a wide variety of characters. His use of
poetic and dramatic means to create a unified aesthetic effect out of a
multiplicity of vocal expressions and actions is recognized as a singular
achievement, and his use of poetry within his plays to express the deepest
levels of human motivation in individual, social, and universal situations
is considered one of the greatest accomplishments in literary history.
Life
A complete, authoritative account of Shakespeare's life is lacking,
and thus much supposition surrounds relatively few facts. It is commonly
accepted that he was born in 1564, and it is known that he was baptized
in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire. The third of eight children, he was
probably educated at the local grammar school. As the eldest son, Shakespeare
ordinarily would have been apprenticed to his father's shop so that he
could learn and eventually take over the business, but according to one
account he was apprenticed to a butcher because of declines in his father's
financial situation. According to another account, he became a schoolmaster.
In 1582 Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway, the daughter of a farmer. He
is supposed to have left Stratford after he was caught poaching in the
deer park of Sir Thomas Lucy, a local justice of the peace. Shakespeare
and Anne Hathaway had a daughter in 1583 and twins-a boy and a girl-in
1585. The boy did not survive.
Shakespeare apparently arrived in London about 1588 and by 1592 had
attained success as an actor and a playwright. Shortly thereafter he secured
the patronage of Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton. The publication
of Shakespeare's two fashionably erotic narrative poems Venus and Adonis
(1593) and The Rape of Lucrece (1594) and of his Sonnets (published 1609,
but circulated previously in manuscript form) established his reputation
as a gifted and popular poet of the Renaissance (14th century to 17th century).
The Sonnets describe the devotion of a character, often identified as the
poet himself, to a young man whose beauty and virtue he praises and to
a mysterious and faithless dark lady with whom the poet is infatuated.
The ensuing triangular situation, resulting from the attraction of the
poet's friend to the dark lady, is treated with passionate intensity and
psychological insight. Shakespeare's modern reputation, however, is based
primarily on the 38 plays that he apparently wrote, modified, or collaborated
on. Although generally popular in his time, these plays were frequently
little esteemed by his educated contemporaries, who considered English
plays of their own day to be only vulgar entertainment.
Shakespeare's professional life in London was marked by a number of
financially advantageous arrangements that permitted him to share in the
profits of his acting company, the Chamberlain's Men, later called the
King's Men, and its two theaters, the Globe Theatre and the Blackfriars.
His plays were given special presentation at the courts of Queen Elizabeth
I and King James I more frequently than those of any other contemporary
dramatist. It is known that he risked losing royal favor only once, in
1599, when his company performed "the play of the deposing and killing
of King Richard II" at the request of a group of conspirators against Elizabeth.
In the subsequent inquiry, Shakespeare's company was absolved of complicity
in the conspiracy.
After about 1608, Shakespeare's dramatic production lessened and it
seems that he spent more time in Stratford, where he had established his
family in an imposing house called New Place and had become a leading local
citizen. He died in 1616, and was buried in the Stratford church.
Works
Although the precise date of many of Shakespeare's plays is in doubt,
his dramatic career is generally divided into four periods: (1) the period
up to 1594, (2) the years from 1594 to 1600, (3) the years from 1600 to
1608, and (4) the period after 1608. Because of the difficulty of dating
Shakespeare's plays and the lack of conclusive facts about his writings,
these dates are approximate and can be used only as a convenient framework
in which to discuss his development. In all periods, the plots of his plays
were frequently drawn from chronicles, histories, or earlier fiction, as
were the plays of other contemporary dramatists.
First Period
Shakespeare's first period was one of experimentation. His early plays,
unlike his more mature work, are characterized to a degree by formal and
rather obvious construction and by stylized verse.
Chronicle history plays were a popular genre of the time, and four
plays dramatizing the English civil strife of the 15th century are possibly
Shakespeare's earliest dramatic works (see England: The Lancastrian and
Yorkist Kings). These plays, Henry VI, Parts I, II, and III (1590?-1592?)
and Richard III (1593?), deal with evil resulting from weak leadership
and from national disunity fostered for selfish ends. The four-play cycle
closes with the death of Richard III and the ascent to the throne of Henry
VII, the founder of the Tudor dynasty, to which Elizabeth belonged. In
style and structure, these plays are related partly to medieval drama and
partly to the works of earlier Elizabethan dramatists, especially Christopher
Marlowe. Either indirectly (through such dramatists) or directly, the influence
of the classical Roman dramatist Seneca is also reflected in the organization
of these four plays, especially in the bloodiness of many of their scenes
and in their highly colored, bombastic language. The influence of Seneca,
exerted by way of the earlier English dramatist Thomas Kyd, is particularly
obvious in Titus Andronicus (1594?), a tragedy of righteous revenge for
heinous and bloody acts, which are staged in sensational detail.
Shakespeare's comedies of the first period represent a wide range.
The Comedy of Errors (1592?), a farce in imitation of classical Roman comedy,
depends for its appeal on mistaken identities in two sets of twins involved
in romance and war. Farce is not as strongly emphasized in The Taming of
the Shrew (1593?), a comedy of character. The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1594?)
concerns romantic love. Love's Labour's Lost (1594?) satirizes the loves
of its main male characters as well as the fashionable devotion to studious
pursuits by which these noblemen had first sought to avoid romantic and
worldly ensnarement. The dialogue in which many of the characters voice
their pretensions ridicules the artificially ornate, courtly style typified
by the works of English novelist and dramatist John Lyly, the court conventions
of the time, and perhaps the scientific discussions of Sir Walter Raleigh
and his colleagues.
Second Period
Shakespeare's second period includes his most important plays concerned
with English history, his so-called joyous comedies, and two of his major
tragedies. In this period, his style and approach became highly individualized.
The second-period historical plays include Richard II (1595?), Henry
IV, Parts I and II (1597?), and Henry V (1598?). They encompass the years
immediately before those portrayed in the Henry VI plays. Richard II is
a study of a weak, sensitive, self-dramatizing but sympathetic monarch
who loses his kingdom to his forceful successor, Henry IV. In the two parts
of Henry IV, Henry recognizes his own guilt. His fears for his own son,
later Henry V, prove unfounded, as the young prince displays a responsible
attitude toward the duties of kingship. In an alternation of masterful
comic and serious scenes, the fat knight Falstaff and the rebel Hotspur
reveal contrasting excesses between which the prince finds his proper position.
The mingling of the tragic and the comic to suggest a broad range of humanity
subsequently became one of Shakespeare's favorite devices.
Outstanding among the comedies of the second period is A Midsummer
Night's Dream (1595?), which interweaves several plots involving two pairs
of noble lovers, a group of bumbling and unconsciously comic townspeople,
and members of the fairy realm, notably Puck, King Oberon, and Queen Titania.
Subtle evocation of atmosphere, of the sort that characterizes this play,
is also found in the tragicomedy The Merchant of Venice (1596?). In this
play, the Renaissance motifs of masculine friendship and romantic love
are portrayed in opposition to the bitter inhumanity of a usurer named
Shylock, whose own misfortunes are presented so as to arouse understanding
and sympathy. The character of the quick-witted, warm, and responsive young
woman, exemplified in this play by Portia, reappears in the joyous comedies
of the second period.
The witty comedy Much Ado About Nothing (1599?) is marred, in the opinion
of some critics, by an insensitive treatment of its female characters.
However, Shakespeare's most mature comedies, As You Like It (1599?) and
Twelfth Night (1600?), are characterized by lyricism, ambiguity, and beautiful,
charming, and strong-minded heroines like Beatrice. In As You Like It,
the contrast between the manners of the Elizabethan court and those current
in the English countryside is drawn in a rich and varied vein. Shakespeare
constructed a complex orchestration between different characters and between
appearance and reality and used this pattern to comment on a variety of
human foibles. In that respect, As You Like It is similar to Twelfth Night,
in which the comical side of love is illustrated by the misadventures of
two pairs of romantic lovers and of a number of realistically conceived
and clowning characters in the subplot. Another comedy of the second period
is The Merry Wives of Windsor (1599?), a farce about middle-class life
in which Falstaff reappears as the comic victim.
Two major tragedies, differing considerably in nature, mark the beginning
and the end of the second period. Romeo and Juliet (1595?), famous for
its poetic treatment of the ecstasy of youthful love, dramatizes the fate
of two lovers victimized by the feuds and misunderstandings of their elders
and by their own hasty temperaments. Julius Caesar (1599?), on the other
hand, is a serious tragedy of political rivalries, but is less intense
in style than the tragic dramas that followed it.
Third Period
Shakespeare's third period includes his greatest tragedies and his
so-called dark or bitter comedies. The tragedies of this period are considered
the most profound of his works. In them he used his poetic idiom as an
extremely supple dramatic instrument, capable of recording human thought
and the many dimensions of given dramatic situations. Hamlet (1601?), perhaps
his most famous play, exceeds by far most other tragedies of revenge in
picturing the mingled sordidness and glory of the human condition. Hamlet
feels that he is living in a world of horror. Confirmed in this feeling
by the murder of his father and the sensuality of his mother, he exhibits
tendencies toward both crippling indecision and precipitous action. Interpretation
of his motivation and ambivalence continues to be a subject of considerable
controversy.
Othello (1604?) portrays the growth of unjustified jealousy in the
protagonist, Othello, a Moor serving as a general in the Venetian army.
The innocent object of his jealousy is his wife, Desdemona. In this tragedy,
Othello's evil lieutenant Iago draws him into mistaken jealousy in order
to ruin him. King Lear (1605?), conceived on a more epic scale, deals with
the consequences of the irresponsibility and misjudgment of Lear, a ruler
of early Britain, and of his councilor, the Duke of Gloucester. The tragic
outcome is a result of their giving power to their evil children, rather
than to their good children. Lear's daughter Cordelia displays a redeeming
love that makes the tragic conclusion a vindication of goodness. This conclusion
is reinforced by the portrayal of evil as self-defeating, as exemplified
by the fates of Cordelia's sisters and of Gloucester's opportunistic son.
Antony and Cleopatra (1606?) is concerned with a different type of love,
namely the middle-aged passion of Roman general Mark Antony for Egyptian
queen Cleopatra. Their love is glorified by some of Shakespeare's most
sensuous poetry. In Macbeth (1606?), Shakespeare depicts the tragedy of
a man who, led on by others and because of a defect in his own nature,
succumbs to ambition. In securing the Scottish throne, Macbeth dulls his
humanity to the point where he becomes capable of any amoral act.
Unlike these tragedies, three other plays of this period suggest a
bitterness stemming from the protagonists' apparent lack of greatness or
tragic stature. In Troilus and Cressida (1602?), the most intellectually
contrived of Shakespeare's plays, the gulf between the ideal and the real,
both individual and political, is skillfully evoked. In Coriolanus (1608?),
another tragedy set in antiquity, the legendary Roman hero Gnaeus Marcius
Coriolanus is portrayed as unable to bring himself either to woo the Roman
masses or to crush them by force. Timon of Athens (1608?) is a similarly
bitter play about a character reduced to misanthropy by the ingratitude
of his sycophants. Because of the uneven quality of the writing, this tragedy
is considered a collaboration, quite possibly with English dramatist Thomas
Middleton.
The two comedies of this period are also dark in mood and are sometimes
called problem plays because they do not fit into clear categories or present
easy resolution. All's Well That Ends Well (1602?) and Measure for Measure
(1604?) both question accepted patterns of morality without offering solutions.
Fourth Period
The fourth period of Shakespeare's work includes his principal romantic
tragicomedies. Toward the end of his career, Shakespeare created several
plays that, through the intervention of magic, art, compassion, or grace,
often suggest redemptive hope for the human condition. These plays are
written with a grave quality differing considerably from Shakespeare's
earlier comedies, but they end happily with reunions or final reconciliations.
The tragicomedies depend for part of their appeal upon the lure of a distant
time or place, and all seem more obviously symbolic than most of Shakespeare's
earlier works. To many critics, the tragicomedies signify a final ripeness
in Shakespeare's own outlook, but other authorities believe that the change
reflects only a change in fashion in the drama of the period.
The romantic tragicomedy Pericles, Prince of Tyre (1608?) concerns
the painful loss of the title character's wife and the persecution of his
daughter. After many exotic adventures, Pericles is reunited with his loved
ones.In Cymbeline (1610?) and The Winter's Tale (1610?), characters suffer
great loss and pain but are reunited. Perhaps the most successful product
of this particular vein of creativity, however, is what may be Shakespeare's
last complete play, The Tempest (1611?), in which the resolution suggests
the beneficial effects of the union of wisdom and power. In this play a
duke, deprived of his dukedom and banished to an island, confounds his
usurping brother by employing magical powers and furthering a love match
between his daughter and the usurper's son. Shakespeare's poetic power
reached great heights in this beautiful, lyrical play.
Two final plays, sometimes ascribed to Shakespeare, presumably are
the products of collaboration. A historical drama, Henry VIII (1613?) was
probably written with English dramatist John Fletcher (see Beaumont and
Fletcher), as was The Two Noble Kinsmen (1613?; published 1634), a story
of the love of two friends for one woman.
Literary Reputation
Until the 18th century, Shakespeare was generally thought to have been
no more than a rough and untutored genius. Theories were advanced that
his plays had actually been written by someone more educated, perhaps statesman
and philosopher Sir Francis Bacon or the Earl of Southampton, who was Shakespeare's
patron. However, he was celebrated in his own time by English writer Ben
Jonson and others who saw in him a brilliance that would endure. Since
the 19th century, Shakespeare's achievements have been more consistently
recognized, and throughout the Western world he has come to be regarded
as the greatest dramatist ever.
Contributed by:
A. Kent Hieatt
"Shakespeare, William," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c)
1993-1996 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Compare: Francis Bacon and William Shakespeare
