SHAKESPEARE: HIS LIFE, ART, AND CHARACTERS. WITH AN HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE ORIGIN AND GROWTH OF THE DRAMA IN ENGLAND.Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1872, BY HENRY N. HUDSON, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.CONTENTS Shakespeare’s Characters {continued). Historical Plays. Page King John...................................5 King Kichard the Second....................34 King Henry the Fourth......................63 King Henry the Fifth......................105 King Kiciiard the Third...................134 King Henry the Eighth.....................170 Tragedies. Eomeo and Juliet . . . . . . . 195 Julius Caesar . 220 Hamlet, Prince of Denmark.................243 Macbeth ........ 287 King Lear.................................320 Antony and Cleopatra......................358 Cmbeltne..................................387 Othello, the Moor of Venice .... 423 Coriolanus................................460 Appendix. The Use .of Shakespeare as a Text-Book . . . 489SHAKESPEARE’S CHARACTERS. HISTORICAL PLATS. KING JOHN. SHAKESPEARE has probably done more to diffuse a knowledge of English history than all the historians put together ; onr liveliest and best impressions of “ merry England in the olden time ” being generally drawn from his pages. Though we seldom think of referring to him as authority in matters of fact, yet we are apt to make him our standard of old English manners and character and life, reading other historians by his light, and trying them by his measures, without being distinctly conscious of it. It scarce need be said that the Poet’s labours in this kind are as far as possible from being the unsouled political diagrams of history; they are, in the right and full sense of the term, dramatic revivifications of the Past, wrherein the shades of departed things are made to live their life over again, to repeat themselves, as it were, under our eye; so that they have an interest for us such as no mere narrative of events can possess. If there are any others able to give us as just notions, provided wTe read them, still there are none who come near him in the art of causing themselves to be read. And the further we push our historical researches, the more we are brought to recognize the substantial justness of his representations. Even when he makes free with chronology, and varies from the actual order of things, it is commonly in quest of something higher and better than chronological accuracy; and the result is in6 Shakespeare’s characters. most cases favourable to right conceptions; 1he persons and events being thereby so knit together in a scrt of vital harmony as to be better understood than if the;,' were ordered with literal exactness of time and place. H3 never fails to hold the mind in natural intercourse and sympathy with living and operative truth. Kings and princes and the heads of the State, it is true, figure prominently in his scenes; but this is done in such a way as to set us face to face with the real spirit and sense of the people, whose claims are never sacrificed, to make an imposing pageant or puppet-show of political automatons. If he brings in fictitious persons and events, mixing them up with real ones, it is that he may set forth into view those parts and elements and aspects of life which lie without the range of common history; enshrining in representative ideal forms the else neglected substance of actual character. But the most noteworthy point in this branch of the theme is, that out of the materials of an entire age and nation he so selects and uses a few as to give a just conception of the whole; all the lines and features of its life and action, its piety, chivalry, wisdom, policy, wit, and profligacy, being gathered up and wrought out in fair proportion and clear expression. Where he deviates mos; from all the authorities known to have been consulted by him, there is a large, wise propriety in his deviations, such as might well prompt the conjecture of his having written Torn some traditionary matter which the historians had failed to chronicle. And indeed some of those deviations have been remarkably verified by the researches of later times; as if the Poet had exercised a sort of prophetic power in his dramatic retrospections. So that our latest study and ripest judgment in any historical matter handled by him will be apt to fall in with and confirm the impressions at first derived from him ; +hat vdiich in the outset approved itself to ti e imagination ■ s beautiful, in the end approving itself to the reason as true. These remarks, however, must not be taken as in dispar-HISTORICAL PLAYS. 7 agement of other forms of history. It is important for us to know much which it was not the Poet’s business to teach, and which if he had attempted to teach, we should probably learn far less from him. Nor can we be too much on our guard against resting in those vague general notions of the Past which are so often found ministering to conceit and flippant shallowness. For, in truth, however we may exult in the free soarings of the spirit beyond the bounds of time and sense, one foot of the solid ground of Facts, where our thoughts must needs be limited by the matter that feeds them, is worth far more than acres upon acres of cloud-land glory where, as there is nothing to bound the sight, because nothing to be seen, so a man may easily credit himself with “ gazing into the abysses of the infinite.” And perhaps the best way to keep off all such conceit is by holding the mind down to the specialties of local and particular truth. These specialties, however, it is not for poetry to supply; nay, rather, it w^ould cease to be poetry, should it go about to supply them. And it is enough that Shakespeare, in giving us what lay within the scope of his art, facilitates and furthers the learning of that which lies out of it; working whatever matter he takes into a lamp to light our way through that which he omits. This is indeed to make the Historical Drama wdiat it should be, a “ concentration of history”; setting our thoughts at the point where the several lines of truth converge, and from whence we may survey the field of his subject both in its unity and its variety. All this is to be understood as referring specially to the Poet’s dramas in English history; though much of it holds good also in regard to the Roman tragedies.* Of those * The dramas derived from the English history, ten in number, form one of the most valuable of Shakespeare’s works, and of his maturest age. I say advisedly one of his^^^^^fe^pilBTBi^^vid^ntly intended them to form one great whole. aS^^&eve-j tfctf ntstbric^^heroic poem in the dramatic form, of which the mho,ral plays constitute the rhapsodies. The main features of the events afft set fort^ with such fidelity; their causes, and even their secret springs, ara (placed ir| so clear a light; that we8 Shakespeare’s characters dramas, ten in number, King John comes f rst in the historical order of time. And in respect of this piece the foregoing remarks are subject to no little abatement or qualification. As a work of art, the play li as indeed considerable merit; but as a piece of historical portraiture its claims may easily be overstated. In such a work, diplomatic or documentary exactness is not altogether possible, nor is it even desirable any further than w ill run smooth with the conditions of the dramatic form. Por, to be truly an historical drama, a. work should not adhere to the literal truth of history in such sort as to hinder the proper dramatic life; that is, the laws of the Drama are here paramount to the facts of history; which infers that, where the two cannot stand together, the latter are to give way. Yet, when and so far as they are fairly compatible, neither ought to be sacrificed; at least, historical fidelity is so far essential to the perfection of the work. And Shakespeare’s mastery of his art is especially apparent from the c egree in which he has reconciled them. And the historical inferiority of King John, as will be shown hereafter, lies mainly in this, that, taking his other works in the same line as the standard, the facts of history are disregarded much beyond what the laws of Art seem to require. may gain from them a knowledge of history in all its truth ; while the living picture makes an impression on the imagination which csn never be effaced. But this series of dramas is designed as the vehicle of a much higher and more general instruction; it furnishes examples of the political course of the world, applicable to all times. This mirror of kings should be the manual of princes: from it they may learn the intrinsic dignity ©f their hereditary vocation ; but they will also learn the difficulties of their situa uon, the dangers of usurpation, the inevitable fall of tyranny, which buries itself under its attempts to obtain a firmer foundation; lastly, the ruinous consequences of the weaknesses, errors, and crimes of kings, for whole nations, and many subsequent generations. Eight of these plays, from Richard the Second to Richard the Third, are linked together in uninterrupted successions, and embrace a ~v!ost eventful period of nearly a century of English history. The events por-irayed in them not only follow each other, but are linked together in the closest and most exact connection; and the cycle of revolts, parties, civil and foreign wars, which began with the deposition of Richard the Second, first ends with the accession of Henry the Seventh to the throre. —Schlegei..KING JOHN. 9 The only extant or discovered notice of King John, till it appeared in the folio of 1623, is in the often-quoted list given by Francis Meres in his Palladis Tamia, 1598. So that all we can say with certainty is, that the play was written some time before that date. Various attempts have been made to argue the date of the writing from allusions to contemporary matters; but I cannot see that those attempts really amount to any thing at all. On the other hand, some of the German critics are altogether out, when, arguing from the internal evidences of style, structure of the verse, and tone of thought, they refer the piece to the same period of the author’s life with The Tempest, The Winter’s Tale, and Cymbeline. In these respects, it strikes me as having an intermediate cast between The Two Gentlemen of Verona and The Merchant of Venice. From the characteristics of style alone, I am quite persuaded that the play was written some considerable time before King Henry the Fourth. It thus synchronizes, I should say, very nearly with King Fichard the Second. The matter is w~ell stated by Schlegel: “In King John the political and warlike events are dressed out with solemn pomp, for the very reason that they have little of true grandeur. The falsehood and selfishness of the monarch speak in the style of a manifesto. Conventional dignity is most indispensable where personal dignity is wanting. Falconbridge is the witty interpreter of this language; he ridicules the secret springs of politics, without disapproving of them; for he owns that he is endeavouring to make his fortune by similar means, and would rather be of the deceivers than the deceived ; there being in his view of the world no other choice.” Schlegel thus regards the peculiarities in question as growing naturally out of the subject; whereas I have no scruple of referring them to the undergraduate state of the Poet’s genius; for in truth they are much the same as in several other plays where no such cause has been alleged. These remarks, however, are hardly applicable except to the first three Acts of the play; in the last two we have much10 Shakespeare’s characters. more of the full-grown Shakespeare, sure-f Doted and self-supporting ; the hidden elements of character, and the subtle shapings and turnings of guilty thought shining out in clear transparence, or flashing forth amidst the stress of passion; with kindlings of poetic and dramatic inspiration not unworthy the best workmanship of the Poet’s middle period. Shakespeare drew the material of his other histories from Holinshed, and no doubt had or might have had access to the same source in writing King John. Yet in all the others the rights of historic truth are for the most part duly observed. Which would seem to argue that in this case he not only left his usual guide, but had some special reason for doing so. Accordingly it appears that the fore-mentioned sins against history were not original with him. The whole plot and plan of the drama, the events and the ordering of them, all indeed but the poetry and character, were borrowed. The reign of King John was specially fruitful of doings such as might be made to tell against the old claims and usages of the Mediaeval Church. This aptness of the matter caused it to be early and largely used in furthering the great ecclesiastical revolution of the sixteenth century. The precise date is not known, but Bishop Bale’s pageant of King John was probably written in the time of Edward the Sixth. The design of this singular performance was to promote the Reformation, of which Bale was a very strenuous and unscrupulous supporter. Some of the leading events of John’s reign, his disputes with the Pope, the sufferings of his kingdom under the interdict, the surrender of his crown to the Legate, and his reputed death by poison, are there used, or abused, in a way to suit the time and purpose of the writer. The historical characters are King himself, Pope Innocent the Third, Pandulf, Lang-i, Simon of Swinstead, and a mdnk called Raymundus. With these are mixed various allegorical personages,—KING JOHN. 11 England, who is said to be a widow, Imperial Majesty, Nobility, Clergy, Civil Order, Treason, Verity, and Sedition, the latter serving as the Jester of the piece. Thus we have the common material of the old Moral-plays rudely combined wdth some elements of the Historical Drama such as grew into use on the public stage forty or fifty years later. And the piece, though written by a bishop, teems with the lowest ribaldry and vituperation : therewithal it is totally barren of any thing that can pretend to the name of poetry or wit; in short, the whole thing is at once thoroughly stupid, malignant, and vile. There is no likelihood that Shakespeare knew any thing of Bale’s pageant, as it wms never printed till some forty years ago, the original manuscript having then been lately discovered in the library of the Duke of Devonshire. The Troublesome Reign of John, King of England, upon which Shakespeare’s play was founded, came from the press first in 1591, again in 1611, and a third time in 1622. The first issue was anonymous; the other two were put forth with Shakespeare’s name as author; which really does nothing towards proving it to be his, as we have divers instances of other men’s workmanship being fathered upon him. Steevens at one time thought it to be Shakespeare’s, but afterwards gave it up, as he well might. Several of the German critics have taken the other side, arguing the point at great length, but with little effect. To answer their arguments were more easy than profitable; and such answer can better be spared than the space it would fill, since no English reader able to understand the reasoning will need it, after once reading the play. Coleridge indeed went so far in 1802 as to pronounce it “ not his, yet of him” ; a judgment in which few, I apprehend, will concur. In effect, all the English critics agree that he did not write it, though scarce any two of them agree who did. The Troublesome Reign, which is in two Parts, bears strong internal marks of having been written when the enthusiasm of the nation was wrought up to the height about12 Shakespeare’s characters. the Spanish Armada, and when the Papacy was spitting its impotent thunders against the throne ar d state of the lion-Queen. Abounding in spoken and aci;ed satire and invective, the piece must have been hugely grateful to that national feeling which issued in the Reformation, and which was mightily strengthened afterwards by the means made use of to put the Reformation down. The subject was strikingly apt for the purpose; which was no doubt the cause of its being chos&n. The piece, however, is a prodigious advanc e upon Bale’s performance. The most considerable exception to this is where Falconbridge, while by the King’s order he is plundering the religious houses, finds a fair young nun hidden in a chest which is supposed to contain the Abbot’s treasures. Campbell regrets that the Poet did not re gain this incident, — a regret in which I am far from sympathizing; for, surely, to hold up the crimes of individuals in such a way or at such a time as to set a stigma upon whole classes of men, was a work that might well be left to meaner hands. An intense hatred of Popery runs as a special purpose through both of the older pieces. Which matter is reformed altogether in Shakespeare; who understood well enough, no doubt, that any such special purpose was quite inconsistent wuth the just proportions of Art. He therefore discovers no repugnance to Popery save in 1he form of a just and genuine patriotism ; has no particulai symptoms of a Protestant spirit, but only the natural beatings of a sound, honest English heart, resolute to withstand al ke all foreign encroachments, whether from kings or empeiors or popes. Thus his feeling against Rome is wisely tempered in that proportion which is required by the laws of morality and Art, issuing in a firm, manly national sentiment such as all men may justly respond to, be their creed what it may. So that King John, as compared with the piece out of which it was built, yields a forcible instance md proof of the Poet’s universality. He follows his predecessor in those things which appeal to the feelings of man as man, but for-KING JOHN. 13 sakes him in whatever flatters the prejudices and antipathies of men as belonging to this or that party or sect. And as aversion to Rome is chastised down from the prominence of a special purpose, the parts of Arthur and Constance and Falconbridge proportionably rise; parts that spontaneously knit in with the common sympathies of humanity, — such a language as may always dwell together with the spirit of a man, and be twisted about his heart for ever. Still the question recurs, Why did Shakespeare, with the authentic materials of history at hand, and with his own matchless power of shaping those materials into beautiful and impressive forms, — why did he, in this single instance, depart from his usual course, preferring a fabulous history to the true, and this too when, for aught now appears, the true would have answered his purpose just as well ? It is to come at a probable answer to this question that I have dwelt so long on the two older pieces. We thus see that for special causes the subject was early brought upon the stage. The same causes long operated to keep it there. The King John of the stage, striking in with the passions and interests of the time, had become familiar to the people, and twined itself closely with their feelings and thoughts. A faithful version would have worked at great disadvantage in competition with the theatrical one thus established. This prepossession of the popular mind Shakespeare may well have judged it unwise to disturb. In other words, the current of popular association being so strong, he probably chose rather to fall in with it than to stem it. We may regret that he did so; but we can hardly doubt that he did it knowingly and on principle : nor should we so much blame him for not stemming that current as thank him for purifying it. I will next present, as briefly as may be, so much of authentic history as will throw light directly on the subject.— Henry the Second, the first of the Plantagenet14 SHAKESPE ARE’s CHARACTERS. kings, had four sons, Henry, Richard, Geoffrey, and John. Eleanor, his queen, was first married to Loub the Seventh of France, and some sixteen years after the marriage was divorced on suspicion of conjugal infidelity. Within six weeks after the divorce, she was married to Henry, then Earl of Anjou, and much younger than herself. She brought him large possessions indeed, but not enough to offset the trouble she caused in his family and kingdom. Unfaithful to her first husband, and jealous of the second, she instigated his sons into rebellion against him. In 1189, after a reign of thirty-five years, Henry died, invoking the vengeance of Heaven on the ingratitude of his children, and was succeeded by Richard, Henry and Geoffrey having died before him. Geoffrey, Duke of Bretagne in right of Constance his wife, left one son, Arthur. In 1190, when Arthur was a mere child, Richard contracted him in marriage with the daughter of Tancred, King of Sicily, at the same time owning him as “ our most dear nephew, and heir, if by chance we should die without issue.” At Richard’s death, however, in 1199, John produced a testament of his brother’s, giving him the crown. Anjou, Touraine, and Maine were the proper patrimony of the Plantagenets, and therefore devolved to Arthur as the acknowledged representative of that House, the rule of lineal succession being there fully established. To the ducal chair of Bretagne Arthur was the proper heir in right of his mother, who was then Duchess-regnant of that prDvince. John claimed the dukedom of Normandy, as the proper inheritance from his ancestor, William the Conqueror, and his claim was there admitted. Poitou, Guienne, and five other French provinces were the inheritance of Eleanor his mother; but she made over her title to him; and there also his claim was recognized. The English crown he claimed in virtue of his brother’s will, but took care to strengthen that claim by a parliamentary election. In the strict order of inheritance, all these possessions, be it observed, were due to Arthur; but that orc.er, it appears,KING JOHN. 15 Was not then fully established, save in the provinces belonging to the House of Anjou. As Duke of Bretagne, Arthur was a vassal of France, and therefore bound to homage as the condition of his title. Constance, feeling his need of a protector, engaged to Philip Augustus, King of France, that he should do homage also for the other provinces, where his right was clogged with no such conditions. Philip accordingly met him at Mans, received his oath, gave him knighthood, and took him to Paris. Philip was cunning, ambitious, and unscrupulous, and his plan was to drive his own interests in Arthur’s name: with the Prince entirely in his power, he could use him as an ally or a prisoner, whichever would best serve his turn; and in effect “ Arthur was a puppet in his hands, to be set up or knocked down, as he desired to bully or cajole John out of the territories he claimed in France.” In the year 1200, Philip was at war with John in pretended maintenance of Arthur’s rights; but before the end of that year the war ended in a peace, by the terms of which John was to give his niece, Blanche of Castile, in marriage to Louis the Dauphin, with a dowry of several valuable fiefs; and Arthur was to hold even his own Bretagne as a vassal of John. At the time of this treaty Constance was still alive; and Arthur, fearing, it is said, his uncle’s treachery, remained in the care of Philip. In less than two years, however, the peace was broken. John, though his former wife was still living, having seized and married Isabella of Angouleme, already betrothed to the Count de la Marche, the Count headed an insurrection, and Philip joined him, brought Arthur again upon the scene, and made him raise the flag of war against his uncle. For some time Philip was carrying all before him, till at length Arthur was sent with a small force against the town of Mirabeau, where his grandmother Eleanor was stationed; and, while he was besieging her in the castle, John “used such diligence, that he was upon his enemies’ necks ere they could understand any thing of his coming.” His16 Shakespeare’s characters. mother was quickly relieved, Arthur fell into his hands, and was conveyed to the castle of Falaise; and Philip withdrew from the contest, as the people would have nothing to do with him but as the protector of their beloved Prince. The capture of Arthur took place in July, 1202, he being seventeen or eighteen years old. The King then betook himself to England, and had his coronation repeated. Shortly after, he returned to France, where, a rumour being spread abroad of Arthr r’s death, the nobles made great suit to have him set at liberty. Not prevailing in this, they banded together, ard “began to levy sharp wars against King John in divers places, insomuch that it was thought there would be no quiet in those parts so long as Arthur lived.” A charge of nurder being then carried to the French Court, the King wis summoned thither for trial, but refused to go; whereupon he “was found guilty of felony and treason, and adjudged to forfeit all the lands which he held by homage.” Thence sprang up a war in which John was totally stripped of his French possessions, and at last stole off with inexpressible baseness to England. The quarrel of John with Pope Innocent did not break out till 1207. It was about the election of Cardinal Lang-ton to the See of Canterbury. First came the interdict; then, some two years after, the excommun cation; and finally, at a like interval, the deposition; Phi; ip being engaged to go with an army, and execute the sentence; wherein he was likely to succeed, till at length, n the Spring of 1213, John made his full submission. The next year, he was desperately involved in the famous contest with his barons, which resulted in the establishment of the Great Charter. Of this great movement, so decisiv3 for the liberties of England, Langton was the life and soul. As Primate he had been forced upon the King by the Pope; but he now stood by his country against both Pope and King. No sooner had John confirmed the Charter than his tyranny and perfidy broke out afresh; whereupon the barons,KING JOHN. 17 finding that no laws nor oaths could curb the faithless and cruel devil within him, offered the crown to Louis the Dauphin on condition of his helping them put down the hated tyrant. John died in 1216. The point where all the parts of Kiyig John centre and converge into one has been rightly stated to be the fate of Arthur. This is the heart, whose pulsations are felt throughout the entire structure. The alleged right of Arthur to the throne draws on the wars between Philip and John, and finally the loss from the English crown of the provinces in France. And so far the drama is strictly true to historical fact. But, besides this, the real or reputed murder of Arthur by John is set forth as the main cause of the troubles which distracted the latter part of John’s reign, and ended only with his life. Which was by no means the case. For though, by the treatment of his nephew, John did greatly outrage the loyalty and humanity of the nation, still that w^as but one act in a life-long course of cruelty, cowardice, lust, and perfidy, which stamped him all over with baseness, and finally drew upon him the general hatred and execration of his subjects. Had he not thus sinned away and lost the hearts of the people, he might have safely defied the papal interdict; for who can doubt that they would have braved the thunders of the Vatican for him, since they did not scruple afterwards to do so against him? But the fact or the mode of Arthur’s death was far from being the main cause of that loss. Pope Innocent the Third was a very great man: his proceedings against John were richly deserved: at that time there was no other power in Europe that could tame or restrain the savagery of such lawless and brutal oppressors; and the Church had, by her services to liberty and humanity, well earned the prerogatives then exercised in her name. The death of Arthur, though the consequences thereof survived in a general weakening of the English State, had quite ceased to be an active force in European B18 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. politics when the ecclesiastical tempest bioke loose upon John. Here, then, we have a breach of history in the very central point of the drama; this too without any apparent reason in the laws of the dramatic form. Such a flaw at the heart of the piece must greatly disarrange the order of the work as a representation of facts, and make it very untrue to the ideas and sentiments of the English people at the time; for it implies all along that Arthur was clearly the rightful sovereign, and that he was so regarded; whereas in truth the rule of lineal descen: was not then settled in the State, and the succession of John to the throne was so far from being irregular, that of the last five occupants four had derived their main title from election, — the same right whereby John himself held it. The same objection holds proportionably against another feature of the play. The life of the Austrian Archduke who had behaved so harshly and so meanly towards Richard the First is prolonged five or six years beyond its actual period, for no other purpose, apparently, than that Richard’s natural son may have the honour of revenging his father’s wrongs and death. Richard fell in a quarre with Yidomar, Viscount of Limoges, one of his own vassals. A treasure having been found on Yidomar’s estate, the King refused the offer of a part, and insisted on having the whole; and while, to enforce this claim,he was making war on the owner, he was wounded with an arrow by one of Yidomar’s archers. This occurred in 1199, when Leopold of Austria had been dead several years. The play, however, drives he sin against history to the extreme point of making Aus tria and Limoges the same person. Now, if such an exploit were needful for the proper display of Falconbridge’s ch iracter, it does not well appear but that the real Yidomar would have answered the purpose; at all events, the thing might surely have been compassed without so signal a bieach of historical truth. Here, however, the vice stops wit 1 itself, instead of vitiating the other parts, as in the former case.KING JOHN. 19 Again : In the play the people of Angiers stoutly refuse to own either John or Arthur as their king, until the question shall have first been decided in battle between them ; whereas in fact Anjou, Touraine, and Maine declared for Arthur from the first, and did not waver at all in their allegiance. The drama also represents the imprisonment and death of Arthur as occurring in England ; while in fact he was first put under guard in the castle of Falaise, and afterwards transferred to a dungeon in the castle of Rouen, from whence he was never known to come out alive. These, however, are immaterial points in the course of the drama, save as the latter has the effect of bringing Arthur nearer to the homes and hearts of the English people ; who would naturally be more apt to resent his death, if it occurred at their own doors. Other departures from fact there are, which may easily be justified, as being more than made up by a gain of dramatic truth and effect. Such, for instance, are the freedoms taken with Constance, who, in the play, remains a widow after the death of her first husband, and survives to bewail the captivity of her son and the wreck of his hopes ; but who, in fact, after a short widowhood was married to Guy of Thouars, and died in 1201, the year before Arthur fell into the hands of his uncle. A breach of history every way justifiable, since it gives an occasion, not otherwise to be had, for some noble outpourings of maternal grief and tenderness. And the mother’s transports of sorrow might well consist with a second marriage, though to have represented her thus would have impaired the pathos of her situation, and at the same time have been a needless embarrassment of the action. It is enough that so she would have felt and spoken, had she been still alive ; her proper character being thus allowed to transpire in circumstances which she did not live to see. But, of the justifiable departures from fact, the greatest consists in anticipating'by several years the papal instigations as the cause of the war in which Arthur was taken prisoner. For in reality Rome had no hand in setting on20 Shakespeare’s characters. that war; it was undertaken, as we have se Bn, by Philip of his own will and for his own ends; there being no rupture between John and the Pope till some time after Arthur had disappeared. But the laws of dramatic effect often require that the force and import of diveis actual events be condensed and massed together. To disperse the interest over many details of action involves such a weakening of it as poetry does not tolerate. So th it the Poet was eminently judicious in this instance of concentration. The conditions of right dramatic interest clearly required something of the kind. United, the several events might stand in the drama; divided, they must fall. Thus the course of the play in this matter was fitted to secure as much of actual truth as could be told dramatically without defeating the purpose of the telling. Shakespeare has many happy instances of such condensation in his historical pieces. The reign of King John was specially remarkable as being the dawn of genuine English nationality, such as it has continued substantially to the present day. And the faults and crimes of the sovereign seem to have b ad the effect of testing and so toughening the national unity; just as certain diseases in infancy operate to strengthen the constitution of the man, and thus to prepare him lor the struggles of life. England was then wrestled, as it were, into the beginnings of that just, sturdy, indomitable self-reliance, or selfhood, which she has ever since so \gloriously maintained. The Poet’s vigorous and healthy national spirit is strongly manifested in the workmanship of King John. Falconbridge serves as a chorus to give i, right political interpretation of the events and action of the play. To him, John impersonates the unity and majesty of the nation ; so that defection from him tends to n athing less than national dissolution. Whatever he may be as a man, as King Patriotism has no way but to stanc by him at allKING JOHN. 21 hazards; for the rights and interests of England are inseparably bound up with the reverence of his person and the maintenance of his title. The crimes of the individual must not be allowed to peril the independence and life of the nation. Thus, in Falconbridge’s view, England can only rest true to herself by sticking to the King against all comers whatsoever. And such, undoubtedly, is the right idea of the English State, and of the relation which the Crown bears to the other parts of her political Constitution. Ko philosophy or statesmanship has got beyond Shakespeare in the mastery of this principle. And this principle is the moral backbone of the drama, however the poetry of it may turn upon other points. As for the politics of the piece, these present a rather tangled and intricate complication, which it would hardly pay to trace out in detail; at least, the doing so would strike something too wide of my usual method and purpose in these discourses. Besides, the ground in this respect is well covered by Gervinus, who has worked through the process with great ability indeed^ though, as it seems to me, at a rather unconscionable length.* The characterization of King John corresponds very well, in the degree of excellence, with the period to which I have on other grounds assigned the writing. Much of it, and indeed nearly all, at least in the germs and outlines, was taken from The Troublesome Reign; and the use of * Hero is fi brief portion: “John, imprudent once in resting on false supports, is so now in the wicked removal of weak enemies, and in the dangerous provocation of strong opposition. He contrives the murder of the harmless Arthur, and irritates the already-disturbed Church by fresh extortions. The legate Pandulf, a master of Machiavelian policy, watches these errors, and builds upon them the new unhallowed league between France and Kome; with cold blood he speculates how Arthur’s death may be occasioned by a French invasion, and this again may be advanced by the accusation produced by the murder. This practical prophecy is fulfilled: the country becomes unruly: the King’s evil conscience is roused; suspiciously he has himself crowned a second time, and this makes his nobles suspicious also. The murder of Arthur comes to their hearing; they revolt from the King. A new antinational league is formed between the English vassals on the one side and22 Shakespeare’s characters. the borrowed matter discovers a mark-wo:’thy exercise of judgment in much retrenching of superfluities, in'not a little moral purging and refining, in skilful recasting of features, and in many ennobling additions. The delineation of the English barons is made to reflect the tumultuous and distracted condition of the time, when the best men were inwardly divided and fluctuating between the claims of parliamentary election and actual possession on the one side, and the rights of lineal succession on the other. In such a conflict of duties and motives, the moral sense often drawing sharply at odds with urgent political considerations, the clearest heads and mos; upright hearts are apt to lose their way; nor perhaps h it much to be wondered at if in such a state of things self-interest, the one constant motive of human action, gain such headway at last as to swamp all other regards. The noble and virtuous Salisbury successfully resists this depraving tendency indeed, yet the thorns and dangers of the time prove too much for his judgment. From the outset he is divided between allegiance to John and to Arthur, till the crimes and cruelties of the former throw him quite over to the side of the latter. Humanity outwrestles nationality in his breast, and this even to the sacrifice of humanity itself, as matters turn : his scrupulous preference of moral to prudential regards draws him into serious errcr; which, to be sure, his rectitude of purpose is prompt to retrace, but not France and the Pope on the other; and the French Dauphin prepares on his part a treacherous death for the traitors to England. Meanwhile the fearful Dnd perplexed John loses his old courage and confidence >o far, that he takes his land as a fief from the Pope, and enters into a shameful treaty of subjection to the most virulent of his enemies. The King has forgotten his former vigour, which the enemy has now learned from him; he turns his hardened zeal against poor prophets, only to benumb his superstitious fear ; his energy is gone. The unnaturalness of all these complicated alliances is now speedily manifested; the league between England and the Papacy, that between the Papacy and France, that between I ranee and the English vassals, all are broken up, without attaining the object of one of them: they change throughout into the natural enmity whioh severed interests necessitate.”THE KING. 23 till the mistake "has nearly crippled his power for good. His course well illustrates the peril to which goodness, more sensitive than far-sighted, is exposed in such a hard tussle of antagonist principles. In the practical exigencies of life, doing the best we can for those who stand nearest us is often nobler than living up to our own ideal. So there are times when men must set up their rest to stand by their country, right or wrong, and not allow any faults of her rulers to alienate them from her cause. Sometimes the highest sacrifice which Providence requires of us is that of our finer moral feelings, nay, even of our sense of duty itself, to the rough occasions of patriotism. Is it that our own salvation may even depend on willingness to be lost for the saving of others ? All this is rarely exemplified in Salisbury, who, by the way, was the famous William Long-sword, natural son to Henry the Second, and so half-brother to John. It is considerable that our better feelings stay with him even when the more reckless spirit and coarser nature of Falconbridge carry off our judgment. The King, as he stands in authentic history, was such a piece of irredeemable depravity, so thoroughly weak-headed, rotten-hearted, and bloody-handed, that to set him forth truly without seeming to be dealing in caricature or lampoon, required no little art. The Poet was under the necessity, in some sort, of leaving his qualities to be inferred, instead of showing them directly: the point was, to disguise his meannesses, and yet so to order the disguise as to suggest that it covered something too vile to be seen. And what could better infer his slinking, cowardly, malignant spirit, than his two scenes with Hubert ? Here he has neither the boldness to look his purpose in the face, nor the rectitude to dismiss it; so he has no way but to “ dodge and palter in the shifts of lowness ” : he tries by hints and fawning innuendoes to secure the passage of his thought into effect, without committing himself to any responsibility for it; and wants another to be the agent of24 SHAKESPEARE-’» CHARACTERS. his will, and yet bear the blame as if acting of his own accord. And afterwards, when the consequences begin to press upon him, he accuses the aptness of the instrument as the cause of his suggestion; and the only sagacity he displays is in shirking the responsibility of his own guilty purpose; his sneaking, selfish fear inspiring him with a quickness and fertility of thought far beyond his capacity under any nobler influences. The chief trouble with John in the play is, that he conceives himself in a false position, and so becomes himself false to his position in the hope of thereby rendering it secure. He has indeed far better reasons for holding the throne than he is himself aware of, and th€ utter selfishness of his aims is what keeps him from seeing them. His soul is so bemired in personal regards, that he cannot rise to any considerations of patriotism or public spi’it. The idea of wearing the crown as a sacred trust from ibe nation never once enters his head. And this is all because he lacks the nobleness to rest his title on national grounds; or because he is himself too lawless of spirit to feel the majesty with which the national law has invested him. As the interest and honour of England have no place in his thoughts, so he feels as if he had stolen the throne, and appropriated it to his own private use. This consciousness of bad motives naturally fills him with dark suspicions and sinister designs. As he is without the inward strength of noble aims, so he does not feel outwardly strong; his bad motives put him upon using means as bad for securing liiim elf; and he can think of no way to clinch his tenure but 1 y meanness and wrong. Thus his sense of inherent basene ss has the effect of casting him into disgraces and crimes: his very stings of self-reproach driving him on from bad to worse. If he had the manhood to trust his cause frankly with the nation, as rightly comprehending his trust, he world be strong in the nation’s support; but this he is too mean to see. Nor is John less wanting in manly fortitude than in moral principle: he has not the courage even to be daringlyTHE KING. 25 and resolutely wicked; that is, there is lio backbone of truth in him either for good or for evil. Insolent, heart-swollen, defiant under success, he becomes utterly abject and cringing in disaster or reverse. 44 Even so doth valour’s show and valour’s worth divide in storms of fortune.” When his wishes are crowned, he struts and talks big; but a slight whirl in the wind of chance at once twists him olf his pins and lays him sprawling in the mud. That his seeming greatness is but the distention of gas, appears in that the touch of pain or loss soon pricks him into an utter collapse. So that we may almost apply to him what Ulysses says of Achilles in Troilus and Cressida : “ Possess’d, he is with greatness ; And speaks not to himself, but with a pride That quarrels at self-breath : imagin’d worth Holds in his blood such swoln and hot discourse, That ’twixt his mental and his active parts Kingdom’d Achilles in commotion rages, And batters down himself.” And as, in his craven-hearted selfishness, John cares nothing for England’s honour, nor even for his own as king, but only to retain the spoil of his self-imputed trespass; so he will at any time trade that honour away, and will not mind eating dirt to the King of France or to the Pope, so he may keep his place. All this was no doubt partly owing to the demoralizing influences of the time. And how deeply those influences worked is well shown in the hoary-headed fraud and heartlessness of priestcraft as represented in Cardinal Pandulf; who makes it his special business to abuse the highest faculties to the most refined ill purposes; with subtle and tortuous casuistry explaining away perfidy, treachery, and murder into w^orks of righteousness. The arts of deceit could hardly have come to be used with such unctious selfapproval, but from a long discipline of civilized selfishness in endeavouring to prevent or to parry the assaults of violence and barbarism. For, in a state of continual danger VOL. II. 226 Shakespeare’s characters. and insecurity, cultivated intelligence is naturally drawn to defend itself by subtlety and craft. The ethereal weapons of reason and sanctity are powerless upon men stupefied by brutal passions; and this is too apt to generate even in the best characters a habit of seeking safety by “bowing their gray dissimulation ” into whatever causes they take in hand. Which, I suspect, would go far to explain the alleged system of “pious frauds” once so little scrupled in the walks of religion and learning. Be this as it may, there was, it seems, virtue enough in the England of King John to bring her safe and sound through the vast perils and corruptions of the time. That reign was in truth the seed-bed of those forces which have since made England so great and wise and free. All through the reigns of Henry the Seventh and Henry the Eighth, the lately-experienced horrors of civil slaughter in the York and Lancaster wars made the English people nervously apprehensive as to the consequences of a disputed title to the throne. This * apprehension had by no means worn off in Shakespeare’s time: the nation was still extremely tenacious of the lineal succession, is the only practicable safeguard against the danger of rival claimants. The dogma of the divine right, which then got such headway, was probably more or less the offspring of this sentiment. It has often seemed to me that the Poet, in his sympathy with this strong national feeling, was swayed somewhat from the strict line of historic truth and reason, in ascribing John’s crimes and follies, anc. the evils of his reign, so much to a public distrust of his title. I question whether such distrust really had any considerable hand in those evils. The King’s title was generally held at the time to be every way sound and clear. The nervous dread of a disputed succession was mainly the growth of later experience, and then was putatively transferred to a time when, in fact, it had been little felt. And the anxiety to fence off the evils so dreaded naturally caused the powersCONSTANCE. 27 of the crown to be strained up to a pitch hardly compatible with any degree of freedom; insomuch that in no long time another civil war became necessary, to keep the liberties of England from being swallowed up in the Serbonian bog of royal prerogative. In the apprehension of an experienced danger on one side, men comparatively lost sight of an equal danger on the other side. I suspect that the genius and art of Mrs. Siddons caused the critics of her time and their immediate successors to set a higher estimate upon the delineation of Constance than is fully justified by the work itself. The part seems indeed to have been peculiarly suited to the powers of that remarkable actress; the wide range of moods, and the tugging conflicts of passion, through which Constance passes, affording scope enough for the most versatile gifts of delivery. If I am right in my notion, Shakespearian criticism has not even yet quite shaken off the spell thus cast upon it. At all events, I find the critics still pitching their praise of the part in a somewhat higher key than I can persuade my voice to sound. The abatement, however, which I would make refers not so much to the conception of the character as to the style of the execution; which, it seems to me, is far from displaying the Poet’s full strength and inwardness with nature. There is in many of her speeches a redundancy of rhetoric and verbal ingenuity, giving them a too theatrical relish. The style thus falls under a reproof well expressed in this very play: “ When workmen strive to do better than well, They do confound their skill in covetousness.” In pursuance of the same thought, Bacon finely remarks the great practical difference between the love of excellence and the love of excelling. And so here we seem to have rather too much of that elaborate artificialness which springs more from ambition than frond inspiration. But the fault is among those which I have elsewhere noted as marking the workmanship of the Poet’s earlier period.28 Shakespeare’s characters. The idea pervading the delineation is well stated by Haz-litt as “ the excess of maternal tenderness, rendered desperate by the fickleness of friends and the in ustice of fortune, and made stronger in w7ill, in proportion to the want of all other power.” In the judgment of Gervinus, “ ambition spurred by maternal love, maternal love fired by ambition and womanly vanity, form the distinguishing features ” of Constance; and he further describes her as “a woman ■whose weakness amounts to grandeur, a;id whose virtues sink into weakness.” I am not indeed greatly in love with this brilliant way of putting things; but Gervinus is apt to be substantially right in such matters. My own tamer viewr is that the character, though drawn in the best of situations for its amiability to appear, is nov, a very amiable one. Herein the play is perhaps the truer to history; as the chroniclers make Constance out rather {selfish and weak; not so religious in motherhood but that she betrayed a somewhat unvenerable impatience of widowhood. Nevertheless it must be owned that the soul of maternal grief and affection speaks from her lips with not a little majesty of pathos, and occasionally flows in strains of the most melting tenderness. I know not how the voice of a mother’s sorrow could discourse more eloquenlly than in these lines: “ ®rief fills the room up of my absent child, Lies in his bed, walks up and down wit i me ; Puts on his pretty looks, repeats his words, Remembers me of all his gracious parts. Stuffs out his vacant garments with his form : Then, have I reason to be fond of grief. ’ Nor is there any overstraining of nature in the imagery here used ; for the speaker’s passion is of just the right kind and degree to kindle the imagination into the richest and finest utterance. On the other hand, the general effect of her sorrow is marred by too great an infusion of anger, and she shows too much pride, self-will, and volubility of* scorn, to haveARTHUR. £9 the full touch of our sympathies. Thus, when Eleanor coarsely provokes her, she retorts in a strain of still coarser railing; and the bandying of taunts and slurs between them, each not caring what she says, so her speech bites the other, is about equally damaging to them both; a storm of mutual abuse, in which there is neither modesty nor wit. It is true, she meets with very sore trials of patience, but these can hardly be said to open any springs of sweetness or beauty within her. When she finds that her heart’s dear cause is sacrificed to the schemes of politicians; when it turns out that the King of France and the Archduke of Austria are driving their own ends in her name, and only pretending pity for her and conscience of right, to cover their selfish projects, the heart-wringing disappointment inflames her into outbursts of sarcastic bitterness and scorn; her speech is stinging and spiteful, and sounds quite as much of the intemperate scold as of the sorrowing and disconsolate mother. The impression of her behaviour in these points is well described by Gervinus : 44 What a variety of feeling is expressed in those twenty lines where she inquires anxiously after the truth of that which shocks her to hear! How her grief, so long as she is alone, restrains itself in calmer anguish in the vestibule of despair! how it first bursts forth in the presence of others in powerless revenge, rising to a curse which brings no blessing to herself! and how atoningly behind all this unwomanly rage lies the foil of maternal love! We should be moved with too violent a pity for this love, if it did not weaken our interest by its want of moderation; we should turn away from the violence of the woman, if the strength of her maternal affection did not irresistibly enchain us.” As Shakespeare used the allowable license of art in stretching the life of Constance beyond its actual date, that he might enrich his work with the eloquence of a mother’s love ; so he took a like freedom in making Arthur younger than the facts prescribed, that he might in larger measure80 SHAKESPEARE’S CHARACTERS. pour in the sweetness of childish innocence and wit. Both of these departures from strict historic order are highly judicious; at least they are amply redeemed by the dramatic wealth which comes in fitly through them. And in the case of Arthur there is the further gain, that the sparing of his eyes is owing to his potency of tongue and the piercing touch of gentleness; whereas in the history he is indebted for this to his strength of arm. The Arthur of the play is an artless, gentle, natural-hearted, but high-spirited, eloquent boy, in whom we have tl e voice of nature pleading for nature’s rights, unrestrained by pride of character or place; who at first braves his uncle, because set on to do so by his mother; and afterwards fears him, yet knows not why, because his heart is too ful[ of “ the holiness of youth” to conceive how any thing so treacherous and unnatural can be, as that which he fears. And he not only has a most tender and loving disposition, such as cruelty itself can hardly resist, but is also persuasive and wise far beyond his years; though his power of th 3ught and magic of speech are so managed as rather to aid the impression of his childish age. Observe, too, how in the scene with Hubert his very terror operates in him a sort of preternatural illumination, and inspires him to a cc urse of innocent and unconscious cunning, — the perfect art of perfect artlessness. Of the scene in question Hasilitt justly says, “ If anything ever were penned, heart-piercing, mixing the extremes of terror and pity, of that which shocks and that which soothes the mind, it is this scene.” Yet even here the tender pathos of the loving and love y boy is marred with some “quirks of wit,” such as I can hardly believe the Poet would have allowed in his best days. In Arthur’s dying speech, — “ O me! my uncle’s spirit is in these stones,” — our impression against John is most artfully heightened; all his foregoing inhumanity being, as it we:'e, gathered and concentrated into an echo. — Shakespeare 1 as several times thrown the witchery of his genius into pict ures of nursery life, bringing children upon the scene, an I delighting usFALCONBRIDGE. 31 with their innocent archness and sweet-witted prattle; as in the case of Mamillius in The Winter's Tale, and of Lady Macduff and her son; but Arthur is his most powerful and charming piece in that line. That his great, simple, manly heart loved to play with childhood, is indeed evident enough. Nor is it the least of his claims to our reverence, as an organ of Nature’s bland and benignant wisdom. The reign of King John furnished no characters fully answering the conditions of high dramatic interest. To meet this want, therefore, there was need of one or more representative characters, — persons in whom should be centred and consolidated various elements of national character, which were in fact dispersed through many individuals ; or a boiling down of the diffused old John Bull into an ideal specimen. And such is Falconbridge, with his fiery flood of Norman vigour bounding through his veins, his irrepressible dance of animal spirits, his athletic and frolicsome wit, his big, brave, manly heart, his biting sword, and his tongue equally biting; his soul proof-armoured against all fear save that of doing what were wrong or mean. The Troublesome Reign supplied the name, and also a slight hint towards the character: “ Next them a bastard of the King deceas’d, A hardy wild-head, rough and venturous.” But the delineation is thoroughly Shakespearian, is crammed brimful of the Poet’s most peculiar mental life; so that the man is as different as can well be conceived from any thing ever dreamed of in the older play. And, what is specially worth the noting, Shakespeare clearly embodies in him his own sentiment of nationality, pours his hearty, full-souled English spirit into him and through him ; so that the character is, at least in the political sense, truly representative of the author; — all this, however, without the slightest tincture of egotism or self-obtrusion; the pure nationality of the man, extricated from all personal and partisan mixtures. So, to Falconbridge, both head and heart, the King,32 Shakespeare’s characters. as before remarked, is truly the Impersonation of the State ; and he surrounds the throne with all those nobilities of thought, and all those ideas of majesty and reverence, which are wanting in John himself. He thus regards the crown just as the wearer ought to regard it. Withal he is fully alive to the wrong-headedness and moral baseness of the King; but the office is to him so sacred as the palladium of national unity and life, that he will allow neither himself nor others in his presence to speak disrespectfully of the man. Falconbridge is strangely reckless of appearances. But his heart is evidently much better than his tongue: from his speech you might suppose gain to be his God of gods; but a far truer language, which he uses without knowing it, tells you that gain is to him just no god at all: he talks as if he cared for nothing but self-interest, while his works proclaim a spirit framed of disinterested! ess; his action thus quietly giving the lie to his words; this too in such sort as establishes the more firmly his inward truth. His course in this behalf springs partly from ar impulse of antagonism to the prevailing spirit about him, where he sees great swollen pretences to virtue without a particle of the thing itself. What he most of all abominat 3S is the pursuit of selfish and sinister ends under the garb of religion; piety on the tongue with covetousness in the hea't fills him with intense disgust; and his repugnance is so strong, that it sets him spontaneously upon assuming a garb of selfishness to cover his real conscientiousness of mini and purpose. So too, secretly, he is as generous as the Sun, bat his generosity puts on an affectation of rudeness or something worse: he will storm at you, to bluff you 3ff from seeing the kindness he is doing you. Of the same stripe is his hatred of cruelty and meanness: while these things are rife about him, he never gets angry or makes any quarrel with them; on the contrary, he laughs and breads sinewy jests over them, as if he thought them witty and smart: upon witnessing the heartless and unprincipled bargaining of theFALCONBRIDGE; 83 Kings, he passes it off jocosely as a freak of the “mad world,” and verbally frames for himself a plan that “ smacks somewhat of the policy ”; then, instead of acting out what he thus seems to relish as a capital thing, he goes on to shame down, as far as may be, all such baseness by an example of straightforward nobleness and magnanimity. Then too, with all his laughing roughness of speech and iron sternness of act, so blunt, bold, and downright, he is nevertheless full of humane and gentle feeling. With what burning eloquence of indignation does he denounce the supposed murder of Arthur! though he has no thought of abetting his claims to the throne against the present occupant. He abhors the deed as a crime: but to his keen, honest eye it is also a stupendous blunder; and he deplores it as such, because its huge offensiveness to England’s heart is what makes it a blunder, and because he is himself in full sympathy with the national conscience, which cannot but be shocked at its hideous criminality. So it may be doubted whether he more resents the wickedness or the stupidity of the act. And how much it imperils the State is revealed to him in the hard strain it makes on his own determined allegiance. The Poet manages with great art that Falconbridge may be held to John throughout the play by ties which he is too clear of head and too upright of heart to think of renouncing. In the first place, he has been highly trusted and honoured by the King, and he cannot be ungrateful. Then again, in his clear-sighted and comprehensive public spirit, the diverse interests that split others into factions, and plunge them into deadly strife, are smoothly reconciled: political regards work even more than personal gratitude, to keep him steadfast to the King ; and he is ready wdth tongue and sword to beat down whatsoever anywhere obstructs a broad and generous nationality. In the intercourse of State functionaries, he, to be sure, pays little heed to the delicacies and refinements of political diplomacy: his plain, frank nature either scorns them or is insensible to 2* c34 shakespeaee’s characters. them: but his patriotism is thoroughly sound and true, and knows no taste of fear; and whatever foreign assailants dare to touch England or England’s honour, he is for pounding them straight out of the way, and will think of no alternative but to be pounded out of the way by them.— As a representative character, he stands next to Falstaff. Thoroughly Gothic in features and proportions, and as thoroughly English in temper and spirit, ais presence rays life and true manliness into every part of ' he drama. Is it strange that a nation which could grow such originals should have beaten all the rest of the Avorld in every thing useful and beautiful and great ? KING RICHARD THE SECOND. King Richard the Second is first heard of through an entry in the Stationers’ register, dated August 29, 1597. The play was published in the course of the same year, but without the author’s name. The same text Avas issued again in 1598, with “By William Shakespeare ” in the title-page. There was a third issue in 1608, the title-page having the words, “With new additions of the Parliament-Scene, and the deposing of King Richard.” These additions are in Act iv. scene 1, comprising a hundred and sixty-foTir lines, or about half the Act. A fourth quarto edition appeared in 1615, the text being the same as in that of 1608. Of course the play reappeared along with the others in the folio of 1623. In the folio text, however, several passages, including in all just fifty lines, are unaccountably wanting; the omissions, in some cases, making apalpible break in the continuity of the sense. The text of 1597 is, I believe, generally allowed to be the best of the five, except as regards the additions of 1608 ; each later issue retaining the errors of the earlier, with new ones of its OAvn.KING RICHARD THE SECOND. 35 As to the date of the composition, we have nothing decisive beyond the entry at the Stationers’. Malone assigns the writing to 1593; Chalmers, to 1596; and others, to various dates between those two. To the best of my judgment, the internal evidence of style, the abundance of rhymes, the frequent passages of elaborate verbal trifling, the smooth-flowing current of the verse, and the comparative uncompactness of texture, make strongly in favour of as early a date as 1594, when the author was thirty years old. In all these respects, a comparison of the play with the First Part of King Henry the Fourth, which could not have been written later than 1597, will, I think, satisfy almost any one that there must have been an interval of several years between the two. And we have another sort of argument which, it seems to me, carries no little force towards the same conclusion. The first four Books of Daniel’s History of the Civil Wars, three of which are wholly occupied with the closing passages of Richard’s government and life, were originally published in 1595. Samuel Daniel was a star, not indeed of the first magnitude, nor perhaps of the second, but yet a star in that matchless constellation of wits contemporary with Elizabeth and James which has since made England the brightness of the whole earth. As he was himself a writer of plays, and an aspirant for dramatic honours, it is hardly to be supposed that he would be away from the theatre when “ th’ applause, delight, the wonder of our stage ” was making the place glorious with his “ Delphic lines.” The poem and the play in question have several passages so similar in thought and language as to argue that one of the authors must have drawn from the other. This, to be sure, will of itself conclude nothing as to which way the obligation ran. But there is another sort of resemblance much more to the point. Shakespeare, in strict keeping with the nature and purpose of his wmrk, makes the Queen, in mind, character, and deportment, a full-grown woman; whereas, in fact, she wras at the time only86 Shakespeare’s characters. twelve years old, having been married when she was but eight: a liberty of art every way justifiable in an historical drama, and such as he never scruples to use when the proper ends of dramatic representation may be furthered thereby. On the other hand, the plan of Daniel’s poem, and also the bent of his mind, caused him 1,0 write, for the most part, with the historical accuracy of a chronicle, insomuch that the fine vein of poetry which was in him hardly had fair play, being overmuch hampered by the rigidity of literal truth. Yet he makes a similar departure from fact in regard to the Queen, representing her very much as she is in the play. The point, then, is, that such a departure, however justifiable in either case, seems more likely to have been original in the play than in the poem: in the former it grew naturally from the purpose of the work and the usual method of the workman; in the latter its cause appears to be rather in the force of example : in other words, Shakespeare was more likely to do it because, artistically, it ought so to be; Daniel, because it had been so done with success. And it is considerable that Daniel pushes the divergence from historic truth even further than Shakespeare; in which excess we may easily detect the influence of a model: for that which proceeds by the reason and law of Art naturally stops with them; but in proceeding by the measure of examples and effects such is not the case; and hence it is that imitation is so apt to exaggerate whatever traits it fastens on. To all which if w^e add, as we justly may, that both this and the other resemblances are such withal as would naturally result fro n the impressions of the stage, the whole makes at least something of probability for the point in question. It has indeed been urged further, that in certain other respects Daniel here rises, much more than his wont, above the time, dry level of fact as he found it delivered in the chronicles; as if some special inspiration from without bad in :his case lifted him to a higher style; but I have to confess that such arguments seem quite too shaky to be trusted with much weight of inference.KING RICHARD THE SECOND. 37 Some question has been made as to whether the “ additions” first printed in the quarto of 1608 were written at the same time with the rest of the play. The judgment o£ I believe, all the best critics is that they w^ere; and such is clearly my own. They are all of a piece with the surrounding portions: there is nothing either in the style, the matter, or the connection of them, to argue or even to indicate in the slightest degree a different period of workmanship. Nor is this judgment at all hindered by the fact of their non-appearance in the two earlier issues of the play. For Elizabeth was then on the throne; to whose ears the deposing of monarchs was a very ungrateful theme, especially after the part she had in deposing from both crown and life her enchanting and ill-starred kinswoman, the witty and beautiful Mary of Scotland. Her sensitiveness in this behalf was shown on various occasions. Thus in 1599 Hayward barely escaped prosecution for his History of King Henry the Fourth, which related the deposing of Richard ; all because of the Queen’s extreme jealousy lest the matter should be drawn into a precedent against herself. So that, supposing those “ additions ” to have been a part of the play as originally‘written, it is pretty certain that no publisher would have dared to issue them, however they may have been allowed on the stage. There was certainly one and perhaps two other plays in Shakespeare’s time on the subject of Richard the Second. This we learn beyond peradventure from Dr. Simon Forman, the astrologer and quack, whose Diary I have already quoted in connection with The Winter’s Tale. Under date of April 30, 1611, he notes the performance of a play called Richard the Second at the Globe theatre; adding such particulars of the plot and action as make it evident that the play could not have been Shakespeare’s, though performed at the theatre for which he had so long been used to write. The details noted by Forman ascertain the piece to have embraced the insurrection of Wat Tiler and Jack Straw, with various other matters occurring before the out-38 Shakespeare’s characters. break of the quarrel between Bolingbroke and Norfolk. Forman says nothing about the deposing of Richard; an event which he would hardly have failed to mention, had it formed any part of the play. This brings me to a curious affair of State which took place in 1601. It appears that in February of that year the partisans and accomplices of Essex, in pursuance of the conspiracy they had formed, and to further the insurrection they had planned, procured a play to be acted, wherein the deposing of Richard the Second was represented. The affair is briefly related in Camden’s Annals, and the main points of it are further known from Lord Bacon’s official papers concerning “ the treason of Robert, Earl of Essex.” Bacon’s statement tallies exactly with another document lately discovered in the Stale-Paper Office. This ascertains that on the 18th of February, 1601, Augustine Phillips, a member of the same theatrical company with Shakespeare, was examined under oath, in support of the prosecution, by Chief-Justice Popham, Justice Anderson, and Sergeant Fenner. Phillips testilied that a few days before some of Essex’s partisans had applied, in his presence, to the leaders of the (jrlobe company, “to have the play of the deposing and killing of King Richard the Second played the Saturday next, promising to give them forty shillings more than their ordinary” for playing it. Phillips also testified that he and his fellows had determined to act some other play, “holding the play o? King Richard to be so old, and so long out of use, that they should have small or no company at it,” but that the e xtra forty shillings induced them to change their purpose, and do as they were requested. Until this deposition came to light, it was not known what theatrical company had undertaken the performance for which the friends of Essex were prosecuted. We now know that it was the company to which Shakespeare belonged, and by which his play had for some time been owned and often acted. It is nowise likely, as we haveKING RICHARD THE SECOND. 39 seen, that the piece bespoken by the conspirators was the same which Forman witnessed ten years later. It is indeed possible that the play so bespoke may have been a third one on the same subject, that has not elsewhere been heard of; but this, to say the least, appears highly improbable. To be sure, the play engaged for that occasion is spoken of as being “ so old, and so long out of use,” that it was not likely to draw an audience;«which circumstance has been rather strongly urged against supposing it to have been Shakespeare’s. But these words need not infer any more than that the play had lost the charm of novelty; a thing which, considering the marvellous fertility of the time in dramatic production, might well enough have come about in the course of five or six years. My own judgment, therefore, is, that Shakespeare’s King Richard the Second was written as early as 1594; that it is the play referred to in the trial of Essex and his accomplices; and that for reasons of State the deposition-scene was withheld from the press till some time after the accession of James the First, when such reasons wrere no longer held to be of any force. The leading events of King Richard the Second, and all the persons except the Queen, the whole substance, action, and interest, are purely historical, with only such heightening of effect, such vividness of colouring, and such vital in-vigoration, as poetry can add without marring or displacing the truth of history; the Poet having entirely forborne that freedom of art in representative character which elsewhere issued in such delectations as Falconbridge and Falstaff. For the materials of the drama, Shakespeare need not have gone beyond the pages of Holinshed; and it is certain that he drew directly from that source; though there are several passages which show traces of his reading in the older work of Hall. In the current of Holinshed’s narrative, the quarrel of Bolingbroke and Norfolk strikes in so abruptly, is so inexplicable in its origin, and so teem-40 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. ing with great results, as to form, naturally and of itself, the beginning of the manifold national tragedy which ends only with the catastrophe of King Richard the Third. The cause indeed of that quarrel is hardly less obscure in the history than in the play: it stands out almost as something uncaused, so that there was no need cf going behind it; while at the same time it proves the germ of such a vast and varied procession of historical everts as to acquire the highest importance. It may throw some light on the action of the play to revert briefly to a few antecedent points of history. — At the death of his grandfather, Edward the Third, in June, 1377, Richard was only in his eleventh year; a very handsome boy, with fair gifts of mind, and not without amiable dispositions, but of just about the right age to be spoiled by the influences of his position. Of course he was too young to be capable of rule, while the English had not yet learned how to bridge over the nonage of their king by a settled regency. The youth was fond of pleasure, careless of expense, and apt to love those who humoured his fancies; and in effect the State soon became a prey to rapacious and unprincipled sycophants. Of his three uncles, the Dukes of Lancaster, York, and Gloster, the latter was much the ablest; but, in an age of fierceness and turbulence, was chiefly distinguished for his fierce, turbulent, and despotic temper. Gloster undertook to root out “ the caterpillars of the commonwealth ”; and his doings in this behalf so strengthened his influence, that in 1387 le drew into his own hands nearly the whole power of the State, and reduced the King to a mere cipher. In i his career he proved such a remorseless and sanguinary tyrant, that some year and a half later Richard succeeded, by a well-timed stroke of vigour, in shaking off the tyranny, and becoming his own* master. The government then went on in a smooth and tranquil course for several years; during which time a fresh batch of greedy and reckless favorites got warmed into life ; Gloster used means to rega: n his brokenKING RICHARD THE SECOND. 41 influence, and took advantage of his seat in the Council to baffle and irritate the King, was the chief mover of every intrigue, the soul of every faction that opposed Richard’s wishes; the King’s first wife, “ the good Queen Anne,” having died, he espoused the Princess Isabella of France, then in her eighth year. Emboldened by this alliance, the King in 1397 resolved to execute his long-cherished but deeply-dissembled scheme of vengeance against the Duke of Gloster. The matter was carried with great secrecy and despatch, Richard himself leading the party that went to apprehend the Duke at his own castle. When Gloster, not dreaming what was on foot, came out to meet the King, he was forthwith delivered into the hands of Norfolk, who was then governor of Calais, and who, while pretending to conduct Gloster to the Tower, spirited him away down the river, and across to Calais, and there lodged him in the castle. Richard’s fury, so long repressed, now broke loose. The Duke, in his absence, was impeached of treason for what he had done ten years before. Bolingbroke concurred in this impeachment. When Norfolk was ordered to bring his prisoner before the House, he replied that he could not do so, as the Duke had suddenly died. Gloster was now out of the way^ and, as it was generally thought, by means the most foul; and his former partisans, notwithstanding they had been pardoned and taken into seeming favour, were made to taste the full measure of Richard’s vengeance. In these doings the King’s real character was fairly disclosed. The smiles and affability in Tvhich he had so long cloaked his revenge, his perfidious favours towards his destined victims, and his contempt of law and justice as soon as he felt secure in his power, appalled not only Gloster’s former adherents, but all who had ever incurred the royal displeasure. Bolingbroke, as we have seen, had of late sided with Richard in the impeachment of his uncle. But he had been himself more or less implicated as a partisan of Gloster’s in those very doings which were now drawing the King’s vengeance42 Shakespeare’s characters. on so many others: though now seeming :o stand firm in Richard’s good-will, and though lately advanced by him from Earl of Derby to Duke of Hereford, he might well distrust a hand that had approved itself so false and treacherous in its favours. Here, most likely, we have the true secret of Boling-broke’s sudden and otherwise inexplicable 'upture with the Duke of Norfolk. The two had lately ricden together in a friendly manner, and during the ride had opened their minds to each other with apparent freedo m and sincerity touching the King’s doings and purposes. But the imputed murder of his uncle Gloster might well out Bolingbroke upon apprehending that Norfolk’s seeming confidence was all feigned for the purpose of drawing him into some act or speech that might be turned to his destruction. It is true, Norfolk himself also, along with Bolingbroke and others, had borne a part in those same treasonable proceedings for which Gloster was impeached; but he now stood high, apparently, in the King’s favour; and in his possession of the whole secret touching Gloster’s death he had a strong pledge of the King’s fidelity to him. Richard was bound to Norfolk as his instrument, Norfolk was bound to Richard as his principal, in that dark transaction; neither could betray the other without exposing himself. But this was a very perilous combination. Bolingbroke’s astute, penetrat-, ing, determined spirit saw howto be master of the situation. He could not attack the principal directly, but he could attack him through the instrument. Thus Gloster’s death became Bolingbroke’s opportunity. The play fitly opens with Bolingbroke’^ accusation and challenge of Norfolk; the forecited points of history not forming any part of the action, nor being stated directly, but only implied, sometimes not very clearly, in various notes of dramatic retrospection. Richard tries his utmost to reconcile the parties; for he knows full well that himself is the real mark aimed at in the appellant’s chargesKING RICHARD THE SECOND. 43 and defiance; but he is forced alike by his position and his conscience to dissemble that knowledge, and to take Bo-lingbroke at his word. On the other side, Bolingbroke’s behaviour throughout is also a piece of profound and wrell-acted dissimulation : he understands the King’s predicament perfectly; knows that he dare not avow his thoughts, lest he stand self-convicted in the matter charged. So he has both Richard and Norfolk penned up in a dilemma from which they can nowise escape but by letting out the whole truth, and thus giving him ,a clear victory. He knows they are completely in his toils; his keen sagacity pierces the heart of their situation : nor does his energy lag behind his insight; naturally bold and resolute, his boldness and resolution now spring at the game in conscious strength: he is ambitious of power, he resents his uncle’s death, he loves his country; and his ambition, his resentment, his patriotism, all combine to string him up for decisive action: he has got a firm twist on the wrongdoers, and is fully determined either to twist them off their legs or to perish in the attempt. And observe what a note of terror he strikes into Richard when, referring to the spilling of Gloster’s blood, he declares, “Which blood, like sacrificing Abel’s, cries, Even from the tongueless caverns of the earth, To me for justice and rough chastisement; And, by the glorious worth of my descent, This arm shall do it, or this life be spent.” The little words to me, falling in here with such quiet emphasis, are a stern warning to the guilty parties, that the speaker has assumed the office of avenger, and will not falter in the work. How well the sense of them is taken, appears in the King’s exclamation, “ How high a pitch his resolution soars ! ” It is to be understood withal, that Norfolk has now come to be the King’s main supporter in his career of misrule. Bolingbroke forecasts that, Norfolk once hewn out of the way, Richard will then have to cast in his lot with those who have neither wasted the land with44 SHAKESPEAKE’S CHARACTEES. rapacity nor washed their hands in unrighteous blood. Then too he reckons upon having himself a voice potential in the royal counsels; and he already has it in mind that the race of cormorant upstarts and parasites and suckers who have so long preyed upon the State shall make a speedy end. Such, I think, is clearly the dramatic purpose and significance of the opening scene, which has been diversely interpreted by several critics, who, it seems co me, have not fully entered into its bearing, prospective and retrospective, on the action of the play. Coleridge, for instance, thinks the Poet’s aim in so beginning the piece was to bring out the characters of Richard and Bolingbroke; while Courtenay holds him to have made the opening thus, not from any dramatic purpose, but merely because he fmnd the matter so ordered in the chronicle. Gervinus, again, thinks that Shakespeare “began with this scene, because it was just the beginning of all the sufferings which fell upon the King, and afterwards upon his dethroners.” The views of both Coleridge and Gervinus are doubtless right, as far as they go: but I think the chief object of the scene is to unfold, in its various bearings, direct and remote, the dramatic relation of the two leading persons. Accordingly, out of this relation as there set forth the whole action of the play is made to proceed. The King’s course in arresting the quarrel just as it is coming to the upshot, and in sending both parties into exile, is very cunning, though perhaps in a lather small way. He thus gets rid of the whole question for the present, and saves himself from falling into the hands of either side: Bolingbroke’s scheme is baffled, and his purpose indefinitely postponed: withal the act wears a look of fairness and impartiality, so that public discontent cannol well find where to stick upon it. As matters stand, even Norfolk’s help is likely to prove a hindrance to the King; he has a firm hold upon him through the secret that lies between them: on the other hand, Richard has found in Bolingbroke an an-KING RICHARD THE SECOND. 45 tagonist whom he dares not cope with, and can nowise conciliate hut by arming him with a still greater obstructive power. So, by thus playing them off against each other, he seems to have shaken himself clear at once from a troublesome friend and a dangerous foe: at all events, as he views the thing, he can well afford to purchase a fid-dance from so formidable an assailant by the loss of his ablest defender. For Richard’s main difficulty, in the play as in history, is, that he feels unable to stand without props, and yet is too weak or too wayward to lean upon any but such as are weaker than himself: none are for him but those who pander to his wilfulness; creatures at once greedy and prodigal, and who have no strength to help him but what they suck out of him. Richard is evidently not a little elated at the stratagem of banishment: he flatters himself with having devised a master-stroke of policy which is to make him stronger than ever. Both the clog of Norfolk’s friendship and the dread of Bolingbroke’s enmity are now, as he thinks, effectually removed. After such a triumph, he presumes that none will dare to call the oppressions and abuses of his government to account. Thus he arrogates to himself entire impunity in whatever he may please to do, and so is emboldened to fresh excesses of misrule. He has just been put in a very tight place, as many believed; but he has proved too much for those who put him there; has adroitly turned the tables upon them, and disconcerted their well-laid plans: at least so he thinks, and the thought fills him with delight. Though he has cut down the term of Bolingbroke’s exile to six years, it is with a secret purpose that the exile shall never return; and he trusts that the same king-craft which has extricated him from so sharp a dilemma will carry him safe through any plots, however dark and treacherous, which he may frame for putting the man out of the way. But, in his exhilaration of seeming success, he cannot keep his thoughts to himself; he must still feed his self-applause by blurting them out to his favorites,46 Shakespeare’s characters. instead of leaving them to be gathered sfter the work is done. For so, among his other weaknesses, he has an incurable leakiness of mind, so that he must still be prating of designs which he hardly ought to breathe aloud even to himself. He has indeed a good deal of practical cunning, and is endowed with no mean powers of intellect; but somehow he can never so weave his intellectual forces together as to make them hold water: hence he is ever stumbling over schemes which he has himself spilt in advance. It is hardly worth the while to draw any further outline of the historical matter which the Poet had before him, since both the form and order of events are substantially the same in the play as in Holinshed. The chronicler of course had not the art, nor did it fall within his purpose, to give a lifelike portraiture of the persons; yet in respect of these Shakespeare is no less true to fact than in the events; informing the bald diagrams of the historian with vital spirit and efficacy, and thus enabling us not so much to hear or read about the men of a former age, as to see them passing before us. Hints to that purpose there are indeed in the narrative; but these for the most part are so slight, and so overlaid with other matter, that perhaps no eye but Shakespeare’s could have detected them md drawn forth their secret meaning. And in many such eases he seems to have used a kind of poetical or psychological comparative anatomy; reconstructing the whole order and complexion of characteristic traits from a few fragments, such as would have escaped any perception less apprehensive and quick than his. So that, looking through his eyes, we can now see things in the chronicler that we could never have discerned with our own. It is almost as if from a fossil thumb-nail or tooth or lock of hair one should reproduce the entire mental, moral, and physical structure of the man to whom it belonged. Such appears to have been the Poet’s fineness of faculty! Therewithal the laws of factKING RICHARD THE SECOND. 47 seem to sit as easy upon him as those of imagination : within the hard, stiff lines of historical truth, his creative powers move with as much freedom, facility, and grace, as when owning no restraints but such as are self-imposed. It is probably on some such ground as this that Coleridge, speaking of King Kichard the Second, says he “ feels no hesitation in placing it as the first and most admirable of all Shakespeare’s purely historical plays.” For, in all the qualities of a work of art merely, or as an instance of dramatic architecture and delineation, it is much inferior to the First and Second Parts of King Henry the Fourth. But these are specimens of the mixed drama; that is, dramas consisting partly of historical, partly of ideal, delineations; though the latter are indeed used as the vehicle of a larger moral history than were otherwise compatible with the laws of dramatic reason. In King Richard the Second, on the other hand, all the prominent delineations are historical; with but one exception, no interest, no incidents, of any other kind, are admitted : so that, as Coleridge adds, “ it is perhaps the most purely historical of Shakespeare’s dramas.” And he justly argues, that it is not merely the having historical matter, but the peculiar relation which this matter bears to the plot, that makes a drama properly historical. Macbeth, for instance, has much of historical matter, yet is in no proper sense an historical drama, because the history neither forms nor guides, but only subserves the plot. Nor, again, does the having much besides historical matter keep a drama from being truly historical, provided the history orders and governs the plot. So that both King Richard the Second and King Henry the Fourth are in the strictest sense historical plays; the difference between them being, that in the former the history furnishes the whole matter and order of the work; while in the latter it furnishes a part, and at the same time shapes and directs whatever is added by the creative imagination. Thus, in a purely historical drama, the history makes the plot; in a mixed, it directs the plot; in such48 SHAKESPl • ¡‘e’s CHARACTERS. tragedies as King Lem and Macbeth, it subserves tbe plot. The play in hand has been justly extolled by several of the most judicious critics as embodying a very profound and comprehensive scheme of political phi osophy. Shakespeare was certainly no less a master in th is high province of thought than in the exercise of the creative and representative imagination. The just limits aid conditions of sovereign authority and of individual right, and how all the parts of the body politic should stand in mutual intelligence and interdependence, were as “ th mgs familiar and acquainted ” to his all-gifted and serenely-tempered mind. He was indeed a mighty workman, if th€ world ever saw one. And his mightiness in the grounds and principles of man’s social being is especially conspicuous in this drama. What rightly “ constitutes a State ”; “ the degrees by which true sway doth mount ”; “ the stalk true power doth grow on”; and that “reverence is a loyal virtue, never sown in haste, nor springing with a transient shower”; — these lessons are here unfolded with a depth and largeness of wisdom, and with a harmony and fruitfulness of impression, that cannot be too highly praised Almost every scene contains matter that craves and repays the closest study. The play forecasts, vividly yet sedately, the long series of civil crimes and slaughters of which Richard’s reign was in fact the seed-plot. These forecastings however, so far as they come to verbal expression, are fitly put into the mouths of the King and the Bishop of Carlisle, men whose personal interests and settled prepossessions make them strongly averse to the events in progress; while the persons engaged in driving those events forw ard are touched by no warnings or misgivings in that kiad, because with them all such forebodings of distant evil ire naturally lost in their resentment of the wrongs that have been done, and in the hopes that dance before them in the path they areKING RICHARD THE SECOND. 49 treading. But, besides this, the same forecast is also placed silently in the general drift and action of the piece; which infers the whole workmanship to have been framed with that far-stretching train and progeny of evils consciously in view. But the most noteworthy point in this matter is the Poet’s calmness and equipoise of judgment. In the strife of factions and the conflict of principles, he utters, or rather lets the several persons utter, in the extremest forms, their mutually-oppugnant views, yet without either committing himself to any of them or betraying any disapproval of them. He understands not only when and how far the persons are wrong in what they say or do, but also why they cannot understand it: so he holds the balance even between justice to the men and justice to the truth; for he knows very well how apt men are to be at fault in their opinions while upright in tlieir aims. The claims of legitimacy and of revolution, of divine right, personal merit, and public choice, the doctrines of the monarchical, the aristocratic, the popular origin of the State, — all these are by turns urged in their most rational or most plausible aspects, but merely in the order and on the footing of dramatic propriety, the Poet himself discovering no preferences or repugnances concerning them. So in this play the dialogue throws out timber from which many diverse theories of government may be framed: and various political and philosophical sects may here meet together, and wrangle out their opposite tenets with themes and quotations drawn from the Poet’s pages; just as his persons themselves wrangled out, with words or arms or both, the questions upon wdiich they were actually divided. Nor does he in any sort play or affect to play the part of umpire between the wranglers: which of them has the truth, or the better cause, — this, like a firm commissioner, so to speak, of Providence, he leaves to appear silently in the ultimate sum-total of results. And so imperturbable is his fairness, so unswerving his impartiality, as almost to seem the offspring VOL. n. 3 d50 SHAIvESPEARE’S CHARACTERS. of a heartless and cynical indifference. Hence a French writer, Cliasles, sets him down as “chiedy remarkable for a judgment so high, so firm, so uncompromising, that one is wellnigh tempted to impeach his coldness, and to find in this impassible observer something tha: may almost be called cruel towards the human race. In the historical pieces,” continues he, “the picturesque, rapid, and vehement genius which produced them seems to bow before the higher law of a judgment almost ironical in its clear-sightedness. Sensibility to impressions, the ardent force of imagination, the eloquence of passion, — these brilliant gifts of nature, which would seem destined to draw a poet beyond all limits, are subordinated in this extraordinary inte ligence to a calm and almost deriding sagacity, that pardons nothing and forgets nothing.” The moral and political lessons designed in this piece run out into completeness in the later plays of the series, and so are to be mainly gathered from them. Here we have the scarce-perceptible germs of consequences which blossom and go to seed there; these consequences being scattered all along down the sequent years till nearly a century after, when the last of the Plantagenets met his death in Bosworth-field. Those lessons a:*e found, not only transpiring inaudibly through the events and actions of the pieces that follow, but also in occasional notes of verbal discourse; as in the Second Part of Xing Henry the Fourth, iii. 1, where Bolmgbroke, worried almost to death with the persevering enmity of the Percys, so pointedly remembers the prediction of Richard: “ Northumberland, thou ladder wherewithal The mounting Bolingbroke ascends my thi one, The time shall not be many hours of age More than it is, ere foul sin gathering head Shall break into corruption : thou shalt think, Though he divide the realm, and give thee half, It is too little, helping him to all ; And he shall think that thou, which know’st the way To plant unrightful kings, wilt-know agair,RICHARD. 51 Being ne’er so little urg’d, another way To pluck him headlong from tli’ usurped throne. The love of wicked friends converts to fear ; That fear to hate.” And the same thing comes out again, perhaps still more impressively, in the fact that Bolingbroke’s conscience, when king, arms the irregularities of his son with the stings of a providential retribution: though aware of Prince Henry’s noble qualities, and of the encouragement they offer, yet the remembrance of what himself has done fills him with apprehensions of the worst; so that he looks upon the Prince as “ only mark’d for the hot vengeance and the rod of Heaven to punish his mistreadings.” The King and Bolingbroke are among the wisest and strongest of Shakespeare’s historical delineations. Both are drawn at full length, and without omission of a fe&-ture or lineament that could anywise help us towards a thorough knowledge of the men; so far, that is, as regards the argument and action of the piece. All through the first three Acts, Richard appears pretty thoroughly despicable, insomuch that it seems hardly possible he should ever rally to his side any honest stirrings either of pity or respect. He is at once crafty and credulous, indolent and arrogant, effeminate and aggressive; a hollow trifler while Fortune smiles, a wordy whimperer when she frowns. His utter falseness of heart in taking order for the combat, while secretly bent on preventing it; his arbitrary freakishness in letting it proceed till the combatants are on the point of crossing their lances, and then peremptorily arresting it; his petulant tyranny in passing the sentence of banishment on both the men, and his nervous, timid apprehensiveness in exacting from them an oath not to have any correspondence during their exile; his mean, scoffing insolence to the broken-hearted Gaunt, his ostentatious scorn of the dying man’s reproofs, his impious levity in wishing him a speedy death, and his imperious,52 Shakespeare’s characters. headlong contempt of justice, and even of his own plighted faith, in seizing the Lancaster estates to his own use before the “ time-honour’d Lancaster” is in th3 grave; — these things mark him out as a thorough-paced profligate, at once lawless and imbecile, who glories in spurning at whatever is held most sacred by all true men. Richard’s character indeed, both as del vered in history and as drawn in the play, is mainly that of a pampered and emasculated voluptuary, presumptuous, hollow-hearted, prodigal, who cannot be got to harbour tie idea that the nation exists for any purpose but to serve5 his private will and pleasure, and who thinks to divorce the rights and immunities of the crown from its cares and duties and legitimate honours. All this had the effect of bringing his personal character into contempt even before his administration became generally disliked. So Hume describes him as “indolent, profuse, addicted to low pleasures, spending his whole time in feasting and jollity, and d: ssipating, in idle show, or in bounties to favourites of no reputation, that revenue which the people expected to see him employ in enterprises directed to public honour and advantage.” As already intimated, strong and independent supports he will nowise endure ; and as he cannot live without supports of some kind, so he takes to climbing plants, u that seem in eating him to hold him up,” and finally pull him to the ground. Such being his disposition, he naturally affects the society of befrilled and capering sprigs ; and so draws about him a set of spendthrift minions, who stop his ear wdth flatteries, and inflame his blood with libidinous fancies ; who make him insolent, imperious, and deaf to the voice of sober counsel and admonition, and draw him into a shallow and frivolous aping of foreign manners and fashions. Among his other traits of wantonness is an eager, restless haunting of public places and scenes of promiscuous familiarity ; thus making himself “ stale and cheap to vulgar company,” till he grows “ common -hackney’ i in the eyes of men,” so that, even “ when he has occasion to be seen, heRICHARD. 53 is but as the cuckoo is in June, heard, not regarded,” and men hang their eyelids down before him, “ being with his presence glutted, gorg’d, and full.” This matter, to be sure, is not brought forward in the present play, and is perhaps rightly withheld, lest it should too much turn away our sympathies from the King in his hours of humiliation and sorrow; but it is aptly urged by Bolingbroke in the following piece, when he remonstrates with the Prince against those idle courses which seem likely to bring him into a similar predicament: “ The skipping King, he ambled up and down With shallow jesters and rash bavin wits, a Soon kindled and soon burn’d ; carded his state, Mingled his royalty, with capering fools ; Had his great name profaned with their scorns ; And gave his countenance, against his name, To laugh at gibing boys, and stand the push Of every beardless vain comparative ; Grew a companion to the common streets : That, being daily swallow’d by men’s eyes, They surfeited with honey, and began To loathe the taste of sweetness, whereof a little More than a little is by much too much.” Nevertheless Richard has in detail the parts, mental, moral, and practical, of a well-rounded manhood; and his endowments, severally regarded, are not without a fair measure both of strength and beauty: but there seems to be no principle of cohesion or concert among them; so that he acts in each of them by turns, never in all of them, hardly ever in two of them, at once. He thus moves altogether by fits and starts, and must still be in an excess, now on one side, now on another; and this because the tempering and moderating power of judgment is wanting; in a word, he has no equilibrium: a thought strikes him, and wdiirls him far off to the right, where another thought strikes him, and whirls him as far off to the left; and so he goes pitching and zigzagging hither and thither. This is not specially constitutional with him, but mainly the result54 Shakespeare’s characters. of bad education and an unconscientious way of life. In his case, the discipline of order and virtue has been forestalled by a planting of loose and giddy thoughts ; and long indulgence in voluptuous arts, and the instilled poison of wanton imaginations, have dissolved the bands of self-restraint, and induced a habit of setting pleasure before duty, and of making reason wait on passion; and this has wrought a certain chronic sleaziness into his texture, and rendered him more and more the sport of contradictory impulses and humours. Richard is riot without bright and just thoughts, but he cannot^for any length of time maintain a reasonable propriety of thought. Hence his discourse piesents a strange medley of sense and puerility; and we cften have a gem of mind or a beautiful image with a childish platitude treading on its heels. So too he is lofty and abject, pious and profane, bold and pusillanimous, by fits; has spasms of elation swiftly alternating with spasms of dejection, and is ever running through the gamut of sharps and flats ; “ every feeling being abandoned for its direct opposite upon the pressure of external accident.” This supreme trait of weakness is most tellingly displayed in his dialogue with Carlisle, Aumerle, Salisbury, and Scroop, just after his return from Ireland, when, upon learning how Bolingbroke is carrying all before him, he vibrates so rapidly between the extremes of ungrounded hope and unmar ly despair. His spirit soars in the, faith that, for every man in arms with Bolingbroke, “ God for His Richard hath in heavenly pay a glorious angel”; but when, a moment after, he finds that, so far from angels mustering to his aid, even men are deserting him, all his faith instantly vanishes in pale-faced terror and dismay. Therewithal he is ever inviting hostile designs by openly anticipating them, or by futile or ill-judged precautions against them. So in his swearing the two banished Dukes not to plot or join hands against him di ring their exile. So too when Bolingbroke comes, avowed.y and with justRICHARD. 55 cause, to reclaim his own, and to redress the bleeding State; he discovers no purpose of grasping the crown, till Richard’s weak-kneed concession or acquiescence puts it in his mind, and fairly wooes him to it; that is, the King presumes the design is to unseat him, and thereby prompts it. Thus the apprehension of being deposed, instead of stiffening up his manly parts, at once deposes his intellect and spirit. When a bold and resolute self-assertion, or a manly and stout-hearted defiance would outdare and avert the peril, he just quails and cowers; and his deprecating of the blow before it comes is a tacit pledge of submission when it comes. He himself tells Bolingbroke, “they well deserve to have, that know the strong’st and surest way to get”; while his behaviour just illustrates how they deserve not to have, who use the strong’st and surest way to lose. But perhaps the most mark-worthy point in his character is, that the prospect or the pressure of adversity or distress, instead of kindling any strain of manhood in him, or of having any bracing and toning effect upon his soul, only melts it into a kind of sentimental pulp. Suffering does not even develop the virtue of passive fortitude in him: at its touch, he forthwith abandons himself to a course of passionate weakness. And he is so steeped in voluptuous habits, that he must needs be a voluptuary even in his sorrow, and make a luxury of woe itself: pleasure has so thoroughly mastered his spirit, that he cannot think of bearing pain as a duty or an honour, but merely as a license for the pleasure of maudlin self-compassion : so he hangs over his griefs, hugs them, nurses them, buries himself in them, as if the sweet agony thereof were to him a glad refuge from the stings of self-reproach, or a dear release from the exercise of manly thought. This, I take it, is the true explanation of the fact, that when he is sick in fortune, and sees “ the wTorld is not his friend, nor the world’s law,” he forthwith turns a moralistic day-dreamer and fancy-monger, and goes to spending his wits in a sort of holiday of poetical, self-brooding tearfulness. His spirit wantons in running self-56 Shakespeare’s characters. pleasing divisions upon sadness, as if to beguile the sense and memory of his follies and crimes. And such an ingenious working of sentimental embroidery is perhaps the natural resort of a profligate without mear s. It is also to be noted that in his reverse of fortune Richard’s mind is altogether self-centred ; and he is so becharmed with his self-pity, that he has no thought to spare for those whom his fall has dragged down into ruin along with him. But this is only part and parcel of his general character; which is that of “a mind deeply reflective in its misfortunes, but wanting the guide to all sound reflection, — the power of going out of himself, under the conduct of a loftier reason than could endure to dwell upon the merely personal.” In this respect, cne may well be tempted to run a parallel, as indeed Hazlitt has done, between Richard the Second and Henry th 3 Sixth as drawn by Shakespeare. The two Kings closely resemble each other in a certain weakness of character bordering on effeminacy; and this resemblance is made specially apparent by their similarity of state and fortune, Yet this similarity seems to have put the Poet upon a more careful discrimination of the men. Richard is as selfi sh as he is weak, and weak partly because of his selfishness. With goodly powers of mind, still his thinking never rtns clear of self, but is all steeped to the core in personal regards; he reads men and things altogether through the medium of his own wishes and desires. And because his thoughts do not rise out of self, and stay in the contemplation c f general truth, therefore it is that his course of life runs so tearingly a-clash with the laws and conditions of his place, With Henry, on the other hand, disinterestedness is pushed to the degree of an infirmity. He seems to pereeiv3 and own truth all the more willingly where it involves a sacrifice of his personal interests and rights. But a man, (¡specially a king, cannot be wise for others, unless he be so for himself. Thus Henry’s weakness seems to spring in part from an excessive disregard of self He permits the laws to suffer,RICHARD. 57 and in them the people, partly because he cannot vindicate them without, in effect, taking care of his own cause. And when others break their oaths to him, he blames his own remissness as having caused them to wrong themselves. But Richard is at last felt to be the victim as well as the author of wrong; and the Poet evidently did not mean that the wrongs he has done should lie so heavy upon us as to preclude commiseration for the wrong he suffers. Our sympathies are indeed deeply moved in the wretched man’s behalf. This, I suppose, is because the spectacle of fallen greatness, of humiliatioi^md distress, however merited, is a natural object of pity; while, again, honest pity naturally magnetizes other sentiments into unison with itself. The heart must be hard indeed that does not respond to the pathos of York’s account of the discrowned monarch’s ride into London: “ No man cried, God save him ! No joyful tongue gave him his welcome home ; But dust was thrown upon his sacred head ; Which with such gentle sorrow he shook off, — His face still combating with tears and smiles, The badges of his grief and patience, — That, had not God, for some strong purpose, steel’d The hearts of men, they must perforce have melted, And barbarism itself have pitied him.” And it is rather surprising how much he redeems himself in our thoughts by his manly outburst of resentment in the parliament-scene, when the sneaking Northumberland so meanly persecutes him to “ ravel out his weav’d-up follies.” Then too his faults and infirmities are so much those of our common humanity, that even through them he creeps into our affections, and spins round us the ties of brotherhood. Nor, in truth, is his character without beautiful parts; and when affliction brings these out, as night does the stars, he puts forth claims to gentle regard which the judgment is no less prompt to ratify than the heart to own.58 Shakespeare’s characters. In collision with such a compact, close-knit, sure-footed structure as Bolingbroke, it is no wonder that Richard’s brittle, stumbling, loose-jointed fabric soon goes to pieces. In one of his paroxysms of regal conceit, he flatters himself that “ not all the water in the rough-rude sea can wash the balm from an anointed king ”; but h s fate is a preg-nant warning that in the eye of Heaven, ay, and of men too, a king can wash off his own consecrati on by flagitious, persistent misgovernment, and can effectually discrown himself by prostituting the intrusted sym bol of a nation’s sovereignty into an instrument of wilful and despotic self-indulgence. Richard has thought to stai d secure in the strength of his good right, and would not see how this might be practically annulled by bad use. By not respecting his great office, he has taught the people to despise his person, and has set them to longing for a.man in his place who will be a king in soul as 'well as in title. Thus the king by inheritance finds himself hopelessly unkinged in an unequal struggle with a king by nature and merit. Bolingbroke is obviously the moving and controlling spirit of the drama. Every thing waits upon his firm-set and tranquil potency of will, and is mad3 alive with his silent, inly-working efficacy of thought and purpose. He sets the action on foot, shapes its whole course, and ties up all its lines at the close; himself riding, in calm and conscious triumph, the whirlwind he has had a hand in raising. Bold, crafty, humble, and aspiring, he is also brimful of energy, yet has all his forces thoroughly in hand, so that he uses them, and is never mastered by them. His vessel is so well-timbered and so tight-built, that it never springs a-leak; either from nature or from purpose, perhaps from both, he takes the way of spreading himself by deeds, not by discourse; plans industriously, but says nothing about it; and as he prates not of his mental whereabout, so you never know what he is thinking of dr driving at, till his thoughts have compassed their drift, and overtaken their ends: consequently he remains throughout the play anBOLINGBROKE. 59 enigma both to the other persons and to us. At once ardent and self-restrained, far-sighted, firmly poised, always eying his mark steadily, and ever working towards it stealthily, he knows perfectly withal how to abide his time: he sees the opportunity clearly while it is coming, and seizes it promptly when it comes; but does all this so quietly as to seem the mere servant of events, and not at all the worker of them. He is undoubtedly ambitious of the crown, expects to have it, means to get it, and frames his action to that end; but he builds both the ambition and the expectation on his knowledge of Richard’s character and his own political insight: reading the signs of the time with a statesman’s eye, he knows that things are hastening towards a crisis in the State; as he also knows that they will be apt to make an end the sooner, if left to their natural course : nor, after all, is it so correct to say that he forces the crown away from Richard, as that he lets Richard’s fitful, jerking impotence shake it off into his hand; though it must be owned that he takes, and knows he is taking, just the right way to stimulate Richard’s convulsive zigzaggery into fatal action. Bolingbroke, throughout the play, appears framed of qualities at once attractive and commanding. In the sequent play, the tempestuous Hotspur denounces him as a “ vile politician.” A politician he is indeed, but he is much more than that. He is a conscious adept and a willing prac-tiser in the ways of popularity; and if there is much of artfulness in his condescension, there is much of genuineness too: for he knows that the strength of the throne must stand in having the hearts of the people knit to it; and in his view the tribute of a winning address, or of gracious and obliging behaviour, may be honestly and wisely paid, to purchase their honest affection. Therewithal he is a master of just that proud complaisance and benignant loftiness, that happy mixture of affability and reserve, which makes its way most surely to the seat of popular confidence and respect. Nor does his courtship of the people ever forget60 Shakespeare’s charactebs. that their love will keep the longer and the better for being so seasoned with reverence as to stop sho’t of familiarity : for this cause, he offers himself seldom to their eyes; and when he thus offers himself, he does it so sparingly as to make their eyes glad of the sight without glutting them; and does it in such a way, that their love of the man may in no sort melt down their awe of the pince. The way he sweetens himself into their good thoughts, by smiling and bowing his farewTell pleasantness ujon them when leaving for his place of exile, has its best showing in Richard’s description, — “ How he did seem to dive into their hearts With humble and familiar courtesy ; What reverence he did throw away on slaves ; Wooing poor craftsmen with the craft of smiles, And patient under bearing of his fortune. Off goes his bonnet to an oyster-wench; A brace of draymen bid God speed him w?ll, And had the tribute of his supple knee, With Thanks, m,y countrymen, my loving friends.” Bolingbroke’s departure is with the po:*t and bearing of a conscious victor in the issue he has made. He knows that the hearts of the people are going with him, and that his power at home will strike its roots the deeper for the rough wind of tyranny which blow^s him abroad, where he must “sigh his English breath in foreign clouds, eating the bitter bread of banishment.” From that moment., he sees that the crown is in reversion his; and the inspiration of these forward-looking thoughts is one cause why he throws such winning blandness and compliance into his parting salutations. And on* coming back to reclaim his plundered inheritance, instead of waiting for a formal settlement of rights and titles, no sooner is he landed than he quietly assumes the functions, and goes to doing the works, of sovereignty, while disclaiming the office and all pretensions to it. In their long experience of a king without kingliness, the people have had enough of the name without the thing: so he px*oceeds to enact the thing without the name.BOLIN GrBROKE. 61 Men thus get used to seeing kingly acts done by him, and grow warm with the sense of public benefits resulting therefrom, without understanding clearly that they are such; that is, they are made to feel the presence of a real king inside of him, before they know it. In this way, he literally steals the sentiment of loyalty into them; while his approved kingliness of spirit reinvests the title with its old dearness and lustre, and at the same time points him out as the rightful wearer of it. Being thus a king in fact, though not in name and outward show, the sentiments that have been wont to go with the crown silently draw together and centre upon him; and when this is done the crown itself naturally gravitates towards his head. Whether the man consciously designs all this, may indeed be questioned; but such is clearly the natural drift and upshot of the course he pursues. Nor is his bearing towards the lords who gather round him less remarkable. During their long ride together, he cheats the tediousness of the road with his sweetness and affability of discourse, thus winning and fastening them to his cause, yet without so committing himself to them as to give them any foothold for lording it over him. The overweening Percys, from the importance of their aid, evidently reckon upon being a power behind the throne greater than the throne; but they are not long in finding they have mistaken their man. So in the deposition-scene, when the insolent Northumberland thinks to rule the crestfallen King by dint of browbeating, Bolingbroke quietly overrules him; and he does this so much in the spirit of one born to command, as to make it evident that the reign of favouritism is at an end. He is not unmindful that those who have engaged in rebellion to set him up may do the same again to pluck him down: therefore he is the prompter to let them know that, instead of being his master, they have given themselves a master in him, and that, if he has used their services in establishing his throne, he has done so as their King, and not as their creature. And as he has no62 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. notion of usurping the crown by their help ia order that they may rule the State with a king under them; so neither is he wanting in magnanimity to the brave old Bishop of Carlisle, whose honest, outspoken, uncompromising loyalty to Richard draws from him a reproof indeed, but in language so restrained and temperate as to show that he honours the man much more* than he resents the act. The same nobleness of spirit, or, if you please, p alitic generosity, is evinced again in his declared purpose of recalling Norfolk, and reinstating him in his lands an 1 honours; and perhaps still better in the scene where he pardons Aumerle, and where, while the old Duke and Duchess of York are pleading with all their might, the one against, the other for, their son’s life, he gently plays with the occasion, and defers the word, though his mind is made up, and at last gratifies the father by denying his suit, and binds all three of their hearts indissolubly to himself by a wise act of mercy the more engaging for his stern justice to the other conspirators. And so the way Bolingbroke kings it all through the fourth and fifth Acts, sparing of words, but prompt and vigorous, yet temperate and prudent in deed, makes a forcible contrast to Richard’s fro ward, violent, imbecile tyrannizing in the first and second. As for the murder of Richard, this is indeed an execrable thing; but there is the less need of remarking upon it, inasmuch as Bolingbroke’s professed abhorrence of the deed and remorse for having hinted it, whether sincere or not, sufficiently mark it out for reprobation. Of course the proximate cause of it is the conspiracy which has come to light for restoring the deposed King, and which has cost the lives of several men. The death of those men is, in the circumstances, just. And the fact that Richard’s life thus holds Bolingbroke in constant peril of assassination amply explains why the latter should wish the ground and motive for such plots removed, though it may nowise excuse the means used for stopping off that peril. But in truth the head and spring of all these evils lies in the usurpation ; and for this Richard is quite as much to blame as Bolingbroke.KING HENRY THE FOURTH. 68 KING HENRY THE FOURTH. Dr. Johnson rightly observes that the First and Second Parts of King Henry the Fourth are substantially one drama, the whole being arranged as two only because too long to be one. For this cause it seems best to regard them as one in what follows, and so dispose of them both together. The writing of them must be placed at least as early as 1597, when the author was ihirty-three years old. The First Part was registered at the Stationers’ for publication in February, 1598, and was published in the course of that year. There were also four other quarto issues of the play before the folio edition of 1628. The Second Part was first published in 1600, and there is not known to have been any other edition of it till it reappeared along wdth the First Part in the folio. It is pretty certain, however, for reasons to be stated presently, that the Second Part was written before the entry of the First Part at the Stationers’ in 1598. It is beyond question that the original name of Sir John Falstaff was Sir John Oldcastle; and a curious relic of that naming survives in Act i. scene 2, where the Prince calls Falstaff “ my old lad of the castle.” And we have several other strong proofs of the fact; as in the Epilogue to the Second Part: “ For any thing I know, Falstaff shall die of a sweat, unless already he be killed with your hard opinions; for Oldcastle died a martyr, and this is not the man.” Also, in Amends for Ladies, a play by Nathaniel Field, printed in 1618: “ Did you never see the play where the fat Knight, hight Oldcastle, did tell you truly what this honour was?” which clearly alludes to Falstaff’s soliloquy about honour in the First Part, Act v. scene 1. Yet the change of name must have been made before the play was entered in the Stationers’ books, as that entry mentions “the conceited mirth of Sir John FalstaffP And WO have one small but pretty decisive mark inferring64 Shakespeare’s characters. the Second Part to have been written before that change was made : in the quarto edition of this Part, Act i. scene 2, one of Falstaff’s speeches has the prefix Old; the change in that instance being probably left unmarked in the printer’s copy. All which shows that both Parts were originally written long enough before February, 1598, for the author to see cause for changing the name. “ Sir John Oldcastle, the good Lord Cobham,” was much distinguished as a Wicklifiite martyr, and his name was held in high reverence by the Protestants in Shakespeare’s time. And the purpose of the change in question probably was t6 rescue his memory from the profanations of the stage. Thus much seems hinted in the fi»recited passage from the Epilogue, and is further approved by what Fuller says in his Church History: “ S :age-poets have themselves been very bold with, and others very merry at, the memory of Sir John Oldcastle, whom they have fancied a boon companion, a jovial royster, and a coward to boot. The best is, Sir John Falstaff hath relieved the memory of Sir John Oldcastle, and is substituted buffoon in his place.” Another motive for the change may have been the better to distinguish Shakespeare’s play from The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth; a play which hid been on the stage some years, and wherein Sir John Oldcastle was long the names of the Dramatis Personce, as were also Ned and Gadshill. There is no telling with any certainty when or by whom The Famous Victories vras written. It is known to have been on the boards as early as 1588, because one of the parts was acted by Tarlton, the celebrated comedian, who died that year. And Nash, in his Pierce Penniless, 1592, thus alludes to it: “ What a glorious thing it is to have Henry the Fifth represented on the stage, leading the French King prisoner, and forcing him and the Dauphin to swear fealty.” It was also entered at the Stationers’ in 1594; and a play cal ed Harry the Fifth, probably the same, was performed in 1595 ; and not less than three editions of it were printed. All which tellsKING HENRY THE FOURTH. strongly for its success and popularity. The action of the play extends over the whole time occupied by Shakespeare’s King Henry the Fourth and King Henry the Fifth. The Poet can hardly be said to have built upon it or borrowed from it at all, any further than taking the above-mentioned names. The play is indeed a most wretched and worthless performance ; being altogether a mass of stupid vulgarity ; at once vapid and vile; without the least touch of wit in the comic parts, or of poetry in the tragic; the verse being such only to the eye; Sir John Oldcastle being a dull, low-minded profligate, uninformed with the slightest felicity of thought or humour ; the Prince, an irredeemable compound of ruffian, blackguard, and hypocrite; and their companions, the fitting seconds of such principals : so that to have drawn upon it for any portion or element of Shakespeare’s King Henry the Fourth were much the same as “ extracting sunbeams from cucumbers.” In these plays, as in others of the same class, the Poet’s authority was Holinshed, whose Chronicles, first published in 1577, was then the favourite book in English history. And the plays, notwithstanding their wealth of ideal matter, are rightly called historical, because the history everywhere guides, and in a good measure forms, the plot, whereas Macbeth, for instance, though having much of historical matter, is rightly called a tragedy, as the history merely subserves the plot. King Henry the Fourth, surnamed Bolingbroke from the place of his birth, came to the throne in 1399, having first deposed his cousin, Richard the Second, whose death he W’as generally thought to have procured shortly after. The chief agents in this usurpation were the Percys, known in history as Northumberland, Worcester, and Hotspur, three haughty and turbulent noblemen, who afterwards troubled Henry to keep the crown as much as they had helped him in getting it. The lineal heir to the crown next after Richard was ESHAKESPEAKe’s Ci,_ i ACTE US. Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March, a lad :hen about seven years old, whom the King held in a sort of honourable custody. Early in his reign, one of tli3 King’s leading partisans in Wales went to insulting and oppressing Owen Glendower, a chief of that country, who lad been trained up in the English Court. Glendower petitioned for redress, and was insultingly denied ; whereupon he took the work of redress into his own hands. Sir Edmund Mortimer, uncle to the young Earl of March, and brother to Hotspur’s wife, was sent against him; but his foices were utterly broken, and himself captured and held in close confinement by Glendower, where the King suffered him to lie unransomed, alleging that he had treacherously allowed himself to be taken. Shakespeare, however, following Holinshed, makes the young Earl, who was then detained at Windsor to have been Glendower’s prisoner. After the captivity of Mortimer the King led three armies in succession against Glendower, rnd was as often baffled by the valour or the policy of the Welshman. At length the elements made war on the King; his forces were storm-stricken, blown to pieces by tempests; which bred a general belief that Glendower could “ command the Devil,” and “ call spirits from the vasty deep.” The King finally gave up and withdrew; but still consoled himself that he yielded, not to the arms, but to the magic arts of his antagonist. In the beginning of his reign the King led an army into Scotland, and summoned the Scottish King to appear before him and do homage for his crown; but, finding that the Scots would neither submit nor fight, and being pressed by famine, he gave over the undertaking an 1 retired. Some while after, Earl Douglas, at the head of ten thousand men, burst into England, and advanced as far as Newcastle, spreading terror and havoc around him. On their return they were met by the Percys at Homildon where, after a fierce and bloody battle, the Scots were! totally routed; Douglas himself being captured, as were also many otherKING HENRY THE FOURTH. 67 Scottish noblemen, and among them the Earl of Fife, a prince of the blood royal. The most distinguished of the English leaders in this affair was Henry Percy, surnamed Hotspur; a man of the most restless, daring, fiery, and impetuous spirit, who first armed at the age of twelve years, after which time, it is said, his spur was never cold. Of the other events suffice it to say that they are much the same in history as in the drama; while the Poet’s selection and ordering of them yield no special cause for remark. One or two points, however, it may be well to notice as throwing some light on certain allusions in the play. In the Spring of 1405, Prince Henry, then in his nineteenth year, was at the head of an army in Wales, where Glendower had hitherto carried all before him. By his activity, prudence, and perseverance, the young hero gradually broke the Welshman down, and at length reduced the whole country into subjection. He continued in this service most of the time for four years; his valour and conduct awakening the most favourable expectations, which however were not a little dashed by his rampant hilarity during the intervals of labour in the field. His father was much grieved at these irregularities; and his grief was heightened by some loose and unfilial words that were reported to him as having fallen from the Prince in hours of merriment. Hearing of this, the Prince went to expostulate with his father; yet even then he enacted a strange freak of oddity, arraying himself in a gown of blue satin wrought full of eyelet-holes, and at each eyelet the needle still hanging by the silk; probably meaning to intimate thereby, that if his behaviour, his iporal garb, were full of rents, it was not too late to sew them up, and the means were at hand for doing so. Being admitted to an interview, he fell on his knees and, presenting a dagger, begged the King to take his life, since he had withdrawn his favour. His father, much moved, threw away the dagger, and, kissing him, owned with tears that he had indeed held him in suspicion, though, as he now saw, without just cause; and promised68 Shakespeare’s characters. that no misreports should thenceforth shake his confidence in him. At another time, one of his unruly companions being convicted of felony, and sentenced to prison by the Chief Justice, the Prince undertook to rescue him, and even went so far as to assault the Judge; who forthwith ordered him to prison also, and he had the good sense to submit. Upon being tqld this incident, the King exclaimed, u Happy the King that has a judge so firm in his duty, and a son so obedient to the law! ” Perhaps I should add, that the battle of Homildon was fought September 14, 1402; which marks the beginning of the play. The battle of Shrewsbury, which closes the First Part, took place July 21, 1403; Prince Henry being then only sixteen years old. The King died March 19, 1413 ; so that the two plays cover a period of about ten years and a half. HISTORICAL CHARACTERS. If these two plays are substantially one, ib is the character of Prince Henry that makes them so; that is, they have their unity in him; and the common argument of them lies in the change alleged to have taken place in him on coming to the throne. Why was Henry of Monmcutli so loose and wild a reveller in his youth, and yet such a proficient in noble and virtuous discipline in his manhocd ? what causes, internal and external, determined him to the one; what impulses from within, what influences from without, transformed him into the other? Viewed in ihe light of this principle, the entire work, with its broad, rich variety of incident and character, and its alternations of wit and poetry, will be seen, I think, to proceed in a spirit of wise insight and design. Accordingly, in the first scene of the play, this matter is put forth as uppermost in the King’s thoughts. I refer to what passes between him and Westmoreland touching theTHE KING. 69 victory at Homildon; where the Earl declares “it is a conquest for a prince to boast of,” and the King replies, — “ Yea, there thou mak’st me sad, and mak’st me sin, In envy that my Lord Northumberland Should be the father to so blest a son ; Whilst I, by looking on the praise of him, See riot and dishonour stain the brow Of my young Harry. 0, that it could he prov’d That some night-tripping fairy had exchang’d In cradle-clothes our children where they lay, And call’d mine Percy, his Plantagenet! Then would I have his Harry, and he mine.” One reason of Prince Henry’s early irregularities seems to have grown from the character of his father. All accounts agree in representing Bolingbroke as a man of great reach and sagacity; a politician of inscrutable craft, full of insinuation, brave in the field, skilful alike at penetrating others’ designs and at concealing his own ; unscrupulous alike in smiling men into his service and in crunching them up after he had used them. All which is fully borne out in that, though his reign was little else than a series of rebellions and commotions proceeding in part from the injustice whereby he reached the crown and the bad title whereby he held it, yet he always got the better of them, and even turned them to his advantage. Where he could not win the heart, cutting off the head, and ever plucking fresh security out of the dangers that beset him; his last years, however, were much embittered, and his death probably hastened, by the anxieties growing out of his position, and the remorses consequent upon his crimes. But, while such is the character generally ascribed to him, no historian has come near Shakespeare in the painting of it. Much of his best transpiration is given in the preceding play of Richard the Second,, where he is the controlling spirit. For, though Richard is the more prominent character in that play, this is not as the mover of things, but as the receiver of movements caused by another; the effects lighting on him, while the worker of them is comparativelyTO Shakespeare’s characters. unseen. For one of Bolingbroke’s main peculiarities is, that he looks solely to results; and, like a true artist, the better to secure these he keeps his designs and processes in the dark; his power thus operating so secretly, that in whatever he does the thing seems to have done itself to his hand. How intense his enthusiasm, yev, how perfect his coolness and composure! Then too how pregnant and forcible, always, yet how calm and gentle, and at times how terrible, his speech! how easily and unconcernedly the words drop from him, yet how pat and home they are to the persons for whom and the occasions whereon they are spoken! To all which add a flaming thirst of power, a most aspiring and mounting ambition, with an equal mixture of humility, boldness, and craft, and t ie result explains much of the fortune that attends him through all the plays in which he figures. For the Poet keeps h im the same man throughout. So that, taking the whole delineation together, we have at full length and done to the life, the portrait of a man in act prompt, bold, decisive, in thought sly, subde, far-reaching; a character hard and cold indeed to the feelings, but written all over with success; which has no impulsive gushes or starts, but all is study, forecast, and calm suiting of means to preappointed ends. And this perfect self-command is in great part the secret of his strange power ever others, making them almost as pliant to his purposes as are the cords and muscles of his own body; so that, as the event proves, he grows great by their feeding, till he can compass food enough without .their help, and, if they go to hindering him, can eat them up. For so it turned out with the Percys; strong sinews indeed with him for a head; while, against him, their very strength served but to work their ow7n overthrow. Some points of this description are well illustrated in wdiat Hotspur says of him just before the brttle of Shrewsbury, in the speech beginning, — “ The King is kind ; and well we know th3 King Knows at what time to promise, when to pay.”THE KING. 71 Hotspur, to be sure, exaggerates a good deal there, as he does everywhere, still his charges have a considerable basis of truth. As further matter to the point, observe the account which the King gives of himself when remonstrating with the Prince against his idle courses; which is not less admirable for truth of history than for skill of pencil. Equally fine, also, is the account of his predecessor immediately following that of himself; where we see that he has the same sharp insight of men as of means, and has made Richard’s follies and vices his tutors; from his miscarriages learning how to supplant him, and perhaps encouraging his errors, that he might make a ladder of them, to mount up and overtop him. The whole scene indeed is pregnantly characteristic both of the King and the Prince. And how the King’s penetrating and remorseless sagacity is flashed forth in Hotspur’s outbursts of rage at his demanding all the prisoners taken at Homildon! wherein that roll of living fire is indeed snappish enough, but then he snaps out much truth. But, though policy was the leading trait in this able man, nevertheless it was not so prominent but that other and better traits were strongly visible. And even in his policy there was much of the breadth and largeness which distinguish the statesman from the politician. Besides, he w~as a man of prodigious spirit and courage, had a real eye to the interests of his country as well as of his family, and in his wars he was humane much beyond the custom of his time. And in the last scene of the Poet’s delineation of him, where he says to the Prince, — ‘‘Come hither, Harry ; sit thou by my bed, And hear, I think, the very latest counsel That ever I shall breathe ” ; though we have indeed his subtle policy working out like a ruling passion strong in death, still its workings are suffused with gushes of right feeling, enough to show that he was not all politician; that beneath his close-knit prudence there was a soul of moral sense, a kernel of religion. Norn SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. must I omit how the Poet, following th3 leadings both of nature and history, makes him to he plagued by foes springing up in his own bosom in proportion as he ceases to be worried by external enemies; the crown beginning to scald his brows as soon as he has crushed those who would pluck it from him. How different is the atmosphere which waits upon the group of rebel war-chiefs, whereof Hotsp ir is the soul, and where chivalry reigns as supremely as wit and humour do in the haunts of Falstaff! It is difficult to speak of Hotspur satisfactorily; not indeed but that the lines of his character are bold and emphatic enough, but rather because they are so much so. For his frar.ie is greatly dis-proportioned, which causes him to seem larger than he is; and one of his excesses manifests itself i:i a wiry, red-hot speech, which burns such an impression of him into the mind as to make any commentary seem prosaic and dull. There is no mistaking him: no character in Shakespeare stands more apart in plenitude of peculiarity; and stupidity itself cannot so disfeature him with criticism, but that he will be recognized by any one who has ever been with him. He is as much a monarch in his sphere as the King and Falstaff are in theirs; only they rule more by power, he by stress: there is something in them that takes away the will and spirit of resistance; he makes every thing bend to his arrogant, domineering, capricious temper. Who that has been with him in the scenes at the Palace and at Bangor can ever forget his bounding, sarcastic, overbearing spirit? How he hits all about, and makes the feat'iers fly wherever he hits! It seems as if his tongue coulc go through the world, and strew the road behind it with splinters. And how steeped his speech everywhere is in ihe poetry of the sword! In what compact and sinewy platoons and squadrons the words march out of his mouth in bristling rank and file! as if from his birth he had been cradled on the iron breast of war. How doubly-charged he is, in short,HOTSPUR. 73 with the electricity of chivalry! insomuch that you can touch him nowhere but he gives you a shock. In those two scenes, what with Hotspur, and what with Glendower, the poetry is as unrivalled in its kind as the wit and humour in the best scenes at Eastcheap. What a dressing Hotspur gives the silken courtier who came to demand the prisoners! Still better, however, is the dialogue that presently follow's in the same scene; wrhere Hotspur seems to be under a spell, a fascination of rage and scorn: nothing can check him, he cannot check himself; because, besides the boundings of a most turbulent and impetuous nature, he has always had his own way, having from his boyhood held the post of a feudal war-chief. Irascible, headstrong, impatient, every effort to arrest or divert him only produces a new impatience. Whatever thought strikes him, it forthwith kindles into an overmastering passion that bears down all before it. We see that he has a rough and passionate soul, great strength and elevation of. mind, with little gentleness and less delicacy, and a “force of will that rises into poetry by its own chafings.” While “the passion of talk” is upon him, he fairly drifts and surges before it till exhausted, and then there supervenes an equal “ passion of action.” “ Speaking thick ” is noted as one of his peculiarities; and it is not clear whether the Poet took this from some tradition respecting him, or considered it a natural result of his prodigious rush and press cf thought. 7 Another striking trait in Hotspur, resulting perhaps, in part, from his having so much passion in his head, is the singular absence of mind so well described by Prince Henry: “I am not of Percy’s mind, the Hotspur of the North; he that kills me some six or seven dozen of Scots at a breakfast, washes his hands, and says to his wrife, Fie upon this quiet life ! I want worJc. 0, my sweet Harry ! says she, how many hast thou killed to-day? Give my roan horse a drench, says he; and answers, an hour after, Some fourteen / a trifle, a trifle ! ” So again in the scene VOL. II. 474 Shakespeare’s ciiaracters. of Hotspur and his wife at Warkworth. She winds up her strain of tender womanly remonstrance by saying,— “ Some heavy business hath my lord in hand, And I must know it, else he loves me not.” Before answering her, he calls in a servant, makes several inquiries about his horse, and orders him to be brought into the park, hears her reproof, and exchanges divers questions with her; then replies, “Love! I love fihee not; I care not for thee, Kate”; and presently heals rp the wound: “ Come, wilt thou see me lide ? And when I am o’ horseback I will swear I love thee infinitely.” Here it is plain that his absence grows from a certain skittishness of mind: he has not the control of his thinking; the issues of his brain being so conceived in lire as to pre* elude steadiness of attention and the pauses of thought. The qualities I have noted in Hotspur unfit him, in a great measure, for a military leader in reg ular warfare, his nature being too impulsive and heady for the counterpoise of so weighty an undertaking. Too impatient and eager for the contest to concert operations; abundantly able to fight battles, but not to scheme them; be is qualified to succeed only in the hurly-burly of border warfare, where success comes more by fury of onset than by wisdom of plan. All which is finely apparent just before the battle of Shrewsbury, where, if not perversely wrong-headed, he is so headstrong, peremptory, and confident even to rashness, as to be quite impracticable. We see, and his fellow-chieftains see, that there is no coming tc a temper with him; he being sure to run a quarrel with any one who stands out against his proposals. Yet he is never more truly the noble Hotspur than on this occasion, when, amidst the falling-oif of friends, the backwardness of allies, and the thickening of dangers, his ardent and brave spirit turns his very disadvantages into grounds of confidence. His untamed boisterousness of tongue has one of its bestGLENDOWER. i O eruptions in the dispute with Glen dower at Bangor, where his wit and his impudence come in for about equal shares of our admiration. He finally stops the mouth of his antagonist, or heads him off upon another subject, as ho does again shortly after, in a dispute about the partitioning of the realm; and he does it not so much by force of reason as of will and speech. His contempt of poetry is highly characteristic; though it is observable that he has spoken more poetry than any one else in the play. But poetry is altogether an impulse with him, not a purpose, as it is with Glendower; and he loses all thought of himself and his speech, in the intensity of passion with which he contemplates the object or occasion that moves him. His celebrated description of the fight between Glendower and Mortimer has been censured as offending good taste by its extravagance. It would not be in good taste indeed to put such a strain into the mouth of a contemplative sage, like Prospero; but in Hotspur its very extravagance is in good taste, because hugely characteristic. Hotspur is a general favourite: whether from something in himself or from the King’s treatment of him, he has our good-will from the start; nor is it without some reluctance that wre set the Prince above him in our regard. Which may be owing in part to the interest we take, and justly, in his wfife; who, timid, solicitous, affectionate, and playful, is a woman of the true Shakespearian stamp. How delectar-ble is the harmony felt between her prying, inquisitive gentleness and his rough, stormy courage! for in her gentleness there is much strength, and his bravery is not without gentleness. The scene at Warkwortli, where they first appear together, is a choice heart-refection: combining the beauty of movement and of repose, it comes into the surrounding elements like a patch of sunshine in a tempest. The best of historical matter for poetical and dramatic uses has seldom been turned to better account that way than in the portrait of Glendower. He is represented, withTo Shakespeare’s characters. great art and equal truth, according to the superstitious belief of his time; a belief in which himself doubtless shared: for, if the winds and tempests came when he wished them, it was natural for him to think, as others thought, that they came because he wished them. The popu lar ideas respecting him all belonged to the region of poetry; and Shakespeare has given them with remarkable exactness, at the same time penetrating and filling them with his own spirit. Crediting the alleged portents of his nativity, Glendower might well conclude he was “ not in the roll of common men ”; and so betake himself to the stud} and practice of those magic arts which were generally believed in then, and for which he was specially marked by his birth and all the courses of his life. And for the same cause he would naturally become somewhat egotistical, long-winded, and tedious; presuming that what was interesting to him as relating to himself wrould be equally so to others for its own sake. So that we need not altogether discredit Hotspur’s account of the time spent by him “in reckoning up the several devils’ names that were his lacqueys.” For, though Hotspur exaggerates here, as usual, yet wo see that he has some excuse for his sauciness to Glendower, in that he has been dreadfully bored by him. And there is something ludicrous withal in the Welshman’s being so wrapped up in himself as not to perceive the unfitness of talking thus to one so hare-brained and skittish. Glendower, however, is no ordinary enthusiast. A man of wild and mysterious imaginations, yet h3 has a practical skill that makes them tell against the King; his dealing in magic rendering him even more an object of fear than his valour and conduct. And his behaviour in t ie disputes with Hotspur approves him as much superior in the external qualities of a gentleman as he is more superstitious. Though no suspicion of any thing false or mean can attach to Hotspur, it is characteristic of him to indulge his haughty temper even to the thwarting of his purpose: he will haz-THE CHIEF JUSTICE. 77 ard the blowing-up of the conspiracy rather than put a bridle on his impatience; which the Welshman, with all his grandeur and earnestness of pretension, is too prudent to do. In the portrait of Glendower there is nothing unwarranted by history; only Shakespeare has with marked propriety made the enthusiastic and poetical spirit of the man send him to the study of magic arts, as involving some natural aptitude or affinity for them. It may be interesting to know that he managed to spin out the contest among the wilds of Snowdon far into the next reign; his very superstition perhaps lending him a strength of soul which no misfortune could break. I must not leave this strange being without remarking how sweetly his mind nestles in the bosom of poetry; as appears in the passage where he acts as interpreter between his daughter and her husband Mortimer. Among the minor historical characters of these plays there is much judicious discrimination. — Lord Bardolph is shrewd and sensible, of a firm practical understanding, and prudent forecast; and none the less brave, that his cool judgment puts him upon looking carefully before he leaps.—■ Yernon, with his well-poised discretion in war-council and his ungrudging admiration of the Prince, makes a happy foil to Hotspur, whose intemperate daring in conduct, and whose uneasiness at hearing Prince Henry’s praises spoken, would something detract from his manhood, but that no suspicion of dishonour can fasten upon him. — The Archbishop, so forthright and strong-thoughted, bold, enterpris ing, and resolute in action, in speech grave, moral, and sententious, forms, all together, a noble portrait. — The Chief Justice, besides the noble figure he makes at the close, is, with capital dramatic effect, brought forward several times in passages at arms with Falstaff; where his good-natured wisdom, as discovered in his suppressed enjoyment of the fat old sinner’s wit, just serves to sweeten without at all diluting the reverence that waits upon his office and char-78 Shakespeare’s characters. acter. ■—Northumberland makes good his c haracter as found in history. Evermore talking big and doing nothing; full of verbal tempest and practical impotence; and still ruining his friends, and at last himself, between “ I would ” and “I dare not”; he lives without our resp3ct, and dies unpitied of us; while his daughter-in-law’s remembrance of her noble husband kindles a sharp resentment of his mean-spirited backwardness, and a hearty scorn of his blustering verbiage. Prince Henry was evidently a great fa vourite with the Poet. And he makes him equally so with his readers: pouring the full wealth of his genius upon him; centering in him almost every manly grace and virtu3, and presenting him as the mirror of Christian princes and loadstar of honour; a model at once of a hero, a gentleman, and a sage. Wherein, if not true to fact, he was true to the sentiment of the English people; who probably cherished the memory of Henry the Fifth with mo ’e fondness than any other of their kings since the great Al::red. In the character of this man Shakespeare deviated from all the historical authorities known to hav 3 been accessible to him. Later researches, however, have justified his course herein, and thus given rise to the notion of his having drawn from some traditionary matter that had not yet found a place in written history. An ex traordinary conversion was generally thought to have fallen upon the Prince on coming to the crown; insomuch that the old chroniclers could only account for the change by some miracle of grace or touch of supernatural benediction. Wal-singham, a contemporary of the Prince, tells us that “as soon as he was invested with the ensigns o:? royalty he was suddenly changed into a new man, behaving with propriety, modesty, and gravity, and showing a desire to practise every kind of virtue.” Caxton, also, says ;c he was a noble prince after he was king and crowned; howbeit in his youth he had been wild, reckless, and spared nothing of his lustsPEIRCE HENEY. 79 nor desires.” And various other old writers speak of him in the same strain. Prince Henry’s conduct was indeed such as to lose him his seat in the Council, where he was replaced by his younger brother. Nevertheless it is certain that in mental and literary accomplishment he was in advance of his age; being in fact one of the most finished gentlemen as well as greatest statesmen and best men of his time. This seeming contradiction is all cleared up in the Poet’s representation. It was for the old chroniclers to talk about his miraculous conversion : Shakespeare, in a far wiser spirit, and more religious too, brings his conduct within the ordinary rules of human character; representing whatever changes occur in him as proceeding by the methods and proportions of nature. His early “ addiction to courses vain ” is accounted for by the character of Falstaff; it being no impeachment of his intellectual or moral manhood, that he is drawn away by such a mighty magazine of fascinations. It is true, he is not altogether unhurt by his connection with Sir John: he is himself sensible of this; and the knowledge goes far to justify his final treatment of Falstaff. But, even in his wildest merry-makings, we still taste in him a spice and flavour of manly rectitude; undesigned by him indeed, and the more assuring to us, that he evidently does not taste it himself. Shakespeare has nothing finer in its way than the gradual sundering of the ties that bind him to Falstaff, as the higher elements of his nature are called forth by emergent occasions ; and his turning the dregs of unworthy companionship into food of noble thought and sentiment, extracting the sweetness of wisdom from the weeds of dangerous experiences. And his whole progress through this transformation, till “like a reappearing star” he emerges from the cloud of wildness wherein he had obscured his contemplation, is dappled with rare spots of beauty and promise.* * Our sympathies would be almost wholly with Hotspur and his friends, had not the Poet raised up a new interest in the chivalrous bearing of Henry of Mon-80 Shakespeare’s characters. At the battle of Shrewsbury, as already stated, the Prince was sixteen years old. But, young as h€ was, he did the work of a man, never ceasing to fight where the battle was hottest; though so badly hurt in the face, that much effort was used to withdraw him from the field. So that in fact he was some twenty years younger than Hotspur. Such a difference of age would naturally forec.ose any rivalry between them; and one of the Poet’s most judicious departures from literal truth is in approximating their ages, that such influences might have a chance to work. The King, too, displays his usual astuteness in endeavouring to make the fame of Hotspur tell upon the Pince; though he still strikes wide of his real character, misderiving his conduct from a want of noble aptitudes, whereas it springs rather from a lack of such motives and occasions with which his better aptitudes can combine. But the King knows right well there is matter in him that will take fire when such sparks are struck into i;. Accordingly, before they part, the Prince speaks such words, and in such a spirit, as to win his father’s confidence ; the emulation mouth, to balance the noble character of the young ^ercy. Rash, proud, ambitious, prodigal of blood, as hotspur is, we feel tha: there is not an atom of meanness in his composition. He would carry us av ay with him, were it not for the milder courage of young Harry, — the courage of principle and of mercy. Frank, liberal, prudent, gentle, but yet brave as Hotspur himself, the Prince shows us that, even in his wildest excesses, he has drunk deeply of the fountains of truth and wisdom. The wisdom of the King is that of a cold and subtle politician; Hotspur seems to stand out from his followers as a haughty feudal lord, too proud to have listened to any teacher but his own will; but the Prince, in casting away the aignity of his station to commune freely with his fellow-men, has attained that strength which is above all conventional power: his virtues as well as his frailties belong to our common humanity; the virtues capable, therefore, of the highes; elevation; the frailties not pampered into crimes by the artificial incentives of social position. His challenge to Hotspur exhibits all the attributes of Ihe gentleman as well as the hero,—merev, sincerity, modesty, courage. Could the Prince have reached this height amidst the cold formalities of his father’s Court? We think that Shakespeare meant distinctly to show that Henry of Monmouth, when he “sounded the very base-string of humility,’ gathered out of his dangerous experience that spirit of sympathy with huma 1 actions and motives from which a sovereign is almost necessarily excluded. - -Knight.PRINCE HENRY. 81 kindled in him being no less noble than the object of it. Now it is that his many-sided, harmonious manhood begins fully to unfold itself. He has already discovered forces answering to all the attractions of Falstaff; and it is to be hoped that none will think the worse of him for preferring the climate of Eastcheap to that of the Court. But the issue proves that he has far better forces, which sleep indeed during the absence, but spring forth at the coming, of their proper stimulants and opportunities. In the close-thronging dangers that beset his father’s throne he has noble work to do; in the thick-clustering honours of Hotspur, noble motives for doing it; and the two together furnish those more congenial attractions whereby he is gradually detached from a life of hunt-sport, and drawn up into the nobly-proportioned beauty with which both poetry and history have invested him. In this delineation are many passages over which the lover of poetry and manhood delights to linger; but it would be something out of keeping with my method to quote any of them. Nor can I dwell on the many gentle and heroic qualities that make up Prince Henry’s well-rounded beautiful character. His tenderness of filial piety appears in his heart-bleeding grief at his father’s sickness ; and his virtuous prudence no less appears in his avoiding all show of grief, as knowing that this, taken together with his past levity, will be sure to draw on him the imputation of hypocrisy: his magnanimity appears in his pleading for the life of Douglas; his ingenuousness, in the free and graceful apology to the King for his faults; his good-nature and kindness of heart, in the apostrophe to Falstaff when he thinks him dead; his chivalrous generosity, in the enthusiasm with which he praises Hotspur; and his modesty, in the style of his challenge to him. And yet his nobilities of heart and soul come along in such easy, natural touches, they drop out so much as the spontaneous issues of his life, that we hardly notice them, thus engaging him our love and honour, we scarce know how or why. Great without 4* v82 Shakespeare’s characters. effort, and good without thinking of it, he .s indeed a noble ornament of the princely character. COMIC CHARACTERS. I have already observed how Prince He iry’s deportment as King was in marked contrast with his course while Prince of Wales. I have also noted hat the change in him on coming to the throne was so great and so sudden as to be popularly ascribed to a miracle of grace. Now Shakespeare knew that the day of miricles was passed. He also knew that without a miracle such a sudden revolution of character could not be. And so his idea clearly was, that the change was not really in bis character, but only superinduced upon it by change of position ; that his excellent qualities were but disguised from the world by clouds of loose behaviour, which, when the time came, he threw off, and appeared as he really was. To translate the reason and process of this change into dramatic form and expression was the problem which the Poet undertook to solve in these two plays. In his delineation of the Prince Shabespeare followed the historians as far as they gave him any solid ground to go upon; where they failed him, he supplied the matter from his own stores. Now in all reason Prince Hal must have had companions in the merry-makings which are related of him; for no man of sense goes into such pastimes alone. But of the particular persons “ unletter’d, rude, and shallow,” with whom he had 44 his „hours fill’d up with riots, banquets, sports,” nothing was known, not even their names. So that the Poet had no way to set forth this part of the man’s life but by creating one or more representative characters, concentrating in them such a fund of mental attractions as might overcome t ie natural repugnance of an upright and noble mind to their vices. Which is just what the Poet does in this work. And his method was, to embody in imaginary forms that tiutli of which theFALSTAFF. 83 actual forms had not been preserved; for, as Hallam well observes, “ what he invented is as truly historical, in the large sense of moral history, as what he read.” From the account already given of Bolingbroke it is plain enough what state of things would be likely to wait on him. His great force of character would needs give shape and tone to Court and Council-board, while his subtlety and intricacy might well render the place any thing but inviting to a young man of free and generous aptitudes. That the Prince, as Shakespeare conceived him, should breathe somewhat hard in such an atmosphere, is not difficult to understand. However he may respect such a father, and though in thought he may even approve the public counsels, still he relucts to share in them, as going against his grain; and so is naturally drawn away either to such occupations where his high-strung energies can act without crossing his honourable feelings, or else to some tumultuous merry-makings wdiere, laying off all distinct purpose, and untying his mind into perfect dishabille, he can let his bounding spirits run out in transports of frolic and fun. The question then is, to what sort of attractions will he betake himself? It must be no ordinary companionship that yields entertainment to such a spirit even in his loosest moments. Whatever bad or questionable elements - may mingk in his mirth, it must have some fresh and rich ingredients, some sparkling and generous flavour, to make him relish it. Any thing like vulgar rowdyism cannot fail of disgusting him. His ears were never organized to that sort of music. Here then we have a sort of dramatic necessity for the character of Falstaff. To answer the purpose, it was imperative that he should be just such a marvellous congregation of charms and vices as he is. None but an old man could be at once so dissolute and so discerning, or appear to think so much like a wise man even when talking most unwisely; and he must have a world of wit and sense, to reconcile a mind of such native rectitude and penetration to his profli-84 Shakespeare’s characters. gate courses. In the qualities of Sir Johi: we can easily see how the Prince might he the madcap reveller that history gives him out, and yet be all the while laying in choice preparations of wisdom and virtue, so as to need no other conversion than the calls of duty and the opportunities of noble enterprise. Falstaif’s character is more complex than can well be digested into the forms of logical statement ; which makes him a rather impracticable subject for analysis. He has so much, or is so much, that one cannot easily tell what he is. Diverse and even opposite qualities meet in him; yet they poise so evenly, blend so happily, and work together so smoothly, that no generalities can set him of; if wTe undertake to grasp him in a formal conclusion, tt e best part of him still escapes between the fingers ; so that the only way to give an idea of him is to take the mar. himself along and show him; and who shall do this wTith plump Jack”? One of the wittiest of men, yet he is not a wit; one of the most sensual of men, still he cannot with strict justice be called a sensualist; he has a strong sense of danger and a lively regard to his own safety, a peculiar vein indeed of cowardice, or something very like it, yet he is not a coward; he lies and brags prodigiously, still he is nDt a liar nor a braggart. Any such general descriptions applied to him can serve no end but to make us think we understand him w7hen we do not. If I were to fix upon any one thing as specially characteristic of Falstaff, I should say it is an amazing fund of good sense. His stock of this, to be sure, is pretty much all enlisted in the service of sensuality, yet nowise so but that the servant still overpeers and outshines the master. Then too his thinking has such agility, and is at the same time so pertinent, as to do the work of the most prompt and popping writ; yet in such sort as to give the impression of something much larger and stronger than wit. Í or mere wit, be it ever so good, requires to be sparingly used, and the more it tickles the sooner it tires; like salt,it is grateful as a sea-FALSTAFF. 85 soning, but will not do as food. * Hence it is that great wits, unless they have great judgment too, are so apt to be great bores. But no one ever wearies of Falstaff’s talk, who has th# proper sense for it; his speech being like pure fresh cold water, which always tastes good because it is tasteless. The wit of other men seems to be some special faculty or mode of thought, and lies in a quick seizing of remote and fanciful affinities; in FalstafF it lies not in any one thing more than another, for which cause it cannot be defined: and I know not how to describe it but as that roundness and evenness of mind which we call good, sense, so quickened and pointed indeed as to produce the effect of wit, yet without hindrance to its own proper effect. To use a snug idiomatic phrase, what Falstaff says always Jits all round. And Falstaff is well aware of his power in this respect. He is vastly proud of it too; yet his pride never shows itself in an offensive shape, his good sense having a certain instinctive delicacy that keeps him from every thing like that. In this proud consciousness of his resources he is always at ease; hence in part the ineffable charm of his conversation. Never at a loss, and never apprehensive that he shall be at a loss, he therefore never exerts himself, nor takes any concern for the result; so that nothing is strained or far-fetched: relying calmly on his strength, he invites the toughest trials, as knowing that his powers will bring him off without any using of the whip or the spur, and by merely giving the rein to their natural briskness and celerity. Hence it is also that he so often lets go all regard to prudence of speech, and thrusts himself into tight places and predicaments : he thus makes or seeks occasions to exercise his fertility and alertness of thought, being well assured that he shall still come off uncornered, and that the greater his seeming perplexity, the greater will be his triumph. Which explains the purpose of his incomprehensible lies: he tells them, surely, not expecting them to be believed, but partly for the pleasure he takes in86 Shakespeare’s charactees. the excited play of his faculties, partly for the surprise he causes by his still more incomprehensible feats of dodging. Such is his story about the men in buckram who grew so soon from two to eleven; and how “ three misbegotten knaves in Kendall green came at my back, and let drive at me; — for it was so dark, Hal, that thou co ildst not see thy hand”; — lies which, as himself knows well enough, are “ gross as a mountain, open, palpable.” These, I take it, are studied self-exposures, to invite an at back. Else why should he thus affirm in the same breath the colour of the men’s clothes and the darkness of the night ? The whole thing is clearly a scheme, to provoke his hearers to come down upon him, and then witch them with his facility and felicity in extricating himself. And so, when they pounce upon him, and seem to have him in their toils, he forthwith springs a diversion upon them: “ Prince. What trick, what device, what starting-hole canst thou now find out, to hide thee from this open and apparent shame ? Fals. By the Lord, I knew ye as well as He that made ye. Why, hear ye, my masters : was it for me to kill the heir-appar< nt ? Should I turn upon the true Prince ? — Why, thou know’st I am as valiant as Hercules ; hut beware instinct : the lion will not touch the true prince. Instinct is a great matter : I was a coward on instinct I shall think the better of myself and thee during my life ; I for a valiant lion, and thou for a true prince.” To understand this aright, we must bear in mind, that according to the general rule of succession Prince Henry was not the true prince. Legally considered, his father was an usurper; and he could have no right to ihe crown but in virtue of some higher law. This higher aw is authenticated by Falstaff’s instinct. The lion, king of beasts, knows royalty by royal intuition. Such is the catastrophe for which the foregoing acts, the hacking of his sword, the insinuations of cowardice, the boastings, and the palpable lies, were tbe prologue and preparation. So that his course here is all of a piece with his usual practice of involving himself ir difficulties, the better to set off his readiness at shifts and evasions; know-FALSTAFF. 87 ing that, the more he gets entangled in his talk, the richer will be the effect when by a word he slips off the entanglement. I am persuaded that Sir John suspected all the while who their antagonists were in the Gad shill robbery; but determined to fall in with and humour the joke, on purpose to make sport for the Prince and himself, and at the same time to retort their deception by pretending ignorance. We have similar feats of dodging in the scene where Falstaff rails at the Hostess for keeping a house where pockets are picked, and also at the Prince for saying that his ring was copper. The Prince entering just then, the Hostess tells him of the affair, Falstaff goes to railing at her again, and she defends herself; which brings on the following: *4 Prince. Thou say est true, Hostess; and he slanders thee most grossly. Host. So he doth you, my lord ; and said, this other day, you ought him a thousand pound. Prince. Sirrah, do I owe you a thousand pound ? Fals. A thousand pound, Hal! a million ! Thy love is worth a million ; thou owest me thy love. Host. Nay, my lord, he called you Jack, and said he would cudgel you. Fals. Did I, Bardolph ? Bard. Indeed, Sir John, you said so. Fals. Yea ; if he said my ring was copper. Prince. I say ’tis copper : dar’st thou he as good as thy word now ? Fals. Why, Hal, thou know’st, as thou art hut man, I dare ; hut, as thou art prince, I fear thee as I fear the roaring of the lion’s whelp. Prince. And why not as the lion ? Fals. The King himself is to he feared as the lion. Dost thou think I’ll fear thee as I fear thy father ? Prince. Sirrah, there’s no room for faith, truth, nor honesty in this hosom of thine. Charge an honest woman with picking thy pocket! Why, thou impudent, ernhoss’d rascal, if there were any thing in thy pocket hut tavern-reckonings, and one poor pennyworth of sugar-candy to make thee long-winded ; — if thy pocket were enriched with any other injuries hut these, I am a m. And yet you will stand to it; you will not pocket up wrong : art thou not ashamed ! Fals. Dost thou hear Hal ? Thou know’st, in the state of innocency88 Shakespeare’s characters. Adam fell : and what should poor Jack Falstaff d) in the days of villainy ? Thou seest I have more flesh than another man, and therefore more frailty.” In all these replies there is clearly nothing more to be said. And thus, throughout, no exigency turns up but that Sir John is ready with a word that exactly fits into and fills the place. And his tactics lie not in turning upon his pursuers and holding them at bay; but, when the time is ripe, and they seem to have caught him, he instantaneously diverts them upon another scent, or else enchants them into a pause by his nimble-footed sallies and escapes. Elsewhere the same faculty shows itself in a quick turning of events to his own advantage; as at the battle of Shrewsbury, when, being assailed by Douglas, he falls down as if killed, and in that condition witnesses the fall of Hotspur; and then claps up a scheme for appropriating the honour of his death. The stratagem must be given in his own words: “’Sblood ! ’twas time to counterfeit, or that hot termagant Scot had paid me scot and lot too. Counterfeit! I lie ; I am no'counterfeit : to die, is to be a counterfeit; for he is but the count jrfeit of a man who hath not the life of a man : but to counterfeit dying, when a man thereby liveth, is to be no counterfeit, but the true and perfect image of life indeed. The better part of valour is discretion ; in the which better part I have saved my life. — ’Zounds ! I am afraid of this gunpowder Percy, though he be dead. How, if he should count 3rfeit too, and rise ? By my faith, I am afraid he would prove the better (ounterfeit. Therefore I’ll make him sure; yea, and I’ll swear I kille 1 him. Why may not he rise as well as I ? Nothing confutes me but eyes, and nobody sees me. Therefore, sirrah, with a new wound in your thigh, come you along with me.” He then shoulders the body and walks of?. Presently he meets the Prince and his brother John, throws down the body, and we have the following: "Feds. There is Percy ! if your father will do me any honour, so ; if not, let him kill the next Percy himself. I look to be either earl or duke, I can assure you. Prince, Why, Percy I killed, myself, and saw thee dead.FALSTAFF. 89 Fids. Didst thou ! — Lord, Lord, how this world is given to lying ! — I grant yon I was down and out of breath, and so was he ; but we rose both at an instant, and fought a long hour by Shrewsbury clock. If I may be believed, so ; if not, let them that should reward valour bear the sin upon their own heads. I’ll take it upon my death, I gave him this wound in the thigh : if the man were alive, and would deny it, ’zounds ! I would make him eat a piece of my sword.” Here his action as exactly fits into and fills the place as his words do in other cases. He carries the point, not by disputing the Prince’s claim, but by making it appear that they both beat down the valiant Hotspur in succession. If the Prince left Hotspur dead, he saw Falstaff dead too. And Falstaff most adroitly clinches his scheme by giving this mistake such a turn as to accredit his own lies. It has been said that Shakespeare displays no great force of invention; and that in the incidents of his dramas he borrows much more than he originates. It is true, he discovers no pride nor prodigality of inventiveness ; he shows indeed a noble indifference on that score; cares not to get up new plots and incidents of his own where he finds them ready-made to his hand. Which is to me, as I have elsewhere remarked, good evidence that he prized novelty in such things at its true worth, and chose to spend his force on the weightier matters of his art. But he is inventive enough wdienever he has occasion to be so; and in these incidents about Falstaff, as in hundreds of others, he shows a fertility and aptness of invention in due measure and keeping with his other gifts. Falstaff finds special matter of self-exultation in that the tranquil, easy contact and grapple of his mind acts as a potent stimulus on others, provided they be capable of it, lifting therii up to his own height. “ Men of all sorts,” says he, “ take a pride to gird at me. The brain of this foolish-compounded clay, man, is not able to invent any thing that tends to laughter, more than I invent, or is invented on me; I am not only witty in myself, but the cause that wit is in other men.” Here it is plain that he is himself proud of90 shakespeaee’s characte ks. the pride that others take in girding st him; he enjoys their wit even more than they do, b Bcause he is the begetter of it. He is the flint, to draw sparks from their steel, and himself shines by the light he causes them to emit. For, in truth, to laugh and to provoke laughter is with him the chief end of man. Which is further shown in what he says of Prince John: “Gool faith, this same young, sober-blooded boy doth not love me; nor a man cannot make him laugh.” He sees that the brain of this dry youth has nothing for him to get hold of or work upon; that, be he ever so witty in himself, he cannot be the cause of any wit in him; and he is vexed and chagrined that his wit fails upon him. And Dr. Johnson, sj>eaking of Prince John’s frosty-hearted virtue, well remarks that “ he who cannot be softened into gayety cannot easily be melted into kindness.” And, let me add, none are so hopeless as they that have no bowels. Austere boys are not apt to make large-souled men. And it was this same straitlaced youth who, in the history as in the play, afterwards broke faith with the Archbishop and othe]’insurgent leaders near York, snapping them up with a mean and cruel act of perfidy, and, which is more, thought the better of himself for having done so. I suspect Prince Henry is nearer Heaven in his mirth than Prince John in iis prayers! This power of generating wit and thought in others is what, in default of entertainment for hk nobler qualities, attracts the Prince; wdio evidently takes to Sir John chiefly for the mental excitement of his conversation. And, on the other hand, Falstaff’s pride of wit is specially gratified in the fascination he has over the Prince; and he spares no pains, scruples no knavery, to work diversion for him. Witness what he says to himself when tempering Justice Shallow “between his finger and his thumb”: “I will devise matter enough out of this Shallow to keep Prince Harry in continual laughter the wearing-cut of six fashions. O, it is much that a lie with a slight oath, and a jest with a sad brow, will do with a fellow that never had the ache inPALSTAFF. 91 his shoulders. O, you shall see him laugh, till his face be like a wet cloak ill laid up.” Nor has FalstafF any difficulty in stirring up congenial motions in the Prince, insomuch that the teacher sometimes has enough to do to keep his leading. FalstafF is the same in this respect when the Prince is away; indeed his wit is never more fluent and racy than in his soliloquies. But it is not so with the Prince; as appears in his occasional playing with other characters, where he is indeed sprightly and sensible enough, but wants the nimbleness and raciness of wit which he displays in conversation with Sir John. The cause of which plainly is, that FalstafF has his wit in himself; the Prince, in virtue of FalstafF’s presence. With Sir John the Prince is nearly as great as he in the same kind; without him, he has none of his greatness; though he has a greatness of his own which is far better, and which FalstafF is so far from having in himself, that he cannot even perceive it in another. Accordingly it is remarkable that Prince Henry is the only person in the play who understands Falstafl^ and the only one too whom FalstafF does not understand. One of Sir John’s greatest triumphs is in his first scene with the Chief Justice; the purpose of that scene being, apparently, to justify the Prince in yielding to his fascinations, by showing that there is no gravity so firm but he can thaw it into mirth, provided it be the gravity of a fertile and genial mind. And so, here, the sternness with which this wise and upright man begins is charmed into playfulness before he gets through. He slides insensibly into the style of Sir John, till at last he falls to downright punning. He even seems to draw out the interview, that he may taste the delectable spicery of FalstafF’s talk; and we fancy him laughing repeatedly in his sleeve while they are talking, and then roaring himself into stitches he gets out of sight. Nor, unless our inv_ _ sadly out of gear, can we help loving an(L^n^ing him the more for being drawn into such an intelectual frolic by such an intellectual player.92 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS Coleridge denies that Falstaff has, propsrly speaking, any humour. Coleridge is high authority indeed ; nevertheless I cannot so come at Sir John but that his whole mental structure seems pervaded with a most grateful and refreshing moisture; nor can I well understand any definition of humour that would exclude him from being among the greatest of all both verbal and practical rumourists. Just think of his proposing Bardolph, — an oifscouring and package of dregs which he has picked up, nobody can guess wherefore, unless because his face has turned into a perpetual blush and carbuncle;—just think of his proposing such a person for security, and that too to one who knows them both ! To my sense, his humour i s showm alike in the offer of such an endorser and in what he says about the refusal of it. And in his most exigent moments this juice keeps playing in with rarely-exhilarating effect, as in the exploit at Gadshill and the battle of Shrewsbury. And everywhere he manifestly takes a huge pk asure in referring to his own peculiarities, and putting upon them the most grotesque and droll and whimsical constructions, no one enjoying the jests that are vented on him more than he does himself. Falstaff’s overflowing humour results in a placid goodnature towards those about him, and attaches them by the mere remembrance of pleasure in his company. The tone of feeling he inspires is well shown in what the Hostess says when he leaves her for the wars : “ Well, fare thee well: I have known thee these twrenty-nine years, come peascod-time; but an honester and truer-hearted man — well, fare thee well.” She wants to say some good of him which she cannot quite say, it is so glaringly untrre; the only instance, by the way, of her being checked by any scruples on that score. This feeling of the Hostess is especially significant in view of what has passed between them. She cannot keep angry at him, because in his roughest speeches there is something tells her it is all a mere carousal of his wits. Even when she is most at odds with him, a soothingFALSTAFF. 93 word at once sweetens her thoughts; so that, instead of pushing him for the money he has borrowed, she pawns her plate, to lend him ten pounds more. And so in regard to his other associates: he often abuses them outrageously, so far as this can be done by words, yet they are not really hurt by it, and never think of resenting it. Perhaps, indeed, they do not respect him enough to feel resentment towards him. But, in truth, the juiciness of his spirit not only keeps malice out of him, but keeps others from imputing it to him. Then too he lets off as great tempests of abuse upon himself, and means just as much by them: they are but exercises of his powers, and this, merely for the exercise itself; that is, they are play; having indeed a kind of earnestness, but it is the earnestness of sport. Hence, whether alone or in company, he not only has all his faculties about him, but takes the same pleasure in exerting them, if it may be called exertion; for they always seem to go of their own accord. It is remarkable that he soliloquizes more than any of the Poet’s characters except Hamlet; thought being equally an ever-springing impulse in them both, though, to be sure, in very different forms. Nor is Falstaff’s mind tied to exercises of wit and humour. He is indeed the greatest of make-sports, but he is something more. (He must be something more, else he could not be that.) He has as much practical sagacity and penetration as the King. Except the Prince, there is no person in the play who sees so far into the characters of those about him. Witness his remarks about Justice Shallow and his men : “ It is a wonderful thing to see the sem-blable coherence of his men’s spirits and his: they, by observing of him, do bear themselves like foolish justices; he, by conversing with them, is turned into a justice-like serving-man. If I had a suit to Master Shallow, I would humour his men with the imputation of being near their master; if to his men, I would curry with Master Shallow, that no man could better command his servants.” Which94 Shakespeare’s characters. is indeed a most shrewd and searching commentary on what Sir John has just seen and heard. It is impossible to hit them off* more felicitously. I must add, that with Shallow and Silence for his theme Falstaff’s wit fairly grows gigantic, and this too without any abatement of its frolicsome agility. The strain of humorous exaggeration with wdiich he pursues the theme in soliloquy is indeed almost sublime. Yet in some of his reflections thereon, as in the passage just quoted, we have a clear though brief view of the profour d philosopher underlying the profligate humourist and make-sport; for he there discovers a breadth and sharpness of observation, and a depth of practical sagacity, such as might have placed him in the front rank of statesmen and sages. I have said that Falstaff, though having a peculiar vein of something very like cowardice, is not a coward. This sounds paradoxical, but I think it just. On this point Mackenzie speaks with rare exactness. ‘-Though,” says he, “I will not go so far as to ascribe valour to Falstaff, yet his cowardice, if fairly examined, will be found to be not so much a weakness as a principle : he has the sense of danger, but not the discomposure of fear.” In approval of this, it is to be observed that amid the perilous exigencies of the fight his matchless brain is never a whit palsied with fear; and no sooner has he fallen down to save lis life by a counterfeit death, than all his wits are at work to convert his fall into a purchase of honour. Certainly his cowardice, if the word must still be applied to him, is :iot such as either to keep him out of danger or to lose him the use of his powers in it. Whether surrounded with pleasures or perils, his sagacity never in the least forsakes him; and his unabated purlings of humour when death is busy all about him, and even when others are taunting him with cowardice, seem hardly reconcilable with the character generally set upon him in this respect. As there is no touch of poetry in Falstafl*, he sees nothing in the matter of honour but the sign; and he has moreFALSTAFF. 95 good sense than to set such a value on this as to hazard that for which alone he holds it desirable. To have his name seasoned sweet in the world’s regard he does not look upon as signifying any real worth in himself, and so furnishing just ground of self-respect; but only as it may yield him the pleasures and commodities of life: whereas the very soul of honour is, that it will sooner part with life than forfeit this ground of self-respect. For honour, true honour, is indeed a kind of social conscience. Falstaif is altogether the greatest triumph of the comic Muse that the world has to show. In this judgment I believe that all who have fairly conversed with the irresistible old sinner are agreed. In the varied and delectable wealth of his conversation, it is not easy to select such parts as are most characteristic of the man; and I have rather aimed to quote what would best illustrate my points than what is best in itself. Of a higher order and a finer texture than any thine 1 have produced is the scene where Falstaif personates the King, to examine the Prince upon the particulars of his life. It is too long for quotation here; and I can but refer to it as probably the choicest issue of comic preparation that genius has ever bequeathed to human enjoyment. Upon the whole, then, I think Falstaff may be justly described as having all the intellectual qualities that enter into the composition of practical wisdom, without one of the moral. If to his powers of understanding were joined an imagination equal, it is hardly too much to say he would be as great a poet as Shakespeare. And in all this we have, it seems to me, just the right constituents of perfect fitness for the dramatic purpose and exigency which his character was meant to answer. In his solid and clear understanding, his discernment and large experience, his fulness and quickness of wit and resource, and his infinite humour, what were else dark in the life of Prince Henry is made plain; and we can hardly fail to see how he is drawn to what is in itself bad indeed, yet drawn in virtue of something within himi:6 Shakespeare’s characters. that still prefers him in our esteem. Wil h less of wit, sense, and spirit, Sir John could have got no hold on the Prince; and if to these attractive qualities he had not joined others of a very odious and repulsive kind, he would have held him too fast. I suppose it is no paradox to say that, hugely as wTe delight to be with Falstaff, he is notwithstanding just about the last man that any one would wish to resemble; which fact, as I take it, is enough of itself to keep the pleasure of his part free from any moral infection or taint. And our repugnance to being like him is not so much because he offends the moral feelings as because he hardly touches them at all, one way or the other. The character seems to lie mainly out of their sphere; and they agree to be silent towards him, as having practically disrobed himself of moral attributes. Now, however bad we may be, these are probably the last elements of our being that we would consent to part with. Nor, perhaps, is there any thing that our nature so vitally shrinks away from, as to have men’s moral feelings sleep concerning us. To be treated as beneath blame, is the greatest indignity that can be offered us. Who would not rather be hated by men than be such as they should not respect enough to hate ? This aloofness of the moral feelings seems owing in great part to the fact of the character impressing us, throughout, as that of a player; though such a player whose good sense keeps every thing stagy and theatrical cut of his playing. He lives but to furnish, for himself and others, intellectual wine, and his art lies in turning every thing about him into this. His immoralities are mostly such wherein the ludicrous element is prominent; and in the entertainment of this their other qualities are lost sight of. The animal susceptibilities of our nature are in him carried up to their highest pitch; his several appetites hu£ their respective objects with exquisite gust; his vast plum mess is all mellow with physical delight and satisfaction; 2nd he converts it all into thought and mirth. Moreover h s speech borrowsFALSTAFF. 97 additional flavour and effect from the thick foldings of flesh which it oozes through ; therefore he glories in his much flesh, and cherishes it as being the procréant cradle of jests : if his body is fat, it enables his tongue to drop fatness ; and in the chambers of his brain all the pleasurable agitations that pervade the structure below are curiously wrought into mental delectation. With how keen and inexhaustible a relish does he pour down sack, as if he tasted it all over and through his body, to the ends of his fingers and toes ! yet who does not see that he has more pleasure in discoursing about it than in drinking it ? And so it is through all the particulars of his enormous sensuality. And he makes the same use of his vices and infirmities ; nay, he often caricatures those he has, and sometimes affects those he has not, that he may get the same profit out of them. Thus Falstaff strikes us, throughout, as acting a part ; insomuch that our conscience of right and wrong has little more to do with the man himself than with a good representation of him on the stage. And his art, if not original and innate, has become second nature : if the actor was not born with him, it has grown to him, and become a part of him, so that he cannot lay it off ; and if he has. nobody else to entertain, he must still keep playing for the entôr-tainment of himself. But because we do not think of applying moral tests to him, therefore, however we may surrender to his fascinations, we never feel any respect for him. And it is very considerable that he has no self-respect. The reason of which is close at hand: for respect is a sentiment of which mere players, as such, are not legitimate objects. Not but that actors may be very worthy, upright men : there have been many capital gentlemen among them as such, they are indeed abundantly respectable : but in the useful callings men are respected for their calling’s sake, even though their characters be not deserving of respect ; which seems not to be the case with men of the stage. And as Falstaff is no less a player to himself than to others, he therefore respects himself as little as others respect him. VOL. II. 5 G98 SHAKESPEARE’S CHARACTERS. It must not be supposed, however, that because he touches the moral feelings so little one way or the other, therefore his company and conversation were altogether harmless to those who actually shared them. It is not, cannot be so; nor has the Poet so represented it. “E^il communications corrupt good manners,” whether known and felt to be evil or not. And so the ripe understanding of Falstaff himself teaches us : “It is certain that either wise bearing or ignorant carriage is caught, as men take diseases one of another; therefore let men take heed of their company.” In the intercourse of men there are always certain secret, mysterious influences at work: the conversation of others affects us without our knowing it, and by methods past our finding out; and it is always a sacrament of harn to be in the society of those whom we do not respect. In all that happens to Falstaff, the being cast off at last by the Prince is the only thing that really hurts his feelings. And as this is the only thing that hurts him, so it is the only one that does him any good: for he is strangely inaccessible to inward suffering; and yet nothing but this can make him better. His character keeps on developing, and growing rather worse, to the end of the play; and there are some positive indications of a hard bad heart in him. His abuse of Shallow’s hospitality is exceedingly detestable, and argues that hardening of all within which tells far more against a man than almost any amount of mere sensuality. For it is a great mistake to suppose that our sensual vices, though they may and often do work the nost harm to ourselves, are morally the worst. The malignant vices, those that cause us to take pleasure in the pain or damage of others, — it is in these that Hell is most especially concentrated. Satan is neither a glutton nor a wine-bibber; he himself stoops not to the lusts of the flesh, though he delights to see his poor dupes eaten up by them: but to gloat over or to feast on the agonies that one inflicts, th s is truly Satanic. In the matter about Justice Shallow we are let into those worse traits of Falstaff, such as his unscrupulous and un-MRS. QUICKLY. 99 relenting selfishness, which had else escaped our dull perceptions, but which, through all the disguises of art, have betrayed themselves to the apprehensive discernment of Prince Henry. Thus we here come upon the delicate thread which connects that sapient Justice with what I have stated to be the main purpose of the drama. The bad usage which Falstafif puts upon Shallow has the effect of justifying to us the usage which he at last receives from the Prince. And something of the kind was needful in order to bring the Prince’s character off from such an act altogether bright and sweet in our regard. For, after sharing so long in the man’s prodigality of mental exhilaration, to shut down upon him so, was pretty hard. I must not leave Sir John without remarking how he is a sort of public brain from which shoot forth nerves of communication through all the limbs and members of the commonwealth. The most broadly-representative, perhaps, of all ideal characters, his conversations are as diversified as his capabilities; so that through him the vision is let forth into a long-drawn yet clear perspective of old English life and manners. What a circle of vices and obscurities and nobilities are sucked into his train I how various in size and quality the orbs that revolve around him and shine by liis light! from the immediate heir of England and the righteous Lord Chief Justice to poor Robin Ostler who died of one idea, having “ never joy’d since the price of oats rose.” He is indeed a multitudinous man; and can spin fun enough out of his marvellous brain to make all the world “ laugh and grow fat.” We have had several glimpses of Mrs. Quickly, the Hostess of Eastcheap. She is well worth a steady looking at. One of the most characteristic passages in the play is her account of Falstaff’s engagement to her; which has been aptly commented on by Coleridge as showing how her mind runs altogether in the rut of actual events. She can think of things only in the precise order of their occur-100 Shakespeare’s characte rs. rence, having no power to select sucA as touch her purpose, and to detach them from the circumstantial irrelevancies wdth which they are consorted in her memory. In keeping with this mental peculiarity, her character savours strongly of her whereabout in life ; she is plentifully trimmed with vices and vulgarities, and these all taste rankly of her place and calling, thus showing that she has as much of moral as of mental passiveness. Notwithstanding, she always has an odour of wommhood about her, even her worst features being such as none but a woman could have. Nor is her character, wit! all its ludicrous and censurable qualities, unrelieved, as we have seen, by traits of generosity that relish equally :>f her sex. It is even doubtful whether she would have entertained Sir John’s proposals of marriage so favourably, but that at the time of making them he was in a condition to n 3ed her kindness. Her woman’s heart could not stint itself from the plump old sinner when he had wounds to be dressed and pains to be soothed. And who but a woman could speak such words of fluttering eagerness as she speaks in urging on his arrest: “Do your offices, do your off.ces, Master Fang and Master Snare; do me, do me, do me your offices”; where her heart seems palpitating with an anxious hope that her present action may make anothe:* occasion for her kind ministrations ? Sometimes, indeed, she gets wrought up to a pretty high pitch of temper, but she cannot hold herself there; and between her turns of anger and her returns to sweetness there is room for more of womanly feeling than I shall venture to describe. And there is still more of the woman in the cunning simplicity — or is it simpleness ? — with which she manages to keep her good opinion of Sir John ; as when, on being told that at his death “he cried out of women, and said they were devils incarnate,” she replies, u ’A never could abide carnation; ’t was a colour he never liked”; as if she could find no sense in his words but what would stand smooth with her interest and her affection.SHALLOW AND SILENCE. 101 It is curious to observe how Mrs. Quickly dwells on the confines of virtue and shame, and sometimes plays over the borders, ever clinging to the reputation, and perhaps to the consciousness, of the one, without foreclosing the invitations of the other. For it is very evident that even in her worst doings she hides from herself their ill-favour under a fair name ; as people often paint the cheeks of their vices, and then look them sweetly in the face, though they cannot but know the paint is all that keeps them from being unsightly and loathsome. In her case, however, this may spring, in part, from a simplicity not unlike that which sometimes causes little children to shut their eyes at what affrights them, and then think themselves safe. And yet she shows considerable knowledge of the world; is not without shrewdness in her way; but, in truth, the world her soul lives in, and grows intelligent of, is itself a discipline of moral obtuseness; and this is one reason why she loves it. On the whole, therefore, Mrs. Quickly must be set down as a naughty woman ; the Poet clearly meant her so ; and, in mixing so much of good with the general preponderance of bad in her composition, he has shown a rare spirit of wisdom, such as may well remind us that “ both good men and bad men are apt to be less so than they seem.” Such is one formation of life to which the Poet conducts us by a pathway leading from Sir John. But we have an avenue opening out from him into a much richer formation. Aside from the humour of the characters themselves, there is great humour of art in the bringing-together of Falstaff and Shallow. Whose risibilities are not quietly shaken up to the centre, as he studies the contrast between them, and the sources of their interest in each other? Shallow is vastly proud of his acquaintance with Sir John, and runs over with consequentiality as he reflects upon it. Sir John understands this perfectly, and is drawn to him quite as much for the pleasure of making a butt of him as in the hope of currying a road to his purse.102 Shakespeare’s characters. One of the most potent spots in Justice Shallow is the exulting self-complacency with which he remembers his youthful essays in profligacy; wherein, though without suspecting it, he was the sport and byword of his companions ; he haying shown in them the same boobyish alacrity as he now shows in prating about them. His reminiscences in this line are superlatively diverting, partly, perhaps, as reminding us of a perpetual sort of people, not unfrequently met with in the intercourse of life. Another choice spot in Shallow is a huge love or habit of talking on when he has nothing to say; as though his tongue were hugging and kissing his words. Thus, when Sir John asks to be excused from staying with him over night: “ I will not excuse you ; you shall not be excused ; excuses shall not be admitted; there is no excuse shall serve ; you shall not be excused.” And he lingers upon his words and keeps rolling them over in his mouth with a still keener relish in the garden after supper. This fond caressing of his phrases springs not merely from sterility of thought, but partly also from that vivid self-appreciation which causes him to dwell with such rapture on the spirited sallies of his youth. One more point about fetches the compass of his genius, he being considerable mainly for his loquacious thinness. It is well instanced in his appreciation of Sir John’s witticism on Mouldy, one of the recruits he is taking up : “ Fals. Is thy name Mouldy ? Moul. Yea, an ’t please you. Fals. ’Tis the more time thou wert used. Shal. Ha, ha, ha ! most excellent, i’ faith ! things that are mariWP^ lack use : very singular good ! In faith, well said, Sir John ; very well said.” The mixture of conceit and sycophancy here is charming. Of course it is not so much the wit as his own perception of the wit, that the critic admires. One would suppose the force of feebleness had done its best in Shallow, yet it is made to do several degrees betterSHALLOW AND SILENCE. 103 in his cousin, Justice Silence. The tautology of the one has its counterpart in the taciturnity of the other. And Shallow’s habit in this may have grown, in part, from talking to his cousin, and getting no replies; for Silence has scarce life enough to answer, unless it be to echo the question. The only faculty he seems to have is memory, and he has not force enough of his own to set even this in motion; nothing but excess of wine can make it stir. So that his taciturnity is but the proper outside of his essential vacuity, and springs from sheer dearth of soul. He is indeed a stupendous platitude of a man! The character is poetical by a sort of inversion; as extreme ugliness sometimes has the effect of beauty, and fascinates the eye. Shakespeare evinces a peculiar delight sometimes in weaving poetical conceptions round the leanest subjects; and we have no finer instance of this than where Silence, his native sterility of brain being overcome by the working of sack on his memory, keeps pouring forth snatches from old ballads. How delicately comical the volubility with which he trundles off the fag-ends of popular ditties, when in “ the sweet of the night ” his heart has grown rich with the exhilaration of wine! Who can ever forget the exquisite humour of the contrast between Silence dry and Silence drunk ? In this vocal flow of Silence we catch the right spirit and style of old English mirth. For he must have passed his life in an atmosphere of song, since it was only by dint of long custom and endless repetition that so passive a memory as his could have got stored with such matter. And the snatches he sings are fragments of old minstrelsy “ that had long been heard in the squire’s hall and the yeoman’s chimney-corner,” where friends and neighbours were wont to “ sing aloud old songs, the precious music of the heart.” These two sapient Justices are admirably fitted to each other, for indeed they have worn together. Shallow highly appreciates his kinsman, who in turn looks up to him as his great man, and as a kind of superior nature. It were104 Shakespeare’s characters. hardly fair to quit them without referring to their piece of dialogue about old Double; where in all the ludicrous oddity of the thing we have touches that “ feelingly persuade us what we are.” And I suppose there is none so poor shell of humanity but that, if we apply our ear, and listen intently, “ from within are heard m irmurings whereby the monitor expresses mysterious union with its native sea.” It is considerable that this bit of dialogue occurs at our first meeting with the speakers; as if on purpose to set and gauge our feelings aright towards them; to forestall and prevent an overmuch rising of contempt for them; which is probably about the worst feeling vve can cherish. The drama of King Henry the Fourth, taking the two Parts as artistically one, is deservedly ranked among the very highest of Shakespeare’s achievements. The characterization, whether for quantity or quality or variety, or again whether regarded in the individual development or the dramatic combination, is above all praise. And yet, large and free as is the scope here given 1o invention, the parts are all strictly subordinated to the idea of the whole as an historical drama; insomuch that eve i FalstafF, richly ideal as is the character, everywhere helps on the history; a whole century of old English wTit and seise and humour being crowded together and compacted in him. And one is surprised withal, upon reflection, to see l ow many scraps and odd minutes of intelligence are here v,o be met with. The Poet seems indeed to have been almost everywhere, and brought away some tincture and relish of the place; as though his body were set full of eyes, and every eye took in matter of thought and memory: here we have the smell of eggs and butter; there we turn up a :fragment of old John of Gaunt; elsewhere we chance upon a pot of Tewksbury mustard; again we hit a bit of popular superstition, hojw Earl Douglas “runs o’ horseback up a lill perpendicular”: on the march with Falstaff, we contemplate “the cankers of a calm world and a long peace”; at Clement’s-KII HEMY THE FIFTH. 105 Inn we hear “the limes at midnight”; at Master Shallow’s we “ eat a last ear’s pippin of my own grafting, with a dish of caraways and so forth”: now we are amidst the poetries of chivalry and the felicities of victory; now amidst the obscure sufferings of war, where its inexorable iron hand enters the widow’s cottage, and snatches away the land’s humblest comforts. And so I might go on indefinitely, the particulars in this kind being so numerous as might well distract the mind, yet so skilfully composed that the number seems not large, till by a special effort of thought one goes to viewing them severally. And these particulars, though so unnoticed or so little noticed in the detail, are nevertheless so ordered that they all tell in the result. How strong is the principle of organic unity and life pervading the whole, may be specially instanced in Fal-staff; whose sayings everywhere so fit and cleave to the circumstances, to all the oddities of connection and situation out of which they grow; have such a mixed smacking, such a various and composite relish, made up from all the peculiarities of the person by whom, the occasion wherein, and the purpose for which they are spoken, that they cannot be detached and set out by themselves without thwarting or greatly marring their force and flavour. Thus in the farthest extremities of the work we feel the beatings of one common heart. On the whole, we may safely affirm with Dr. Johnson, that “perhaps no author has ever, in two plays, afforded so much delight.” KING- HENRY THE FIFTH. The Life of Henry the Fifth, as it is called in the folio of 1623, was registered, along with As You Like It, at the Stationers’, August 4, 1600, but was locked up from the press* under an order “to be stayed.” In respect of 5*106 Shakespeare’s characte:ss. As You Like It the stay seems to have been continued; but not so in regard to the other, as this was entered again on the 14th of the same month, and was published in the course of that year. The same text was reissued in 1602, and again in 1608. In these editions, known as the quartos, the author’s name was not given: th3 play, moreover, was but about half as long as we have it; the Choruses, the whole of the first scene, and also many other passages, those too among the best in the play, and even in the whole compass of the Poet’s works, being wanting altogether. All these, besides more or less of enlargement in a great many places, together with the ir arks of a careful finishing hand running through the whole, were supplied in the folio of 1623; which, accordingly, is o ir only authority for the text, though the quartos yield valuable aid towards correcting the errors and curing the defecl s of that copy. That the issue of 1600 was surreptitious is on all hands allowed. But there has been much controversy whether it was printed from a full and perfect copy of the play as first written, or from a mangled and mutilated copy, such as could be made up by unauthorized and incompetent reporters. Many things might be urged on ei ther side of this question; but as no certain conclusion seems likely to be reached, the discussion probably may as well be spared. Perhaps the most considerable argument for the former position is, that the quarto has in some eases several consecutive lines precisely as they stand in the folio; while, on the other hand, of many of the longest and best passages in the folio the quarto has no traces whatever. But this is nowise decisive of the point either way, because, granting that some person or persons undertook to report the play as spoken, it is not impossible that he or they may have taken down some parts very carefully, and omitted others altogether. And the Editors of the folio tell us in their Preface that there were “divers stolen and surreptitious copies, maimed and deformed by the frauds and stealths of injurious impostors that exposed them.”KING HENRY THE FIFTH. 107 And here it may not be unfitting to remark that in other cases, as especially in Hamlet, we have strong and even conclusive evidence of the Poet’s plays having been carefully rewritten and vastly improved after the original draughts of them had been made. ISTor is it unlikely that some of them underwent this process more than once. And the fact is of consequence as refuting what used to be, and perhaps still is, the common notion, that Shakespeare’s best workmanship was struck out with little or no labour of reflection and study. Assuredly it was not without severe and patient exercise of thought that he achieved his miracles of poetry and art, and won his place as the greatest of human intellects. We have been taught to think of him as a prodigy of genius going rather by nature and instinct than by reason and purpose, and beating all other men because he could not help it: whereas in truth his judgment was fully equal to his genius; and his greatness stands in nothing else so much as in just that solidity and sobriety of understanding which comes by industry and application, and by making the best use of one’s native gifts. And the instance of King Henry the Fifth yields pregnant matter in this behalf; the difference between the quarto and folio copies in that case not being greater than between the first and second quartos of Hamlet. In the Epilogue to King Henry the Fourth the speaker says, 44 Our humble author will continue the story, with Sir John in it, and make you merry with fair Catharine of France.” Whether this promise was directly authorized by Shakespeare, we cannot positively say, as that Epilogue was probably not of his writing; but there is little doubt that the play to which it is affixed was written as early as 1597. That the play now in hand was written soon after the date of that promise, is highly probable. On the other hand, in the Chorus to Act v. we have the following: “Were now the general of our gracious Empress (As in good time he may) from Ireland coming,108 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. Bringing rebellion broached on his sw ord, How many would the peaceful city quit, To welcome him ! ” This undoubtedly refers to the Earl of Esssx, who went on his expedition against the Irish rebels in April, 1599, and returned in September following. That Chorus, therefore, and probably the others also, was written somewhere between those two dates. The most likely conclusion, then, seems to be, that the first draught of the play was made in 1597 or 1598; that the whole was rewritten, enlarged, and the Choruses added during the absence cf Essex, in the Summer of 1599; and that a copy of the f. rst draught was obtained for the press, fraudulently, after it had been superseded on the stage by the enlarged and finished copy. In this play, as in King Henry the Fourth, the historical matter was taken from Holinshed, both the substance and the order of the events being much the s mie as they are given by the historian. The King came to the throne in March, 1413, being then twenty-six years old. The Parliament with which the play opens was held i:i the Spring of 1414, and the King’s marriage with Catharine took place in the Spring of 1420; so that the time of the action is measured by that interval. The civil troubles which so much harasse 1 the preceding reign naturally started the young King upon the policy of busying his subjects in foreign quarrels; “that action, hence borne out, might waste the memory of the former days.” At the Parliament just mentioned a proposition was made, and met with great favour, to convert a large amount of Church property to the uses of the State; which put the Clergy upon adding the weighty arguments of their means and counsel in furtherance of the same policy; inasmuch as they judged that the best way to prevent a spoiling of the Church was by engaging all minds in a transport of patriotic fervour. King Henry derived his claim to the throne of France from Isabella, Queen of Elward the Second, and daughter of Philip the Fair; he being the fourthKING HENRY THE FIFTH. 109 in a direct line of descent from that celebrated woman. This Philip had left two sons, both of whom died without male issue; whereupon the crown passed to Charles the Fair, the youngest brother of Philip. In effect, the English King was easily persuaded that the Salique law had no right to bar him from the throne of France; and ambassadors were sent over to demand the French crown and all its dependencies; the King offering withal to take the Princess Catharine in marriage, and endow her with a part of the possessions claimed; at the same time threatening that, if this were not done, “ he would recover his right and inheritance with mortal war and dint of sword.” An embassy being soon after received from France, the demand was renewed, and peremptorily insisted on. The French King being then incapable of rule, the government was in the hands of the Dauphin, who saw fit to play off some merry taunts on the English monarch, referring to his former pranks; whereupon the latter dismissed the ambassadors, bidding them tell their master that within three months he would enter France as his own true and lawful patrimony, “meaning to acquire the same, not with big words, but with the deeds of men.” This took place in June, 1415. Before the end of July the King’s preparations were complete, and his army landed at Harfleur on the 15th of August. By the 22d of September the town was brought to an unconditional surrender, and put in the keeping of an English’ garrison. The English army was now reduced to about half its original numbers; nevertheless the King, having first challenged the Dauphin to single combat, and getting no answer, took the bold resolution of marching through several provinces to Calais. After a slow and toilsome march, during which they suffered much from famine and hostile attacks, the army came within sight of Agincourt, where the French were strongly posted, so that Henry must either surrender or cut his way through them. The French army spent the following night in revelry and debate, and in fixing the ran-110 Shakespeare’s characters. som of King Henry and his nobles. The night being cold dark, and rainy, many fires were kindled in both camps; and the English, worn out with labour, want, and sickness, passed the hours in anxious preparation, making their wills and saying their prayers, and hearing every now and then peals of laughter and merriment from t ie French lines. During most of the night the King wss moving about among his men, scattering words of comfort and hope in their ears, and arranging the order of battle; and before sunrise he had them called to matins, and from prayers led them into the field. From the confident bearing of the French it was supposed they would hasten to begin the fight, but when it was found that they kept within their lines, the King gave order to advance u ion them. The battle continued with the utmost fury for three hours, and resulted in the death of ten thousand Frenchmen, five hundred of whom had been knighted the day before. Some report that not above twenty-five of the Erglish were slain; others affirm the number to have been not less than five or six hundred. The news of this victory caused infinite rejoicing in England, and the King soon hastened ov 3r to receive the congratulations of his people. When he arrived at Dover, the crowd plunged into the waves to meet him, and carried him in their arms from the vessel to the beach: all the way to London was one triumphal procession: Lords, Commons, Clergy, Mayor, Aldermen, and citizens flocked forth to welcome him: pageants were set up in the streets, wine ran in conduits, bands of children sang his praise; and, in short, the whole population were in a perfect ecstasy of joy. During his stay in England, the King was visited by several great personages, the Emperor Sigismund being one of them, who came to mediate a peace between him and France. The Emperor was entertained with great magnificence, but his mission accomplished nothing to the purpose. After divers attempts at a settlement by negotiation, the King renewed the war in 1417, and in August landedFALSTAFF. Ill in Normandy with an army. From that time he had an almost uninterrupted career of conquest till the Spring of 1420, when all his demands were granted, and himself publicly affianced to the Princess Catharine. From this sketch it may well be judged that the matter was not altogether fitted for dramatic use, as it gave too little scope for those developments of character and passion wherein the interest of the serious drama mainly consists. For, as Schlegel remarks, “ war is an epic rather than a dramatic subject: to yield the right interest for the stage? it must be the means whereby something else is accomplished, and not the last aim and substance of the whole.” And perhaps it was a sense of this unfitness of the matter for dramatic use that led the Poet, upon the revisal, to pour through the work so large a measure of the lyrical element? thus penetrating and filling it with the efficacy of a grand national song of triumph. Hence comes it that the play is so thoroughly charged with the spirit and poetry of a sort of jubilant patriotism, of which the King himself is probably the most eloquent impersonation ever delineated. Viewed in this light, the piece, however inferior to others in dramatic effect, is as perfect in its way as any thing the Poet has given us. And it has a peculiar value as indicating what Shakespeare might have done in other forms of poetry, had he been so minded; the Choruses in general, and especially that to the fourth Act, being unrivalled in spirit, clearness, and force. — Of course the play has its unity in the hero; who is never for a moment out of our feelings : even when he is most absent or unseen, the thought and expression still relish of him; and the most prosaic parts are touched with a certain grace and effluence from him. For some cause or other, the promise, already quoted, touching the continuation of Sir John was not made good. Falstaff does not once appear in the play. I suspect that when the author went to planning the drama, he saw the impracticability of making any thing more out of him;112 Shakespeare’s characters. while there was at least some danger lest the part should degenerate into clap-trap. And indeed the very fact of such a promise being made might well infer a purpose rather too theatrical for the just rights of truth and art. At all events, Sir John’s dramatic office and mission were clearly at an end when his connection with Prince Henry was broken off; the design of the character being to explain the Prince’s wuld and riotous courses. Besides, Falstaff must have had so much of manhood in him as to love the Prince, else he were too bad a man for the Prince to be with ; and when he was so sternly cast off, the grief of this w^ound must in all reason have sadly palsied his sportmaking powers. To have continued him with his wits shattered or crippled, had been flagrant injustice to him; to have continued him with his wits sound and in good trim, had been something unjust to the Prince. To be sure, Falstaff repenting and reforming might be a much better man; but in that capacity he was not for us. In such a man as he has been, the process of repentance must be secret, else it would not be edifying; and to set it forth upon the stage as matter of public amusement, were a clear instance of profanation. Such a thing ought never to be shown at all, save as it transpires silently in the fruits of an amended life. So that the Poet did well to keep Falstaff in retirement where, though his once matchless powers no longer give us pleasure, yet the report of his sufferings gently touches our pity, and recovers him to our human sympathies. And when at last the Hostess tells us “ the King has killed his heart,” what a volume of redeeming matter is suggested concerning him! We then for the first time begin to respect him as a man, because we see that he has a heart as well as a brain; and that his heart is big and strong enough to outwrestle his profligacy, and give death the advantage of him. And it is observable that those who see much of him, although they do not respect him, and can but stand amazed at his overpowering freshets of humour, nevertheless get strongly attached to him. Thisfalstaff’s companions. 113 is especially the case with that strangely-interesting creature, Mrs. Quickly; and now we can hardly choose but think the better both of Falstaff and of Bardolph, when, the former having died, and a question being raised as to where he has gone, the latter says, “Would I were with him, wheresoine’er he is, either in Heaven or in Hell! ” In Quieldy’s account of his last moments there is a pathos to which I know of nothing similar, and which is as touching as it is peculiar. It is in Shakespeare’s choicest vein of humour. — His make-up being so original, and so plenipo-tent in wit and humour, it was but natural that Sir John, upon his departure, should leave some audible vibrations in the air behind him. The last of these dies away upon the ear when Fluellen uses him to point a moral; and this reference, so queerly characteristic of the speaker, is abundantly grateful as serving to start up a swarm of laughing memories. In the comic portions of this play we have a fresh illustration of the Poet’s versatility and range of genius. There is indeed nothing here that comes up to the earlier scenes at Eastcheap : so much is implied in the absence of Falstaff; for nothing else in the comic line can be expected to equal that delineation. But Hostess Quickly reappears as Mrs. Pistol, the same character, but running into an amusing variety of development: the swaggering Pistol is also the same,as before, only in a somewhat more efflorescent stage; ranting out with greater gust than ever the picked-up fustian of the bear-garden and the play-house; a very fuliginous pistol — without fire: Bardolph, too, with his “ face all bubukles, and whelks, and knobs, and flames of fire,” but advanced in rank, and carrying a sense of higher importance. With these we have an altogether original addition in Corporal Nym, a delineation of low character in the Poet’s most realistic style; with a vein of humour so lifelike as to seem a literal transcript from fact; vrhile the native vulgarity of the man is kept from being disgusting by the H114 shakespeaee’s characters. freshness and spirit with which his characteristic traits are delivered. These three good-for-nothing profligates are a fitting example of the human refuse and scum which lately gravitated round Sir John; and they serve the double purpose of carrying into the new scenes the memory of the King’s former associations, and also of evincing the King’s present severity and rectitude of discipline. They thus help to bridge over the chasm, which might else appear something too abrupt, between wdiat the hero was as Prince of Wales and what he is as King: therewithal their presence shows him acting out the purpose, which he avowed at our first meeting with him, of imitating the Sun, who causes himself to be more wondered at “ By breaking through the foul and ugly mists Of vapours that did seem to strangle him.” That some such clouds of vileness exhaled from the old haunts of his discarded life should still hang about his path, was natural in the course of things, and may be set down as a judicious point in the drama. I have elsewhere * observed somewhat upon the remarkable character of the Boy who figures as servant to “ these three swashers.” He is probably the same whom we met with as Page to Falstaff in the preceding play. His arch and almost unconscious shrewdness of remark was even then a taking feature; and it encouraged the thought of his having enough healthy keenness of perception to ward off the taints and corruptions that beset him. And he now translates the follies and vices of his employers into apt themes of sagacious and witty reflection, touching at every point the very pith of their distinctive features. The mixture of penetration and simplicity with which he moralizes their pretentious nothings is very charming. Thus Pistol’s turbulent vapourings draw from him the sage remark, “ I did never know so full a voice issue from so empty a heart: but the saying is true, The empty vessel makes the greatest * Volume i. page 171.FLUELLEN, JAMY, AND MACMORRIS. 115 sound. Bardolph and Nym had ten times more valour than this roaring Devil i’ the old play, and they are both hang’d ; and so would this be, if he durst steal any thing adventurously.” Shakespeare specially delights in thus endowing his children and youngsters with a kind of unsophisticated shrewdness, the free outcome of a native soundness that enables them to walk unhurt amid the contagions of bad example ; their own minds being kept pure, and even furthered in the course of manhood, by an instinctive oppugnance to the shams and meannesses which beset their path. But the comic life of the drama is mainly centred in a very different group of persons. Fluellen, Jamy, and Mac-morris strike out an entirely fresh and original vein of entertainment ; and these, together with Bates and Williams, aptly represent the practical, working soldiership of the King’s army. The conceited and loquacious Welshman, the tenacious and argumentative Scotchman, the hot and impulsive Irishman, with all whose nations the English have lately been at war, serve the further purpose of displaying how smoothly the recent national enmities have been reconciled, and all the parties drawn into harmonious co-operation, by the King’s inspiring nobleness of character, and the catching enthusiasm of his enterprise. All three are as brave as lions, thoroughly devoted to the cause, and mutually emulous of doing good service ; each entering into the work with as much heartiness as if his own nation were at the head of the undertaking. All of them too are completely possessed with the spirit of the occasion, where “ honour’s thought reigns solely in the breast of every man ”; and as there is no swerving from the line of earnest warlike purpose in quest of any sport or pastime, so the amusement we have of them results purely from the spontaneous working-out of their innate peculiarities; and while making us laugh they at the same time win our respect, their very oddities serving to set off their substantial manliness.116 Shakespeare’s characters. Fluellen is pedantic, pragmatical, and somewhat querulous, but withal a thoroughly honest and valiant soul. He loves to hear himself discourse touching “ the true discipline of the wars,” and about “Alexander the Pig,” and how “ Fortune is painted plind, with a muffler afore her eyes, to signify to you that Fortune is plind; and she is painted also with a wheel, to signify to you, which is the moral of it, that she is turning, and inconstant, and mutability, and variation ” : but then he is also prompt to own that “ Captain Jamy is a marvellous falorous gentleman, and of great expedition and knowledge in th’ aunchient wars ” ; and that “ he will maintain his argument as well as any military man in the ’orld, in the disciplines of the pristine wars of the Romans.” He is indeed rather easily gulled into thinking Pistol a hero, on hearing him “ utter as prave ’ords at the pridge as you shall see in a Summer’s day ”: this lapse, however, is amply squared when he cudgels the swagger out of the “ counterfeit rascal,” and persuades him to eat the leek, and then makes him accept a groat to “heal his proken pate ” ; which is one of Shakespeare’s raciest and most spirited comic scenes. Herewith should be noted also his cool discretion in putting up with the mouthing braggart’s insolence, because the time and place did not properly allow his resenting it on the spot: and when he calls on him to “ eat his victuals,” and gives him the cudgel for sauce to it; and tells him, “You called me yesterday mountain-squire, but I will make you to-day a squire of low degree ”; there is no mistaking the timber he is made of. On another occasion, Fluellen sharply reproves one of his superior officers for loud-talking in the camp at night: “ If you would take the pains but to examine the wars of ~Pom-pey the Great, you shall find, I~warrant you, that there is no tiddle-taddle nor pibble-pabble in Pompey’s camp ” Hand the King, overhearing this reproof, hits the white of his character when he says to himself — “ Though it appear a little out of fashion, There is much care and valour in the Welshman.”THE KING. 117 But perhaps the man’s most characteristic passage is in his plain and downright style of speech to the King himself: the latter referring to the place of his own birth, which was in Wales, addresses him as “my good countryman,” and he replies, “ I am your Majesty’s countryman, I care not who know it; I will confess it to all the ’orld: I need not be ashamed of your Majesty, praised be Got, so long as your Majesty is an honest man.” On the whole, Fluellen is a capital instance of the Poet’s consideration for the rights of manhood irrespective of rank or title or any adventitious regards. Though a very subordinate person in the drama, there is more wealth of genius shown in the delineation of him than of any other except the King. The delineation of the King, as I have remarked in another place,* has something of peculiar interest from its personal relation to the author. It embodies the Poet’s ethics of character. Here, for once, he relaxes his strictness of dramatic self-reserve, and lets us directly into his own conception of what is good and noble: in his other portraits we have the art and genius of the poet; here, along with this, is also reflected the conscience and heart of the man. The King is the most ^complex and many-sided of all Shakespeare’s heroes, with the one exception of Hamlet; if indeed even Hamlet ought to be excepted. He is great alike in thought, in purpose, and in performance; all the parts of his character drawing together perfectly, ns if there were no foothold for distraction among them. Truth, sweetness, and terror build in him equally. And he loves the plain presence of natural and homely characters, where all is genuine, forthright, and sincere. Even in his sternest actions as king, he shows, he cannot help showing, the motions oi a brotherly heart: there is a certain grace and suavity in his very commands, causing them to be felt as benedictions. To be frank, open, and affable with all sorts * Volume i. page 247.118 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. of persons, so as to call their very hearts int< i • - ir mouths, and move them to be free, plain-spoken, and simple in his company, as losing the sense of inferior rank in an equality of manhood, —jail this is both an impulse of nature andLa rule of judgment with him. Nothing contents him short of getting heart to heart with those about or beneath hinp all conventional starch, all official' forms, all the facings of pride, that stand in the way of this, he breaks through; yet he does this with so much natural dignity and ease, that those who see it are scarcely sensible of it: they feel a peculiar graciousness in him, but know not why. And in his practical sense of things, as well as in his theory, inw'ard merit..ia. the onlybasis-of kingly right and rule : yet he is so much at home in this thought, that he never emphasizes it at all; because he understands full well that such merit, where it really lives, will best make its way when left to itself, and that any boasting or putting on airs about it can only betray a lack of it. Thus the character of this crowned gentleman stands together in that native harmony and beauty which is most adorned in being unadorned. And his whole behaviour appears to be governed by an instinctive sense of this. There is no simulation, no disguise, no study for appearances, about him: all got-up dignities, any thing put on for effect, whatever savours in the least of sham or shoddy, is his aversion; and the higher the place where it is used, the more he feels it to be out of place; his supreme deliglfO being to seem just what he is, and to be just what he seems. In other words, he has a steadfast, living, operative faith in the plenipotence of truth: he wants nothing better; he scorns to rely on any thing less: this is the soul of all his thoughts and designs. The sense of any discrepancy between his inward and his outward parts would be a torment to him. Hence his unaffected heartiness in word and deed. Whatsoever he cannot enter into with perfect wholeness and integrity of mind, that he shrinks from having any thing to do with. Accordingly in all that flows from himTHE KING. we feel the working of a heart so full that it cannot cL but overflow. Perhaps indeed he has never heard it s«. that “ an honest man’s the noblest work of God ” ; perhaps he has never even thought it consciously; but it is the core of his practical thinking; he lives it, and therefore knows it by heart, if not by head. This explains what are deemed the looser parts of his conduct while Prince of Wales. For his character, through all its varieties of transpiration in the three plays where he figures, is perfectly coherent and all of a piece. In the air of the Court there was something, he hardly knew what, that cut against his grain; he could not take to it. His father was indeed acting a noble part, and was acting it nobly; at least the Prince thought so: still he could not but feel that his father was acting a part. Dissimulation, artifice, official fiction, attentiveness to show, and all that course of dealing where less is meant than meets the ear, were too much the style and habit of the place : policy w~as the method, astuteness the force, of the royal counsels; and plain truth was not deep enough for one who held it so much his interest to hoodwink the time. Even the virtue there cherished was in great part a made-up, surface virtue; at the best there was a spice of disingenuousness in it. In short, the whole administration of the State manifestly took its shape and tone from the craft of the King, not from the heart of the man. (To the Prince’s keen eye all this was evident, to his healthy feelings it was offensive; he craved the fellowship of something more fresh and genuine; and was glad to get away from it, and play with simpler and honester natures, where he could at least be frank and true, and where his spirits might run out in natural freedom. “ Covering discretion with a coat of folly ” was better in his sense of things than to have his native sensibilities smothered under such a varnish of solemn plausibility and factitious constraint. Even his inborn rectitude found a more congenial climate where no virtue at all was professed, and where its claimsShakespeare’s characters. e frankly sported off, than where the *e was so much of nister craft and indirection mixed up with it: the reckless and spontaneous outpourings “of moral looseness, nay, the haunts of open-faced profligacy, so they had some sparkling of wit and raciness of humour in them, were more to his taste than the courts of refined hypocrisy and dissimulation, where politicians played at hide-and-seek with truth, and tied up their schemes with shreds of Holy Writ. Still it should be noted withal, that during his intercourse with Falstaff the Prince was all the while growing better, whereas Falstaff was daily growing worse. This was because the former was secretly intent on picking out the good, the latter the evil, of that intercourse. With the one it was a process of free and generous self-abandon ; with the other, of greedy and sensual self-seeking. So the Prince went into the Gad shill robbery merely as a frolic ; the jest of the thing was what he looked to; and he took care to have all the money paid back to the losers. On the other hand, Falstaff’s sole thought was to snatch the means of self-indulgence; and so the act was all of a piece with his cheating the Hostess out of her hard-earned cash by practising on her simple-hearted kindness ; and with his laying a plot to swindle Shallow, expressly on the ground that, “ if the young dace be a bait for the old pike, I see no reason in the law of nature but I may snap at him.” And it seems to me a very-mark-worthy point in that great delineation, that while Falstaff* was thus preparing for those darker villainies, the Prince was silently feeding the nobler mind which in due time prompted an utter repudiation of Sir John. At all events, whatever perils there might be in such companionship, I must needs think that even in the haunts of Eastcheap, as Shakespeare orders them, the Prince had a larger and richer school of practical wisdom; that he could there learn more of men, of moral good and evil, could get a clearer insight of the strengths and weaknesses of the human heart, and touch more springs of noble thought and purpose, than in ary college of made-THE KING. 121 up appearances, where truth is so adulterated with cunning, that the mind insensibly loses its simplicity, and sucks in perversion under the names of dignity and prudence. Accordingly, I suppose the Prince’s course in this matter to have grown mainly from the one pregnant fact, that his tongue could not endure the taste of falsehood, nor his hand the touch of fraud. And because, from his fulness of inward worth, he must and would be true, and rejoiced in what was simple and candid and direct, and hated all disguise and pretence and make-believe, therefore his mind on all sides moved in contact with the truth and life of things. Thus the dangerous experiences he had with revellers and make-sports were to him a discipline of virtue and wisdom: he found at least* more of natural sap in them than in the walking costumes from which they withdrew him: the good that was in them he could retain, the ill he could discard, because the former had something in him to stick upon, which the latter had not: and he knew that the noblest fruit would grow larger and ripen better in the generous soil where weeds also grew, than in the dry enclosures where nature and soul-power were repressed, to make room for craft-power and artifice. Yet even then, as often as he had any manly work to do, an answering spirit of manliness was forthwith kindled within him, and the course of riot and mirth was instantly shaken off as at the touch of a stronger affinity. To apply one of Bacon’s fine sayings, when once his mind had placed before it noble aims, it was immediately surrounded not only by the virtues, but by the gods. The Prince knew himself to be under a cloud of ill thoughts and surmises ; that he was held in slight esteem by his companions, his kindred, and his foes; that even Pointz put a bad construction on his behaviour; that his brothers gave him up, and his father viewed him wdth reproach and distrust; that in the glory of Hotspur’s deeds himself wras quite eclipsed; that every man was forethinking him a hopeless reprobate, and was shaking the head at the sound of his name : but all this did not appear to move him ; still vol. ii. 6122 Shakespeare’s characters. he seemed unconcerned, and intent only on playing out his game; untouched with compunctious visitings, and digest-inghis shames as quietly as if he were not aware of them. This seeming insensibility was because he had at bottom the strength of a good conscience, and a firm trust in the might of truth: “ rotten opinion ” did not inwardly gall him, because he felt sure that in due time he should raze it out, and was content to abide his time, hie had tried himself in noble work, and knew how sweet was the conscience of having done it like a man, and also knew that his inner mind on this score was a profound secret to those about him: the imputation of certain faults did not worry him, because he knew it was not really deserved ; yet he w^as far from blaming others for it, because he also knew it seemed to be deserved; and in his modest disdain of show he could quietly face the misconstructions of the hour, and remain true to himself in the calm assurance that all would come right in the end. But especially his course of life and the ill repute it drew upon him exempted him from the pestilence of lordly flatterers and buzzing sycophants; and he might well deem the scenes of his mirth to be health and purity itself in comparison with an atmosphere sweetened with that penetrating defilement: if there was a devil in the former, it was at least an undisguised devil; which was vastly better than a devil sugared over so as to cheat the taste, and seduce the moral sentinels of the heart. The character of Shakespeare’s Henry the Fifth may almost be said to consist of piety, honesty, and modesty. And he embodies these qualities in their s implest and purest form ; all sitting so easy and natural in him that he thinks not of them. Then too, which is well worth the noting, they so draw and work together, that each may be affirmed of the others; that is, he is honest and modest in his piety, pious and modest in his honesty; so that there is nothing obtrusive or showy in his acting of these virtues : being solid and true, they are therefore much within and little without,THE KING. 128 and are perfectly free from any air of pretence or design. And all the other manly virtues gather upon him in the train of these; while, as before remarked, at the centre of the whole stands a serene faith in the sufficiency of truth. The practical working of this choice composure is well shown in what happened at the killing of Hotspur. No sooner had Prince Henry slain the valiant Percy than he fell at once to doing him the offices of pious and tender reverence ; and the rather, forasmuch as no human eye witnessed the act. He knew that the killing of Hotspur would be enough of itself to wipe out all his shames, and “ restore him into the good thoughts of the world again”; nevertheless he cheerfully resigned the credit of the deed to Falstaff. He knew that such a surreptitious honour would help his old companion in the way wherein he wTas most capable and needy of help ; while, for himself, he could forego the fame of it in the secret pledge it gave him of other and greater achievements: the inward conscience thereof sufficed him ; and the sense of having done a generous thing was dearer to him than the beguiling sensation of “ riding in triumph on men’s tongues.” This noble superiority to the breath of present applause is what most clearly evinces the solidity and inwardness of his virtue. Yet in one of his kingliest moments he tells us, “If it be a sin to covet honour, I am the most offending soul alive.”. But honour is with him in the highest sense a social conscience, and the rightful basis of self-respect: he deems it a good chiefly as it makes a man clean and strong within, and not as it dwells in the tickle breath of others. As for that conventional figment which small souls make so much ado about, he cares little for it, as knowing that it is often got without merit, and lost without deserving. Thus the honour he covets is really to deserve the good thoughts of men: the inward sense of such desert is enough: if what is fairly his due in that kind be withheld by them, the loss is theirs, not his. Another characteristic article of his creed is that “ in124 Shakespeare’s characters. peace there ’s nothing so becomes a man as modest stillness and humility.” In his former days, during the intervals of high work, he was a spendthrift of his time, and cared mainly to pass it away from the pressure of irksome and benumbing constraint; but, now that high work claims all his hours, 44 ease from this noble miser of his time no moment steals ”; and he pushes ahead as one “ Who, not content that former worth stand fast, Looks forward, persevering to the Iasi, From well to better, daily self-surpasi;.” In his clear rectitude and piety of purpose, he will not go to war with France till he believes religiously and in his conscience that he has a sacred right to the French crown, and that it would be a sin against the c ivinely-appointed order of human society not to prosecute that claim. This point settled, he goes about the task as if his honour and salvation hung upon it. And in putting it through he is at once collected and eager, gentle and terrible; full alike of warlike energy and of bland repose: his frith in the justice of his cause and in the Divine support renders him both earnest and tranquil; and he alternates with majestic grace between the stirrings of his plain homely nature and of his kingly heroic spirit, or blends them both n one as the occasion speaks. The King, however, has one conspicuous lapse from modesty. The pompous brags of the French spouted through their Herald betray him into a brief but rather high strain of bragging, as if he had caught th3 disease of them: but he presently catches himself in it and chides himself for it: the words nauseate him, and he forthwith spits them out; and he is disgust ed with himself till he has washed out the taste of them wuth repentance. So that the result just proves how sound and sincere that virtue is in him. At the same time, with characteristic impulsive frankness, he discloses to the enemy the badness of his own plight: “ My people are with sickness much enfeebled ; My numbers lessen’d, and those few I have Almost no belter than so many Fre .:h.”THE KING. 125 Nor is this a thoughtless act; for in the same breath he owns that “ ’tis no wisdom to confess so much nnto an enemy of craft and vantage ”; but then it is the simple truth, and truth is good enough for him: moreover his frankness, whether he means it so or not, helps him in the end; for it has the effect of dissolving still further the bands of order among the French, making them more negligent, presumptuous, and giddy than ever. Nor is he wanting in the qualities of a discreet and prudent general. His quick and circumspective eye takes in all the parts of military duty. In his method, cool strategic judgment goes hand in hand with daring impetuous courage. He understands, none better, the requirements of sound policy in war. Justice and humanity to non-combatants are cardinal points of discipline with him, and this not only as according with his temper, but as helpers to success. Besides, he looks upon the French people as his own, and therefore will not have them wronged or oppressed by his soldiers. Bardolph and Nym are hanged for theft and sacrilege, and he “ would have all such offenders so cut off”; and he gives express charge that “ nothing be taken but paid for; none of the French upbraided or abused in disdainful language ”; his avowed reason being, that “ when lenity and cruelty play for a kingdom, the gentler gamester is the soonest winner.” But, with all his stress of warlike ardour and intentness, his mind full of cares, thoughtful, provident, self-mastered as he is, his old frank and childlike playfulness and love of harmless fun still cling to him, and mingle genially in his working earnestness. Even in his gravest passages, with but one or two exceptions, as in his address to the conspir-ant lords, there is a dash of jocose humour that is charmingly reminiscent of his most jovial and sportive hours. When “ consideration like an angel came, and whipp’d the offending A(him-ou4-of- him,” it put no stiffness or sourness into his manners, nor had any effect towards withering him up from being still the prince of good fellows. His spirits126 shakespeaee’s characters. are none the less brisk and sprightly for being bound in with the girdle of temperance and conscientious rectitude. lie can be considerate and playful too; self-restrained and running over with fresh hilarity at the same :ime. Perhaps the fairest display of his whole varied make-up is in the night before the battle of Agincourt, when, wrapping himself in a borrowed cloak, he goes unrecognized about the camp, allaying the scruples, cheering the hearts, and bracing the courage of his men. II s free and kindly nature is so unsubdued and fresh, that he craves to be a man among his soldiers, and talk familiarly with them face to face, which he knows could not be if he appeared among them as King. Here too his love of plain unvarnished truth asserts itself: he does not attempt to disguise from himself or from them the huge perils of their situation; he owns that the odds are fearfully against them; because he trusts that all this, instead of appalling their hearts, will rather serve, as indeed it does, to knit up their energies to a more resolute and strenuous effort. The greater the danger they are in, the greater should their courage be, — that is the principle he acts upon, and he has faith that they will act upon it too: he would have them kiow the worst of their condition, because he doubts not that they will be all the surer to meet it like men, dying gloriously, if die they must; and he so frames his speech that it works in them as an inspiration to that effect. Speaking to them of himself in the third person, he says, “I think the King is but a man, as I am: the violet smells to him as it doth to me; all his senses have but human conditions: and though his affections are higher mounted than ours, yet, when they stoop, they stoop with the like wing”: and on his conscience he assures them of what is indeed true, that the King “ would not wish himself anywhere but where he is.” From the overweening confidence of the French, leading to profanity and dissoluteness, he gathers the lessor s of an heroic piety: ‘ ‘ There is some soul of goodness m thi igs evil, Would men observingly distil it out;THE KING. 127 For our bad neighbour makes us early stirrers, Which is both healthful and good husbandry : Besides, they are our outward consciences, And preachers to us all; admonishing That we should ’dress us fairly for our end. Thus may we gather honey from the weed, And make a moral of the Devil himself.” I have elsewhere observed how Shakespeare used the Choruses in this play for the purpose of unbosoming himself in regard to his favourite hero. His own personal sense of the King’s nocturnal doings is most unequivocally pronounced in the Chorus to the fourth Act: ‘ * For forth he goes, and visits all his host; Bids them good morrow with a modest smile, And calls them brothers, friends, and countrymen. Upon his royal face there is no note How dread an army hath enrounded him ; Nor doth he dedicate one jot of colour Unto the weary and all-watched night; But freshly looks, and overbears attaint With cheerful semblance and sweet majesty ; That every wretch, pining and pale before, Beholding him, plucks comfort from his looks: A largess universal, like the Sun, His liberal eye doth give to every one, Thawing cold fear ; that mean and gentle all Behold, as may unworthiness define, A little touch of Harry in the night.” But the best of it is, that all the deep seriousness, not to say gloom, of the occasion does not repress his native jocularity of spirit. John Bates and Michael Williams, whose hearts are indeed braver and better than their words, speak out their doubts and fears with all plainness; and he falls at once into a strain of grave and apt discourse that soon satisfies their minds, which have been rendered somewhat querulous by the plight they are in; and when the blunt and downright Williams pushes his freedom into something of sauciness, he meets it wdth bland good-humour, and melts out the man’s crustiness by contriving quite in his128 Shakespeare’s characters. old style for carrying on a practical joke; so that we have a right taste of the sportive Prince in the most trying and anxious passage of the King. In the same spirit, afterwards, when the jest is coming to the upshot, as it is likely to breed some bloody work, he takes care that no harm shall be done: he turns it into an occasiDn for letting the men know whom they had talked so fre3ly with: he has himself invited their freedom of speech, because in his full-souled frankness of nature he really loves 1,0 be inward with them, and to taste the honest utterance of their minds: and when, upon that disclosure, Williams still uses his former plainness, he likes him the better for it; and winds up the jest by rewarding his supposed offence with a glove full of crowns; thus ending the whole with a stroke of genuine magnanimity, such as cannot fail to secure the undivided empire of his soldiers’ hearts: henceforth they will make nothing of dying for such a noble fellow, v hose wish clearly is, not to overawe them by any studied dignity, but to reign within them by his manliness of soul, and by making them feel that he is their best friend. The same merry, frolicsome humour comes out again in his wooing of the Princess Catharine. It is a real holiday of the spirits with him; his mouth overruns with play; he cracks jokes upon his own person and his speaking of French; and sweetens his way to the lady’s heart by genial frankness and simplicity of manner; wherein we relish nothing of the King indeed, but, which is better, much of the man. With the open and true-hearted pleasantry of a child, he laughs through his courtship; y3t we feel all the while a deep undercurrent of seriousness keneath his laughter ; and there is to our sense no lapse from dignity in his behaviour, because nothing is really so dignified as when a man forgets his dignity in the overflowings of a right noble and generous heart. The King loves men who are better than their words; and it is his nature to be better than he speaks: this is the artless disguise of modesty through which true goodness has its most effective disclosure; while,THE KING. 129 on the other hand, we naturally distrust the beauty that is not something shy of letting its charms be seen. — I must add that, bearing in mind the well-known character and history of King Henry the Sixth, we cannot fail to take it as a signal stroke of irony when the hero, in his courtship, speaks to the Princess of their “ compounding a boy, half French, half English, that shall go to Constantinople, and take the Turk by the beard.” This is one of those highly artful, yet seemingly-spontaneous sallies with which the Poet delights to play out his deep insight of character, and to surprise or to laugh his readers into a knowledge of themselves. — It is also to be noted that, notwithstanding the hero’s sportive mood in the wooing,jvhen he comes to deal with the terms of peace, where he thinks the honour of his nation is involved, his mood is very different: then he purposely forgot the King in the man; now he resolutely forgets the man in the King; and will not budge a hair from the demands which he holds to be the right of his people. The dignity of his person he freely leaves to take care of itself; the dignity of his State is to him a sacred thing, and he will sooner die than compromise it a jot. In respect of piety, the King exemplifies whatever was best in the teaching and practice of his time. Kor, upon the whole, is it altogether certain that any thing better has arisen since his time. What appears as modesty in his dealings with men here takes the form of humility, deep and unaffected; he thinks, speaks, and acts in the fear of God : this trait is indeed the central point, the very core of the whole delineation. Shakespeare found the King highly extolled in Holinshed for his piety at home, and throughout his campaigns; he accepted the matter most heartily, but construed it in a truly liberal spirit, and wrought it purposely into the brightest feature of his hero. Thus at the outset the King’s demeanour is marked by calm, unobtrusive notes of severe conscientiousness: he is above all anxious that his enterprise have the Divine approval; nor are 6* i130 SH AKESPE A RE S CHARACTERS. Lis scruples on this score any the less genuine, that he does not assume to be himself the sole ultimate judge of right and duty, but refers it to the judgment of those who stand to him as authorized interpreters of the Divine will. Then he takes it as a direct interposal of Providence, and a gracious mark of the Divine favour, that the “ dangerous treason, lurking in his way,” is brought to light. And all through he takes care to instruct himself and to have his men instructed, that they are to place their sole reliance in God’s help, to seek that help by piety and rectitude of life, and not to arrogate to themselves the merit of success, nor get puffed with a conceit of their own sufficiency. On the eve of the battle, he remembers, from his father’s own mouth, the wrongs his father did in compassing the crown, and religiously fears lest the sins of the father in this case be visited on the son : in this pious and penitential thought he craves to be alone, that “ he and his bosom may debate awhile ”; and then, after reciting some of the “ good and pious works ” which he has done to atone the fault, he adds, with heartfelt humility, u More will I do ; though all that I can do is nothing worth.” And while the French are revelling out the night in vanity and insolence, he has his soldiers put upon fortifying their courage, and seeking to bring good out of evil, by solemn acts of repentance and prayer. So again, after the great victory, which he in his pious solicitude is slow to credit the report of, his first word is, “Praised be God, and not our strength, for it!” and later, when the results of the battle are fully ascertained, “ O God, Thy arm was here, and not to us, but to Thy arm alone ascribe we all.” And his sincerity in all this is approved by the order he takes that ther^ be no voice of boasting or arrogance on account of what has been done, and that the Divine gift of victory be devoutly acknowledged in “ all holy rites.” How the Poet himself regarded these marks of Christian piety and humility in his hero, well appears from the account given of this King’s reception at London, in the Chorus to Act v.:THE KING. 131 “ Whereas his ords desire him to have borne His bruised helmet and his bended sword Before him through the city, he forbids it, Being free from vainness and self-glorious pride ; Giving full trophy, signal, and ostent, Quite from himself to God.” It is true, some of the King’s acts of religion are in a style that is now out of date, and that was mostly out of date in England when the play was written: but this nowise detracts from their genuineness or from his integrity of heart in doing them. In the fifteenth century, piety and chivalry, which latter was then at its height, went hand in hand, forming a combination so foreign to our modes of thought, that we can hardly enter into it at all. That time is now generally, perhaps justly, regarded as an age of popular bigotry and of clerical simony; yet the Poet’s hero is clearly no bigot, and is as clearly above the suspicion of unclean hands; and whatever may be thought of his religious modes, his Christian spirit is as lofty and pure as any age has witnessed in men of his place. Much the same is to be said touching the civil administration of this King. It is easy for us to observe that, instead of making useless conquests in France, he had better stayed at home, and spent his care in furthering the arts of peace, and been content with giving his people the benefit of a just and unambitious government. But what we call a liberal, humane, and judicious policy of State was in no sort the thing for that time. All men’s ideas of greatness and heroism ran in the channels of war and conquest: to make the people thrifty and happy by wise laws, was nowhere a mark of public honour and applause; and no nation was then held to have any rights that other nations were bound to respect. Kor, after all our fine words and high pretensions, are the nations of our time so clear in this regard, but that those older nations may still put in some claims to respect, and may even hold up their heads, in our presence. It is enough that on all these points King Henry182 Shakespeare’s characters. the Fifth, as Shakespeare draws him, embodies whatever was noblest in the mind and heart of his time ; though it seems hardly worth the while, even if it be true, to repeat the rather threadbare saying, that his faults were those of the age, while his virtues were those of the man. At all events, to insist, as some have done, on judging him by our standard of policy and wisdom, is too absurd or too wrong-headed to deserve any laboured exposure. In respect of proper dramatic interest and effect, this play is far inferior to King Henry the Fourth; nor does it rank very high in the list of Shakespeare’s achievements: but in respect of wisdom and poetry and eloquence it is among his very best. The Choruses are replete v.dth the finest lyrical inspiration; and I know of nothing that surpasses them in vividness of imagery, or in potency to kindle and electrify the reader’s imaginative forces. The King’s speeches to his soldiers at Harfleur and to the Governor and citizens of that town, in Act iii.; his reflections on ceremony, and his speech to Westmoreland just before the battle of Agin court, and Exeter’s account of the deaths of York and Suffolk, all in Act iv.; and Burgundy’s speech in favour of peace, in Act v.; all these may be cited as perfect models in their kind, at once eloquent and poetical in the highest degree. Campbell the poet aptly remarks of them, “ It was said of iEsehylus, that he composed his Seven Chiefs against Thebes under the inspiration of Mars himself. If Shakespeare’s Henry the Fifth had been written for the Greeks, they would have paid him the same compliment.” Kor must I omit to mention the Archbishop’s illustration from the commonwealth of bees in Act i.; which has been justly noted as “full of the most exquisite imagery and music. The art employed in transforming the whole scene of the hive into a resemblance of humanity is a perfect study; every successive object, as it is brought forward, being invested with its characteristic attributes.” I have to confess that in one material respect, at least, thisKING HENRY THE FIFTH. 183 play is not altogether such as I could wish. The French are palpably caricatured, and the caricature is not in a spirit of perfect fairness and candour: it savours too much of running an enemy down. The Poet’s English prejudices, honest as they were, are something too strongly pronounced. Frederick Schlegel well observes that “ the feeling by which Shakespeare seems to have been most connected with ordinary men is that of nationality”; but in this case his nationality is not so tolerant and generous as his other plays would lead us to expect; which imparts to the workmanship some want of the right artistic calmness and equipoise. It is true that in the hero’s time the French people and government were in a most deplorable condition ; the King insane, the Dauphin frivolous and wain, the nobility split into reckless and tearing factions, and the whole nation bordering upon a state of anarchy; insomuch that they may have wTell deserved the rough discipline Henry gave them ; and perhaps nothing less would have sufficed to exorcise the evil spirit out of them, and put them in training for better days : but all this does not justify the braggart, mouth-stretching persiflage and insolence which tha Poet ascribes to them. It is also true that in these points he renders them very much as he found them described in the Chronicles; but the regards of Art as well as of cool justice should have softened away those satirical, distorting, and vituperative lines of description : Shakespeare ought to have seen the French with his own eyes, and not with those of the old chroniclers. Ger-vinus suggests that a jealous patriotic fbeling may have influenced the Poet in this matter. The great Henry the Fourth, probably the most accomplished statesman and wisest ruler of his time, was then on the throne of France. And the German critic thinks that Shakespeare may have had it in mind to dash the enthusiasm of his French contemporaries about their King, by showing an English Henry who was his equal in greatness and originality: but he rightly notes that the Poet’s hero would have appeared still more noble, if his antagonists had been made to seem less despicable.134 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. KING RICHARD THE THIRD. Shakespeare’s drama of King Richard the Third was preceded by at least two other plays on the same subject. The first of these was in Latin, written by Dr. Thomas Legge, Master of Cams College, Cambridge, and is said to have been acted at the University as early as 1579. Sir John Harrington, in his Apology for Poetry, 1591, speaks of this play as one that 44 would move Pialaris the tyrant, and terrify all tyrannous-minded men.” There is no reason for thinking that Shakespeare ever saw it, or had any knowledge of it. The other was an Eng ish drama, printed in 1594, and called 44 The True Tragedy of Richard the Third: Wherein is shown the death of Edward the Fourth, with the smothering of the two young Princes in the Tower.” We have no certain knowledge as to when this piece was written ; though no one doubts that the writing was several years previous to 1594. Shakespeare’s drama indicates no acquaintance with it except in two or three slight particulars ; and even here the similarity infers no more knowledge than might well enough have been caught in the hearing. Other resemblances there are indeed, but only such as would naturally result from using a common authority. The older piece has little that can be deemed worthy of notice. The workmanship, though crude and clumsy enough, displays honesty of mind, and is comparatively free from inflation and bombast. The piece is written partly in prose and partly in heavy blank-verse, interspersed with pentameter couplets and rhyming stanzas, and with passages of fourteen-syllable lines. It may be well to add, for the curiosity of the thing, that, after Richard is killed, Report enters, and holds a dialogue with a Page, to give information of divers things not exhibited ; after which, two Messengers come in, and unfold what is to be done and who is to reign, all the way from Richard to Queen Elizabeth, the whole winding up with an elaborate panegyric on the latter.KING RICHARD THE THIRD. 185 Shakespeare’s drama was entered in the Stationers’ register on the 20th of October, 1597, and was published the same year, but without the author’s name. The play was reprinted in 1598, with “ by William Shakespeare” added in the title-page. There was a third issue in 1602, a fourth in 1605, and a fifth in 1613; the last three all claiming to be “ newly augmented,” though in truth merely reprints of the former two. The play reappeared in the folio of 1628, with many slight alterations of text, with some omissions, and with a few additions, the latter extending in one place to fifty-five consecutive lines. Editors differ a good deal as to the comparative merits of the quarto and folio texts; though all admit that each makes some damaging omissions which the other must be drawn upon to supply. Mr. White leans decidedly to the folio; while Dyce, in his latest edition, prefers the quarto text, on the whole. For myself, I can hardly speak further than that my preference goes sometimes with the one, sometimes with the other. As the additions in the folio do not amount to a general enlargement of the piece, it does not well appear what ground or pretext the quarto of 1602 may have had for claiming to be “ newly augmented.” Perhaps it was but a publisher’s trick, to induce a larger sale of the new edition. The play, however, has very marked diversities of style and workmanship, some parts relishing strongly of the Poet’s earlier, others as strongly of his middle period; and I suspect the claim aforesaid may have referred, disingenuously indeed, to changes made in the piece before the issue of 1597. The great popularity of this play is shown in the number of editions called for, wherein it surpasses any other of the Poet’s dramas. For, besides the five quarto issues already mentioned, there were also three others in quarto, after the folio appeared; which proves that there was still a good demand for it in a separate form. It was also honoured beyond any of its fellows by the notice of contemporary writers. It is mentioned by Meres in his Palladis Tamia, 1598.136 Shakespeare’s characters. Next, we have a very remarkable allusion to it in a poem published in 1614, and entitled The Ghost of Richard the Third. The author of the poem gave only his initials, “ C. B. who he was is not positively known ; some say Charles Best, others Christopher Brooke: but the strong commendatory verses upon him, which have come down to us from such pens as Ben Jonson, Chapman, and Wither, show him to have been a writer of no little distinction. The Ghost of Bichard is made to speak as follows : “ To him that imp’d my fame with Clio’s ■ prill, Whose magic rais’d me from Oblivion’s ten, That writ my story on the Muses’ hill, And with my actions dignified his pen ; He that from Helicon sends many a rill, Whose nectar’d veins are drunk by thirsty men ; Crown’d be his style with fame, his head with bays, And none detract, but gratulate his praise.” Fuller, also, in his Church History, and Milton, in one of his political eruptions, refer to the play as well known; and Bishop Corbet, writing in 1617, gives a qiaint description of his host at Bos worth, which is highly curious as witnessing both what an impression the play had made on the popular mind, and also how thoroughly the hero’s part had become identified with Bichard Burbadge, the original performer of it: “ Mine host was full of ale and history ; And in the morning, when he brought us nigh Where the two Roses join’d, you would suppose Chaucer ne’er made The Romaunt of the Rose. Hear him : See you yon wood ? there Richard lay With his whole army. Loohc the other way, Andy lo / where Richmond in a bed of go 'se Encamp'd himself all nighty and all his force : Upon this hill they met. —Why, he could tell The inch where Richmond stood, where Richard fell. Besides what of his knowledge he could say, He had authentic notice from the play ; Which I might guess by marking up the ghosts, And policies not incident to hosts ;KLNG- IlICH AI D THE THIRD. 137 But chiefly by that one perspicuous thing, Where he mistook a pla ,rer for a king : For, when he would ha re said, King Richard died, And call’d, A horse, a ) orse ! he Burbadge cried ! ’ As regards the date of the composition, the entry at the Stationers’ is the only clear item of external evidence that we have. The internal evidence makes strongly for as early a date as 1593 or 1594. Th ) general style, though showing a decided advance on that af the Second and Third Parts of King Henry the Sixth, is strictly continuous with it, while the history and charac terization of the three plays so knit in together as to make ;hem all of one piece and texture. And it is all but certain that the Poet’s King Henry the Sixth was finished as ea ly as 1592. In Clarence’s account of his dream, and in '.'yrrel’s description of the murder of the young Princes, r nakespeare is out in his plenitude of poetical wealth; am1 the delineation of Richard is indeed a marvel of sustained vigour and versatile aptness: nevertheless the play, as a whole, evinces somewhat less maturity of power than King Richard the Second: in several cases there is great insubordination of the details to the general plan: the points of tragic stress are more frequent, and the dramatic motives more on the surface and more obvious, not to say obtrusive, than may well consist with the reason and law of Art: there is also too much piling-up of curses, or too much ringing of changes in imprecation; and in Richard’s wooing of Lady Anne and of Queen Elizabeth there is an excess of dialogical epigram and antiphras-tic point, with challenge and retort alternating through a prolonged series of stichometrical speeches: all which shows indeed a prodigious fertility of thought, but betrays withal a sort of mental incontinence, or a want of that self-restraining judgment which, in the Poet’s later dramas, tempers all the parts and elements into artistic harmony and proportion. Then too the ethical idea or sense, instead of being duly poised or interfused with the dramatic current, comes138 Shakespeare’s characters. too near overriding and displacing it, — the pressure of a special purpose marring the organic symmetry of the work. The close connection between this play and the Third Part of King Henry the Sixth is so evident as to leave no occasion for tracing it out in detail. At the opening of the one we have Richard flouting in soldo :piy at the “ stately triumphs ” and “ mirthful comic shows ” with which, at the close of the other, King Edward had proposed to celebrate the final and full establishment of his cause. It was indeed fitting that, on Richard’s first appearance as a dramatic hero, we should overhear him at his old practice of ruminating aloud, and thus familiarizing his thoughts with the villainies which he has it in purpose to enact. Everybody may well be presumed to know how Colley Cibber, being seized with a fit of progress, took upon him to reform Shakespeare’s King Richard the Third into fitness for the stage. As the original play was too long for representation, his mode of retrenching it to the proper compass was, in part, by transporting into it a scene or two from the foregoing play. I notice the fact, now, merely as showing that he saw the perfect continuity of the two pieces ; though, as would seem, he did not perceive the absurdity of thus setting the catastrophe of one at the opening of the other. Historically considered, the play in hand embraces a period of something over fourteen years,* namely, from the death of Henry, in May, 147Î, to the fall of Richard, in August, 1485. Half of this period, however, is despatched in the first Act ; the funeral of Henry, the marriage of Richard with Lady Anne, and the death of Clarence being represented as occurring all about the same time ; whereas in fact they were separated by considerable intervals, the latter not taking place till February, 1478. And there is a similar abridgment, or rather suppression of time between the first Act and the second ; as the latter opens with the sickness of King Edward, his seeming reconciliaticn c 3 the j>eers, andKING RICHARD THE THIRD. 139 his death; all which occurred in April, 1483. Thenceforward the events of the drama are mainly disposed in the order of their actual occurrence ; the drama being perhaps as true to the history as wTere practicable or desirable in a work so different in its nature and use. This drawing together and massing of the scattered events is eminently judicious; for the plan of the drama required them to be used only as subservient to the hero’s character; and it does not appear how the Poet could have ordered them better for developing, in the most forcible manner, his idea of that extraordinary man. So that the selection and grouping of the secondary incidents are regulated by the paramount law of the work; and they are certainly made to tell wdth masterly effect in furtherance of the author’s purpose. As to the moral complexion of Shakespeare’s Richard, the incidents whereby his character in this respect transpires are nearly all taken from the historians, with only such heightening as it is the prerogative of poetry to lend, even when most tied to actual events. In the Poet’s time, the prevailing ideas of Richard were derived from the history of his life and reign written by Sir Thomas More. More’s character as a man is above all suspicion of malice or unfairness or rash judgment; while his clear legal mind and his thorough training in the law rendered him a master in the art of sifting and weighing evidence. His early life was passed in the household of Cardinal Morton, who figures as Bishop of Ely in the play; so that he had ready access to the best sources of information: and this, together with his “ monumental probity ” and his approved goodness of heart, stamps his work with as much credibility as can well attach to any record of contemporary events. His book was written in 1513, when he was thirty-three years old; and in speaking of those concerned in the murder of the Princes, he says, “ Dighton yet walketh on alive, in good possibility to be hanged ere he die.” The character of Richard as drawn by him, and as received in the Poet’s time, is well shown in Bacon’s History of Henry the Seventh:140 Shakespeare’s characters. “The body of Richard, after many indignities and reproaches, the diriges and obsequies of the common people towards tyrants, was obscurely buried; no man thinking any ignominy or contumely unworthy of him that had been the executioner of King Henry the Sixth, that innocent prince, with his own hands; the contriver of the death of the Duke of Clarence, his brother; the murderer of his two nephews, one of them his lawful king; and vehemently suspected to have been the impoisoner of his wife, thereby to make vacant his bed for a marriage within the degrees forbidden. And although he were a prince in military virtue approved, jealous of the honour of the English nation, and likewise a good law-maker, for the ease and solace of the common people; yet his cruelties and parricides, in the opinion of all men, weighed down his virtues and merits; and, in the opinion of wise men, even those virtues themselves were conceived to be rather feigned and affected things, to serve his ambition, than true qualities ingenerate in his judgment and nature.” Nevertheless much has since been written to explode the current history of Richard, and to lessen, if not remove, the abhorrence in which his memory had come to be held. The Poet has not been left without his share of criticism and censure for the alleged blackening of his dramatic hero. This attempt at reforming public opinion was led off by Sir George Buck, whose History of Richard the Third was published in 1646. The general drift of his book is well indicated by Fuller in his Church History, who is himself high authority on the matters in question: “ He eveneth Richard’s shoulders, smootheth his back, planeth his teeth, and maketh him in all points a comely anc beautiful person. Nor stoppeth he here; but, proceeding from his naturals to his morals, maketh him as virtuous as ha idsome; concealing most, denying some, defending others, of his foulest facts, wherewith in all ages since he standeth charged on record. For mine own part, I confess it is no heresy to maintain a paradox in history; nor am I such an enemy toKING RICHARD THE THIRD. 141 wit as not to allow it leave harmlessly to disport itself for its own content, and the delight of others. But when men do it cordially, in sober sadness, to pervert people’s judgments, and therein go against all received records, I say that singularity is the least fault that can be laid to such men’s charges.” Something more than a century later, the work was resumed and carried on with much acuteness by Horace Wal-pole in his Historic Doubts. And several other writers have since put their hands to the same task. Still the old judgment seems likely to stand, the main substance thereof not having been much shaken yet. Dr. Lingard has carried to the subject his usual candour and research; and, after despatching the strong points urged on the other side, winds up his account of Richard thus: “Writers have indeed in modern times attempted to prove his innocence ; but their arguments are rather ingenious than conclusive, and dwindle into groundless conjectures when confronted with the evidence which may be arrayed against them.” The killing of the two Princes formed the backbone of the guilt laid at Richard’s door. That they did actually disappear, is tolerably certain; that upon him fell whatever advantage could grow from their death, is equally so; and it is for those who deny the cause uniformly assigned at the time, and long after, for their disappearance, to tell us how and by whom they were put out of the way. And Sharon Turner, who may be justly ranked among the se-A crest sifters of historic fictions and fables, is constrained to admit Richard’s murder of his nephews; and so long as this blood-stain remains, the scouring of others, however it may diminish his crimes, will hardly lighten his criminality. But even if Shakespeare’s delineation were proved to be essentially untrue to Richard as he was in himself, this would not touch the standing of his work as a dramatic reproduction of historical matter. For the Poet’s vindication on this score, it suffices that his Richard, so far at142 Shakespeare’s characters. least as regards the moral complexion of the man, is substantially the Richard of the chroniclers, and of all the historical authorities received and studied in his time. Besides, to satisfy the nice scruples and queries of historic doubters and dialecticians, is not a poet’s business: his concern is with Truth in her operative form, not in her abstract essence; and to pursue the latter were to anatomize history, instead of representing it. Whether, then, Richard was in fact guilty of such and such crimes, matters little; it being enough that he was generally believed to be so, and that this belief was the mother-principle of those national events whereon the drama turns. That Richard was a prince of abundant head; that his government was in the main wise and just; that he was sober in counsel, brave in the field, and far-sighted in both;—all this only renders it the harder to account for that general desertion which left him almost naked t« his foes, but by such a deep and widespread conviction of his wickedness as no puttings-forth of intellect could overcome. Thus his fall, so sudden and complete, was mainly in virtue of what he was thought to be. And forasmuch as the character generally set upon him at the time, if not the essential truth regarding him, was the stuff out of which were spun his overthrow, and the consequent opening of a new social and political era; such therefore was the only character that would cohere with the circumstances, so as to be capable of dramatic development. More’s history, as it is commonly called, was adopted by both Hall and Holinshed into their Chronicles. In that noble composition, the main features of the man are digested and drawn together as follows : “ Richard, the third son, was in wit and courage equal with either of them; little of stature, ill-featured of limbs, crook-backed, his left shoulder much higher than his right, hard-favoured of visage; malicious, wrathful, envious, and from afore his birth ever froward. Free be was called ofRICHARD. 143 dispense, and somewhat above bis power liberal: with large gifts lie gat him unsteadfast friendship, for which he was fain to pill and spoil in other places, and gat him steadfast hatred. He was close and secret, a deep dissembler, lowly of countenance, arrogant of heart; outwardly companionable where he inwardly hated, not letting to kiss whom he thought to kill; despiteous and cruel, not for evil will always, but oftene^for ambition, and for the surety or increase of his estate. His face was small, but such, that at the first aspect a man would judge it to savour of malice, fraud, and deceit. When he stood musing, he would bite and chaw his nether lip; as who said that his fierce nature in his cruel body always chafed, stirred, and was ever unquiet: besides that the dagger which he wore he would, when he studied, with his hand pluck up and down in the sheath to the midst, never drawing it fully out.” Again the same writer notes him as being inordinately fond of splendid and sh6wy dress ; thus evincing an intense craving to be “ looked on in the world,” and to fascinate the eyes of men. Shakespeare’s Richard, morally speaking, is little else than this descriptive analysis reduced to dramatic life and expression ; except, perhaps, that More regards him as a hypocrite by nature, and cruel from policy, whereas the Poet rather makes his cruelty innate, and his hypocrisy a politic art used in furtherance of his ambition. In the present play, we have the working-out of the hero’s character as already formed ; the processes of its formation being set forth in the preceding plays of King Henry the Sixth ; which is sufficient cause for adverting to a few points there delivered. And in this case, as in sundry others, the Poet suggests, at the very outset, the pivot on which the character mainly turns. When we first meet with Richard, Clifford taunts him: “ Hence, heap of wrath, foul indigested lump, As crooked in thy manners as thy shape ! ** And again in the same scene he is called “foul stigmatic”; because the stigma set on his person is both to others the144 Shakespeare’s characters. handiest theme of reproach, and also to himself the most annoying; like a huge boil on a man’s face, which, for its unsightliness, his enemies see most, and, for its soreness, strike first. And Richard’s personal deformity is regarded not only as the proper outshaping and physiognomy of a certain original malignity of soul, but also as aggravating tha£ malignity in turn; his shape havirg grown ugly because his spirit was bad, and his spirit growing worse because of his ugly shape. For his ill-looks invite reproach, and reproach quickens his malice; and because men hate to look on him, therefore he craves all the more to be looked on; and, for the gaining of his wish in this point, he covets nothing so much as the being able through fe ir to compel that which inclination denies. Thus experience generates in him a most inordinate lust of power; while the circumstantial impossibility of coming at this save by crime puts him upon such a course of intellectual training and practice as may enable him to commit crimes, and still bar off the natural consequences. Moreover his extreme vanity results in a morbid sensitiveness to any signs of neglect or scorn; and these being especially offensive to himself, he therefore has the greater delight in venting them on others: as taunts and scoffs are a form of power which he feels most keenly, he thence grows fond of using them as an apt form whereby to make his power felt. For even so bad men nati rally covet to be wielding upon others the causes and instruments of their own sufferings. Hence the bitterly-sareastic humour which Richard indulges so freely, and with such prodigious effect. Of course his sensitiveness is keenest touching the very particular wherein his vanity is most thwarted and wounded: he thinks of nothing so much as the uglin 3ss that balks his desire, and resents nothing so sharply as the opinion or feeling it arrays against him. Accordingly his first and heaviest shots of sarcasm are at those who twit him on that score So, in the scene where the Lancastrian Prince of Wales if killed, Richard seems unmoved till the Prince hits him itRICHARD. 145 that eye, when his wrath takes fire at once, and bursts out in the reply, “ By Heaven, brat, I ’ll plague you for that word.” All which explains the cause of Richard’s being so prone to “ descant on his own deformity.” His thoughts brood upon this, because it is the sorest spot in his condition ; and he becomes intent on making it the source of a dearer gratification than any it deprives him of, — the consciousness of such mental powers as can bear him onward and upward in spite of those disadvantages. Thus his sense of personal disgrace begets a most hateful and malignant form of pride, — the pride of intellectual force and mastery. Hence he comes to glory in the matter of his shame, tp exaggerate it, and hang over it, as serving to approve, to set off, and magnify his strength and fertility of wit; as who would say, Nature indeed made me the reproach and scorn of men, nevertheless I have made myself their wonder and applause; and though my body be such that men could not bear the sight of me, yet I have managed to charm their eyes. In this way the man’s galling wakefulness to his own unsightly shape festers and malignifies into a kind of self-pleasing virulence. Nor is this all. For, on much the same principle, he nurses to the highest pitch his consciousness also of moral deformities. So far from palliating his wickedness to himself, or skulking behind any subterfuges, or trying in any way to dodge the sense of it, he rather makes love to it, and exults in spreading it out and turning it round before his inward eye, and even stimulates his vision of it; as if he were so charmed with the sight that he could not bear to lose any moment of it. To succeed by wrong, to rise by crime, to grow great by inverting the moral order of things, is in his view the highest proof of genius and skill. So he cooks both his moral and personal ugliness into food of intellectual pride. The worse he sees himself to be, the higher he stands in his own esteem, because this argues in him the greater superiority to other men in force of mind. This aspect of the man is indeed startling, but I think it is VOL. II. 7 j146 Shakespeare’s characters. fully borne out by his soliloquies in the Third.Part of King Henry the Sixth ; especially that in Act iii., scene 2 : “ Well, say there is no kingdom, then, for Richard ; What other pleasure can the world ail ord ? I’ll make my heaven in a lady’s lap, And deck my body in gay ornaments, And witch swreet ladies with my word 3 and looks. 0 miserable thought! and more unlik sly Than to accomplish twenty golden crowns ! Why, love forswore me in my mother’s womb : And, for I should not deal in her soft laws, She did corrupt frail Nature with S01113 bribe, To shrink mine arm up like a wither’c. shrub ; To make an envious mountain on my back, Where sits deformity to mock my bod f ; To shape my legs of an unequal size ; To disproportion me in every part. Then, since this earth affords no joy to me, But to command, to check, to o’erbeai such As are of better person than myself, I’ll make my heaven to dream upon the crown, And, whiles I live, t’ account this world but Hell, Until my head, that this mis-shap’d trunk bears, Be round impaled with a glorious crown. Why, I can smile, and murder whiles I smile ; And cry Content to that which grieves my heart; And wet my cheeks with artificial tears, And frame my face to all occasions : 1 can add colours to the chameleon ; Change shapes with Proteus for advantages; And set the murderous Machiavel to school.” So much for the Poet’s Richard as his character is seen growing and taking shape. His innate malice has had fitting exercise and nurture amidst the rancours and fierceness of civil slaughter: by his immunities of rank and station, his native strength of will has been pampered into a towering audacity of thought and purpose: the constant presence and ever-shifting forms of dar ger have trained him to a most protean hypocrisy: he is a consummate master alike in the arts of dissembling and o:? simulation; can counterfeit brusqueness, meekness, innocence, humility, sor-RICHARD. 147 row, anger, indignation, artlessness, and piety; and can play the blusterer, the wag, the boon companion, the penitent, the lover, the devotee, the hot partisan, the hearty friend, the cool adviser, and the passionate avenger; each in turn, or several of them together, as the occasion prompts, or the end requires. But, whatever sentiment he is feigning, or whatever part he is playing, his biting, malicious wit is ever in action, as if this were an original impulse with him, and the natural pastime of his faculties. Many strong instances of this occur in the plays where he is growing, but nothing to what we have from the full-grown Richard in the play that bears his name. Any quotations in this kind would use up too much space; so I must rest with noting that we have a good sample in Act i., scene 3, where, coming abruptly into the presence of the Queen and her friends, he counterfeits passion as the language of grieved and injured virtue; and a still better one in Act iv., scene 2, where he plays off his caustic banter on “the deep-revolving witty Buckingham.” In his pride of intellectual superiority, he looks with intense scorn on all in any sort touched with honesty; they are game to him; and it is his supreme delight to mock at such “ simple gulls ” as Clarence, Hastings, Stanley, Buckingham; and it is by his dry, stinging pungency of speech that he engineers his contempt of them to the spot. Those whom it is not in his power or his policy to kill he loves at least to torment with wounding flouts. I have said that the moral complexion of Shakespeare’s Richard was mainly taken from the historians. Intellectually, however, his proportions are drawn much beyond what the history accords him. I suppose there was very good reason for this. For, to have set forth such a moral physiognomy in dramatic form, with only his actual endowment of mind, would scarce consist with so much of pleasure in his gifts as was required to countervail the horror of his crimes. Such a measure of depravity, stripped of the disguise which it necessarily keeps up in real life, might148 Shakespeare’s characters. indeed be valuable as truth, but would hardly do as poetry. Which may aptly suggest the different laws of History and Art. Now the method of History is to please because it instructs; of Art, to instruct because it pleases. Such, at least, is the best way I can find of marking the difference in question. The forms of poetry are relished, not as being fitted to facts, but as they fit the mind. Nor does this infer any defect of real instructiveness in Art; for whatever pleasure springs in virtue of such correspondence with our better nature carries refreshment and invigoration in its touch. Practically, no man ever understood this thing better than Shakespeare. Nor, perhaps, is bis understanding thereof better shown anywhere than in Richard. The lines of his wickedness as traced in history are somewhat deepened in the play, and its features are charged with boisterous life; making, all together, a fc arful picture, and such as, without counterpoising attractions, would be apt to shock and revolt the beholder. But his intellectuality is idealized so far and in such sort as to season the impression of his moral deformity with the largest and most various mental entertainment. If Richard is all villain, he is an all-accomplished one. And any painful sense of his villainy is spirited away by his thronging diversions of thought, his unflagging gayety of spirits, his prompt, piercing, versatile wit. Nay, his very crimes beget occasion for these enchantments, while every demand seems in effect to replenish his stock: and thus the hateful in his character is so compensated by the admirable, that we are more than reconciled to his company, though nowise reconciled to his crimes. This point is well illustrated in Richard’s wooing of Lady Anne, where the rays of his character arc all gathered, as it were, into a focus. Now, whatever may have been the facts in the case, it is certain that Richard was at the time generally believed by the Lancastrians to have had a hand in killing both Henry the Sixth and Edward his son. It isRICHARD. 149 also certain that within two years after their death Richard was married to Edward’s widow, who must in all reason he supposed to have shared in the common belief of her party. How that party felt on the subject well appears in that the late King was revered by them as a martyr, and his tomb hallowed as the abode of miraculous efficacies; for wdiich cause Richard had his bones removed to a more secluded place. On Richard’s part, the chief motive to the marriage probably was, that he might have a share in the immense estates of the lady’s father, who was Richard Neville, the great Earl of Warwick, known in history as “ the kingmaker,” and in Shakespeare as “the setter-up and puller-down of kings.” For, as Clarence, having married the elder daughter, grasped at the whole; and as Richard proposed by taking the younger to acquire a part; hence arose the fierce strife between them, from which grew the general persuasion that Richard was somehow the cause of his brother’s death. Perhaps, as indicating the manner and spirit of the contest, it should be mentioned that Clarence, to thwart Richard’s purpose, at first had the lady concealed from his pursuit several months in the disguise of a cook-maid ; and that when at last the former saw he could not prevent the marriage, he swore that the latter “ should not part the livelihood with him.” So that the Poet is nowise answerable for this difficulty: it was in the history; and the best he could do was to furnish such a solution of it as would stand with the conditions of dramatic effect. Before solving the difficulty, however, he greatly augments^it by suppression of time. Richard begins and finishes his courtship of the lady over the very coffin of the royal saint whose death she is mourning, and whom he is supposed to have murdered. Yet his triumph, such is the Poet’s management, seems owing not so much to any special vice or defect in her as to his witchcraft of tongue and wit, so put in play as to disconcert all her powers of resistance. In a word, it is because the man is simply irresistible. And it should be remembered in her150 Shakespeare’s characters. behalf, that his art succeeds equally in beguiling King Edward, Clarence, Hastings, Buckingham, and others. His towering audacity, which, springing from entire confidence in his powers, prevails in part by the very boldness of its attempts; his flexibility and suppleness of thought, turning himself indifferently to all occasions, forms, and modes of address; his perfect self-possession and presence of mind? never at a loss for a shift, nor betrayed into a misstep, nor surprised into a pause; his wily dissimalation, and more wily frankness, silencing her charges by pleading guilty to them, parrying her blows by inviting thsm, disarming her hatred by owning its justice ; and his simulating deep contrition for past misdeeds, and the inspiration of her virtue and beauty as the cause of it; — such are the parts of the sly, subtle, unfearing, remorseless Richarc. that are wrought out in his courtship of Lady Anne. The scene is indeed far from being the best, or even among the best, in the play; but it combines a remarkable variety of characteristic points, and happ: ly exemplifies the Poet’s method of diverting off the offensiveness of Richard’s acts by the entertainment of his gifts. In these respects, we have a repetition of the scene afterwards, when he in like manner triumphs, or seems to triumph, over the fears and scruples of Elizabeth. But indeed the Poet’s work is shaped and ordered from the outset with a special view to the point in hand; the utmost care being taken, that in our first impression of the full-grown Richard his thought-swarming head may have the start of his bloody hand. Which order, by the way, is clean reversed in Cibber’s patch-work preparation of the play; the murder of the sainted Henry being there foisted in at the opening, so that admiration of Richard’s intellect is forestalled by abhorrence of his wickedness. Assuredly it is neither wise nor right thus to tamper with the Poet’s workmanship. In the play as he made it, the opening soliloquy, so startling in its abruptness, and so crammed with poetry and thought, has the effect of duly pre-engaging our minds with the hero’s active,RICHARD. 151 fertile, scheming brain: our impression is of one unrelenting indeed, and incapable of fear, but who looks well before he strikes, and who ;s at least as remarkable for his powers of mind as for his abuse of them. Thus, in the original drama, our feelings are from the first properly set and toned to the scope and measure of the terrible as distinguished from the horrible; the reverse of which takes place in the Cibberian profanation. And the organic law of the work plainly requires that some such initiative be given to the penetrating and imperturbable sagacity which presides over all the other elements of Richard’s character, and everywhere pioneers to his purpose. Richard’s irresistible arts of insinuation, how he can at once, and almost in the same breath, plant terrors and sweeten them away, is well shown in the brief scene with Ratcliff and Catesby, when he is preparing to meet the invading Richmond : “ Rich. Some light-foot friend post to the Duke of Norfolk : — Ratcliff, thyself, — or Cateshy ; where is he ? Cate. Here, my good lord. Rich. Fly to the Duke. — [To Rat.] Post thou to Salisbury : When thou com’st thither, — [To Cate.] Dull, unmindful villain, Why stay’st thou here, and go’st not to the Duke ? Cate. First, mighty liege, tell me your Highness’ pleasure, What from your Grace I shall deliver to him. Rich. 0, true, good Cateshy:—hid him levy straight The greatest strength and power he can make, And meet me suddenly at Salisbury.” Here, by bis bland apology implied in “O, true, good Catesby,” which drops so easily that it seems to spring fresh from his heart, he instantly charms out the sting of his former words; and we feel that the man is knit closer to him than ever. Yet his kingly dignity is not a whit impaired, nay, is even heightened, by the act, partly from his graciousness of manner, and partly from his quick art in putting the apology under a sort of transparent disguise. It should be observed that Richard, with all his inborn152 Shakespeare’s characters. malignity, still does not properly hate those whom he kills: they stand between him and his purpose; and he has “ neither pity, love, nor fear,” that he should blench or stick to hew them out of the way. His malice wantons in biting taunts and caustic irony; he revels in teasing and galling others with bitter mocks and jerks; but he is too self-repressive and too politic to let his malice run out in gratuitous cruelties. A reign of terror planted and upheld by a guillotine of malicious wit is as far as his ambition and sagacity will permit him to ^o in that direction. For Shakespeare could never h^ve conceived of the English people as tolerating even for a day a reign of terror founded on a guillotine of steel. And Richard is prudent enough to restrain his innate virulence from attempting so suicidal a course as that. But he has at the same time a certain redundant, impulsive, restless activity of nature, so that he cannot hold still; and as his thought seizes with amazing quickness and surenes3 where and when and how to cut, so he is equally sudden £md sure of hand. It is as if such an excess of life and energy had been rammed into his little body as to strain and bulge it out of shape. I have observed that Richard is a villain with full consciousness ; and that, instead of endeavouring in any way to hide from his crimes, he rather fondles a id caresses them as food of intellectual pride. And such is Coleridge’s view. “ Pride of intellect,” says he, “is the characteristic of Richard carried to the extent of even boasting to his own mind of his villainy. Shakespeare here develops, in a tone of sublime morality, the dreadful consequences of placing the moral in subordination to the mere intellectual being.” In this respect, Richard transcends the Poet’s other crime-heroes, Iago and Edmund, who, with all their steepiing in hell-venom, are still unable to look their hellish purposes steadily in the face, and seek refuge in certain imaginary wrongs which it. is the part of manhood :o revenge either on particular persons or on society at large;.RICHARD» 153 This feature of Richard transpires audibly, and with not a little of special emphasis, in his soliloquies, both those in the Third Part of King Henry the Sixth, and also those in the present play. It has been questioned, and is indeed fairly questionable, whether the delineation in this point does not overpass the natural limits of human wickedness. One of the authors of Guesses at Truth thinks the Poet “ has somewdiat exaggerated the diabolical element ” in the speeches in question. “ If,” says he, “ we compare the way in which Iago’s plot is first sowm, and springs up, and gradually grows and ripens in his brain, with Richard’s downright enunciation of his projected series of crimes from the first, we may discern the contrast between the youth and the mature manhood of the mightiest intellect that ever lived upon earth.” Again, after noting how Richard’s sense of personal deformity acts as an irritant of his innate malice, the writer proceeds thus: “ I cannot but think that Shakespeare would have made a somewhat different use even of this motive, if he had rewritten the play in the maturity of his intellect. Would not Richard then, like Edmund and Iago, have palliated and excused his crimes to himself, and sophisticated and played tricks with his conscience ? ” And the writer affirms withal, that “ it is as contrary to nature for a man to anatomize his heart and soul thus, as it would be to make him dissect his owrn body.” Metaphors are rather ticklish things to reason with ; and the sentence last quoted goes somewhat to discredit the writer’s criticism in certain points which I am apt to think well taken. For in fact men often do practise a degree of self-anatomy in their mental and moral parts, such as were obviously impossible as regards their bodily structure. Now Richard as drawn by the Poet in action no less than in speech has a dare-devil intellectuality, in the strength of which, for aught I can see, he might inspect and scrutinize himself as minutely and as boldly as he would another person, or as another person would him. And why might he not, from the same cause, grow and harden into a habit of facing 1*154 Shakespeare’s cha, ers. his blackest purposes as unflinchingly as he does his unsightly person, and even of taking pleasure in oyer-painting their wickedness to himself, in order at once to stimulate and to gratify his lust of the brain ? And does not his most distinctive feature, as compared with lago and Edmund, stand mainly in this, that intellectual pride is in a more exclusive manner the constituent of his character: The critic, be it observed, specially faults certain of Richard’s soliloquies, as if there were something exceptionally wrong in these; and the question with me is, whether these are not in perfect keeping with his character as transpiring in action throughout the play. For it is manifest that, ia what he does, no less than in what he there says, his hypocrisy is without the least shade of self-delusion. The most constant, the most versatile, the most perfect of actors, he is never a whit taken in by his own acting: he has, in consummation, the art to conceal his art from others; and because this is what he chiefly glories in, therefore he takes care that it may not become in any degree a secret to himself. Moral obliquity so played as to pass for moral rectitude is 13 him the test and measure of intellectual strength and dexterity; for which cause he delights not only to practise it, but also to contemplate himself while practising it, and even while designing it. And herein he differs from all real-life actors, where it is hardly possible but that hypocrisy anc self-deceit should slide into each other: hence it is that hypocrites are so apt to end by turning fanatics, and vice versa, as common observation testifies. But this is making Richard out an improbable character, — a character running to a height of guilt where no man could sustain himself in being? Perhaps so. And my purpose is not so much to vindicate the soliloquies as to suggest whether the charge raised from them will not hold equally against the whole delineation. If I am right in thinking that the soliloquies strictly cohere with his general action, it follows that both are in fault, or neither: so that, if the Poet be there in error, he is at least consistently so. In-RICHARD. 155 stead, therefore, of rejecting the forecited criticism, I should rather incline to extend it over the substance and body of the play; in the very conception of which we seem to have somewhat of the mistake, so incident to youthful genius, of seeking for excellence rather by transcending Nature than by closing with her heartily, and going smoothly along with her. It is plain that such a man as Richard must either cease to be himself, or else must be himself alone. Isolation, virtual or actual, is his vital air, the breath, the necessary condition of his life. One of his character, without his position, would have to find solitude; Richard, by his position, has the alternative of creating it: the former must be where none others are; the latter, where all others are in effect as if they were not. For society is in its nature a complexion of mutualities, and every rule pertaining to it works both ways: it is a partnership of individualities, some of them subordinate indeed, and some superior; but yet in such sort as to presuppose a net-work of ties running and recurring from each to each; so that no one can urge a right without inferring a duty, nor claim a bond without owning himself bound. But Richard’s individuality can abide no partner, either as equal, or as second, or in any other degree. There is no sharing any thing with him, in however unequal portions ; no acting with him, as original, self-moving agents, but only from him, as the objects and passive recipients of his activity. Such is the form and scope of his individuality, that other men’s cannot stand in subordination to it, but must either crush it, or fly from it, or be absorbed into it; and the moment any one goes to acting otherwise than as a limb of his person, or an organ of his will, there is a virtual declaration of war between them, and the issue must hang on a trial of strength or of stratagem. Hence there is, properly speaking, no interaction between Richard and the other persons of the drama. He is the all-in-all of the scene. And herein is this play chiefly distin-156 SHAKESPEARE’S CHARACTERS. guished from the others, .and certainly, as a work of art, not distinguished for the better, that the entire action, in all its parts and stages, so far at least as it has any human origin and purpose, both springs from the hero as its source, and determines in him as its end. So that the drama is not so much a composition of co-operative characters, mutually developing and developed, as the prolonged yet hurried outcome of a single character, to which the other persons serve but as exponents and conductors ; as if he were a volume of electricity disclosing himself by means of others, and quenching their active powers in the very process of doing so. The most considerable exception to this is Queen Margaret, whose individuality shoulders itself in face to face with Richard’s ; her passionate impulse wrestling evenly with his deliberate purpose, and her ferocious temper being provoked to larger and hotter eruptions by all attempts at restraint or intimidation. This, to be sure, is partly because she can do nothing; while at the same time her tongue is all the more eager and powerful to blast, forasmuch as she has no hands to strike. The preceding remarks may go far to explain the great and lasting popularity of this play on the stage. There being no one to share with the hero in the action and interest of the piece, this renders it all the better for theatrical starring; for which cause most of the great actors have naturally been fond of appearing in it, and play-goers of seeing them in it. Besides, the hero, as before remarked, is himself essentially an actor, though an actor of many parts, sometimes acting one of them after another, and sometimes several of them together: and the fact that his character is much of it assumed, and carried through as a matter of art, probably makes it somewhat easier for another to assume. At all events, the difficulty, one would suppose, must be much less in proportion to the stage-effect than m reproducing the deep tragic passions of Lear and Othello, as these burst up from the original founts of nature.RICHARD. 157 Richard, however, is not all hypocrite: his courage and his self-control at least are genuine; nor is there any thing false or counterfeit in his acting of them. And his strength of will is exerted even more in repressing his own nature than in oppressing others. Here it is, perhaps, that we have the most admirable feature of the delineation. Such a vigour of self-command, the central force of all great characters, seldom fails to captivate the judgment, or to inspire something like respect; and, when carried to such a height as in Richard, it naturally touches common people with wonder and awe, as being wellnigh superhuman. In this respect, he strongly resembles Lady Macbeth, that he does absolute violence to his nature in outwrestling the powers of conscience. In his waking moments, he never betrays, excej)t in one instance, any sense of guilt, any pangs of remorse; insomuch that he seems to have a hole in his head, where the moral faculties ought to be. But such a hole can noAvise stand with judgment and true sagacity, which Richard certainly has in a high degree. And it is very much to the point that, as in Lady Macbeth, his strength of will is evidently overstrained in keeping-down the insurgent moral forces of his being. But this part of his nature asserts itself in his sleep, when his powers of self-repression are suspended: then his involuntary forces rise in insurrection against the despotism of his voluntary. In his speech to the army near the close, he describes conscience as “ a word that cowards use, devis’d at first to keep the strong in awe”; and this well shows how hard he strives to hide from others, and even from himself, the workings of that deity in his breast: but the horrid dreams which infest his pillow and plague his slumbers, and which are disclosed to us by Lady Anne, are a conclusive record of the torturing thoughts that have long been rending and harrowing his inner man in his active career, and of the extreme violence his nature has suffered from the tyranny of will in repressing all outward signs of the work going on within. That his conscience in sleep158 siiakespeaee’s characters. should thus rouse itself and act the fury in his soul, to avenge the wrongs of his terrible self-despotism when awake, — this it is that, more than any thing else, vindicates his partnership in humanity, and keeps him within the circle of our human sympathies. Richard’s inexorable tenacity of purpose and his overbearing self-mastery have their strongest display in the catastrophe. He cannot indeed prolong his life; but he makes his death serve in the highest degree the end for which he has lived ; dying in a perfect transport of heroism, insomuch that we may truly say, “ nothing in his life became him like the leaving it.” Nay, he may even be said to compel his own death, when a higher power than man’s has cut off all other means of honour and triumph. Herein, too, the Poet followed the history: but in the prerogatives of his art he found out a way, which history knows not of, to satisfy the moral feelings; representing the hero as in Hands that can well afford to let him defy all the powers of human avengement. Inaccessible to earthly strokes, or accessible to them only in a way that adds to his earthly honour, yet this dreadful impunity is recompensed in the agonies of an embosomed hell; and our moral nature reaps a stern satisfaction in the retributions which are rendered vocal and articulate by the ghosts that are made to haunt his sleeping moments. For even so the Almighty sometimes chooses, apparently, to vindicate His law by taking the punishment directly and exclusively into His own hands. And, surely, His vengeance is never so awful as when subordinate ministries are thus dispensed with. I here refer, of course, to what takes place the night before the battle of Bosworth-field. The matter was evidently suggested by the history, which gives it thus: “ The fame went, that he had the same night a terrible dream; for it seemed to him, being asleep, that he did see divers images like terrible devils, which pulled and haled him, not suffering him to take any rest. The which strange vision not so suddenly strake his heart with fear, but itRICHARD. 159 stuffed his head with many busy and dreadful imaginations.” The effect of this vision is best told by Richard himself, when he starts from his couch in an ecstasy of fright: “ Give me another horse!— hind np my wounds ! — Have mercy, Jesu ! — Soft! I did but dream. — 0 coward conscience, how dost thou afflict me ! — The lights burn blue. —It is now dead midnight. Cold fearful drops stand on my trembling flesh. — My conscience hath a thousand several tongues, And every tongue brings in a several tale, And every tale condemns me for a villain. 1 shall despair. — There is no creature loves me ; And, if I die, no soul shall pity me. Ratcliff. [Entering.] My lord,— Richard Who’s there ? Rat. My lord, ’tis I. The early village-cock Hath twice done salutation to the morn ; Your friends are up, and buckle on their armour. Rich. 0 Ratcliff, I have dream’d a fearful dream! What thinkest thou — will our friends prove all true ? Rat. Ho doubt, my lord. Rich. 0 Ratcliff, I fear, I fear ! Methought the souls of all that I had murder’d Came to my tent; and every one did threat To-morrow’s vengeance on the head of Richard. Rat. Hay, good my lord, be not afraid of shadows. Rich. By the apostle Paul, shadows to-night Have struck more terror to the heart of Richard Than can the substance of ten thousand soldiers Armed in proof and led by shallow Richmond.” Thus the still small voice, which Richard so tyrannically strangles while consciousness is vigilant, takes its turn of tyranny with him when his other forces are in abeyance. And I suppose his intense, feverish activity of mind and body when awake springs in part from the gnawings of the worm: he endeavours, or rather is impelled, to stifle or lose the sense of guilt in a high-pressure stress and excitement of thought and work. For so the smothered pangs of remorse often act as potent stimulants or irritants of the intellect and will; the hell within burning the fiercer for160 shakespeaee’s characters. being repressed, and so heating the brain into restless, convulsive activity. In this way, the very conscience of crime may have the effect of plunging the subject into further crimes: Remorse “ Works in his guilty hopes and selfish fears, And, while she scares him, goads him to his fate.” And it is through the secret working of this power that Henry’s prophecy touching Richmond, and also the fortuneteller’s prediction which made the hero start on seeing the castle at Exeter, and hearing it called Rougemont, stick so fast in his memory, and sit so heavy on his soul through the closing struggle. As Gervinus says, “he who in his realistic free-thinking was fain to deny all higher powers, and by his hypocrisy to deceive even Heaven itself, succumbs at last to their inevitable stroke.” The introduction of Margaret in this play has no formal warrant in history. After the battle of Tewksbury, May, 1471, she was confined in the Tower till 1475, when, being ransomed by her father, she went into France, and died there in 1482. So that the part she takes in these scenes is, throughout, a dramatic fiction. And a very judicious piece of fiction it is too. Nor is it without a basis of truth; for, though absent in person, she was notwithstanding present in spirit, and in the memory of her voice, which seemed to be still ringing in the ears of both friends and foes; Her character, too, like Richard’s, has its growth and shaping in the preceding plays of King Henry the Sixth; which makes it needful to revert to certain matters there presented. Henry the Fifth had made great conquests in France, and died in 1422, leaving the crown to his infant son, afterwards Henry the Sixth, who at the age of twenty-two was married to Margaret of Anjou. During his nonage, what with the rising spirit of France, and what with the fierce feuds that sprang up amongst the English leaders, the provinces in France were recovered one after another to the FrenchMARGARET. 161 crown. The English people w^ere vastly proud of those conquests, and were stung almost to madness at the loss of them. Hence grew the long series of civil wars known as “the Wars of the Roses.” The great and fiery spirit of Margaret was present and active all through that conflict. The irritations caused by the losses in France are represented by Shakespeare as so many eggs of discord in the nest of English life, and Margaret as the hot-breasted fury that hatched them into effect; her haughty, vindictive temper, her indomitable energy, and fire-spouting tongue fitting her to be, as indeed she was, a constant provoker and stirrer-up of hatreds and strifes. Much has been said by one critic and another about the Poet’s Lancastrian prejudices as manifested in this series of plays. One may well be curious to know whether those prejudices are to be held responsible for the portrait he gives of Margaret, wherein we have, so to speak, an abbreviature and compendium of nearly all the worst vices of her time. The character, however lifelike and striking in its effect, is coloured much beyond what sober history warrants: though some of the main features are not without a basis of fact, still the composition and expression as a whole has hardly enough of historical truth to render it a caricature. A bold, ferocious, and tempestuous woman, void alike of delicacy, of dignity, and of discretion, all the bad passions out of which might be engendered the madness of civil war seem to flock and hover about her footsteps. Her speech and (iction, however, impart a wonderful vigour and lustihood to the scenes wherein she moves; and perhaps it was only by exaggerating her, or some other person, into a sort of representative character, that the springs and processes of that long national bear-fight could be developed in a poetical or dramatic form. Her penetrating intellect and unrestrainable volubility discourse forth the motives and principles of the combatant factions; while in her remorseless impiety and revengeful ferocity is impersonated, as it were, the very genius and spirit of the terrible con- K162 Shakespeare’s characters. fliet. So that we may regard her as, in some sort, an ideal concentration of that murderous ecstasy which seized upon the nation. And it should be observed withal, that popular tradition, sprung from the reports of her enemies, and cherished by patriotic feeling, had greatly overdrawn the wickedness of Margaret, to the end, apparently, that it might have something foreign whereon to father the evils resulting from her husband’s weakness and the moral distemper of the times. The dramatic character of Margaret, whether as transpiring at Court or in the field, is sustained at the same high pitch through all the plays wherein she figures. Afflictions do but open in her breast new founts of imbitterment: her speech is ever teeming with the sharp answer that engenders wrath; and out of every wound issues the virulence that is sure to provoke another blow. If any one thinks that her ferocity is strained up to a pitch incompatible with her sex, and unnecessary for the occasion; perhaps it will be deemed a sufficient answer, that the spirit of such a war could scarce be dramatically conveyed without the presence of a fury, and that the Furies have always been represented as females. I will add a few words touching the reason which seems to have justified the Poet in carrying on the part of Margaret, against the literal truth of history, into the scenes of King Richard the Third. Now it is considerable that in the earlier plays Richard is made several years older than he really was. Old enough, however, he was in fact, to have the spirit of the times thoroughly transfused into his character. There can be no doubt that the pungent seasoning sprinkled in here and there from the bad heart and busy brain of the precocious Richard is a material addition to those plays in an artistic point of view But there was, I think, good cause in the substantial truth of things why Richard should be there just as he is. In point of moral history, it was but rightMARGARET. 163 to forecast the style of character which the proceedings then on foot were likely to generate and hand down to after-times. And as in the earlier plays Richard supplies such a forecast, so in the later play Margaret supplies a corresponding retrospect. She was continued on the scene, to the end, apparently, that the parties might have a terrible present remembrancer of their former deeds; just as the manhood of Richard had been anticipated for the purpose, as would seem, of forecasting the final issues from the earlier stages of that multitudinous tragedy. So that there appears to be some reason in the ways of Providence, as well as in the laws of Art, why Margaret should still be kept in presence, as the fitting counterpart of that terrible man, — so merry-hearted, subtle-witted, and bloody-handed, whose mental efficacy turns perjury, murder, and what is worse, if aught worse there be, to poetry, — as he grows on from youth to manhood, and from manhood to his end, at once the offspring and the avenger of civil butchery. As for the part which Margaret takes in the scenes of King Richard the Third, I have but little to add respecting it. Her condition is vastly different indeed from what it was in the earlier plays, but her character remains the same. She is here stripped of arms and instruments, so that her thoughts can no longer work out in acts. But, for this very cause, her Amazonian energies concentrate themselves so much the more in her speech; and her eloquence, while retaining all its strength and fluency, burns the deeper, forasmuch as it is the only organ of her mind that she has left. 11 brief, she is still the same high-grown, wide-branching tree now rendered leafless indeed, and therefore all the fitter fo the blasts of heaven to howl and whistle through! Lorn suffering has deepened her fierceness into sublimity. At once vindictive and broken-hearted, her part runs into a most impressive blending of the terrible and the pathetic. Walpole, in his Historic Doubts, remarks that in this play the Poet “ seems to deduce the woes of the House of York from the curses which Queen Margaret had vented against164 Shakespeare’s characters. them.” Might it not as well be said that her woes are deduced from the curse formerly laid upon her by the Duke of York? I can perceive no deduction in either case: each seems hut to have a foresight of future woe to the other, as the proper consequence of past or present crimes. The truth is, Margaret’s curses do hut proclaim those moral retributions of which God is the author, and Nature His minister ; and perhaps the only way her former character could be carried on into these scenes was by making her seek indemnity for her woes in ringing changes upon the woes of others. She is a sort of wailing or ululating chorus to the thick-thronging butcheries and agonies that wind their course through the play. A great, brave, fearful woman indeed, made sacred by all the anguishes that a wife and a mother can know! Of the other characters in this play probably little need be said. — Hastings and Buckingham neither get nor deserve any pity from us. They have done all they could to nurse and prepare the human tiger that finally hunts them to death. Their thorough steeping in the wickedness of the times, and their reckless participation, either by act or by sympathy, in Richard’s slaughters, mark them out as worthy victims when, from motives no better than he is actuated by, they undertake to block the course which they have themselves exult-d to see that living roll of hell-fire pursue. 1 Stanley gauges the hero rightly from the first, penetrates j closest designs, and then adroitly fathers the results of s own insight upon some current superstition of omens or 'earns. Without sharing in any of Richard’s crimes or •filing his hands at all with blood, he turns Richard’s eapons against him, and fairly beats him at his own game, xis relationship to Richmond naturally marks him out for suspicion: he forecasts this from afar, and with a kind of honest knavery so shapes his course that he can easily parry or dodge or quiet the suspicion when it comes. With clean purposes, he dissembles them as completely as Richard doesLADY ANNE. 165 his foul ones. He is in secret correspondence with Richmond all along; yet carries it so, that no wind thereof gets abroad. His art takes on ^ the garb of perfect frankness, candour, and simplicity, which is art indeed. He counsels Dorset to speed his flight to Richmond, and gives him letters ; then goes straight to Richard, and tells him Dorset has fled. He is also the first to inform Richard that “ Richmond is on the seas,” and that “ he makes for England, here to claim the crown.” By this timely speaking of wdiat is true, but what he would naturally be least expected to disclose, he makes a passage for the full-grown deceit which he is presently forced to use. But he justly holds it a work of honesty to deceive such an arch-deceiver in such a cause. And his patriotism and rectitude of purpose are amply shown in that, when the crisis comes, he stakes what is dearest in the world to him, for the deliverance of his country from the butchering tyrant. This was a good beginning for the noble and illustrious House of Stanley, which has, I believe, in all ages since stood true alike to loyalty and liberty. The parts of Lady Anne, of Elizabeth, the Duchess of York, and the two young Princes, are skilfully managed so as to diversify and relieve what would else be a prolonged monotony of atrocious wickedness and intellectual circus-riding. I say relieve, for the change from the society of such consummate hypocrisies and villainies to that of heart-rending sorrow is a relief: nay, it is almost a positive happiness thus to escape now and then from the doers of wrong, and breathe awhile with the suiferers of wrong. Lady Anne’s seeming levity in yielding to the serpert flatteries of the wooing homicide is readily forgiven in the sore burden of grief which it entails upon her, in her subdued gentleness to other destined victims, and in the sad resignation with which she forecasts the bitterness of her brief future. Her nature is felt to be all too soft to stand166 Shakespeare’s characters. against the crafty and merciless tormentor into whose har. she has given herself; and she seems “Like a poor bird entangled in a snare, Whose heart still flutters, though her wings forbear To stir in useless struggle.” Elizabeth is prudent, motherly, and pitiful, withal by no means lacking in strength and spirit. Stanley, Margaret, and the Duchess excepted, she is the only person in the play who reads correctly the hero’s character, i From the slaughter of her kindred at Pomfret, her instinctive feminine sagacity gathers at once the whole scheme of what is coming, and anticipates the utter ruin-t# her House. But she is so benetted round with intriguing arts, and, what is still worse, so beset with the friendly assurances of minds less penetrating than hers, that all her defences prove of no avail in the chief point. It was both wise and kind in the Poet to represent her voice as so untuned to the language of imprecation, that she has to call on one so eloquent in curses as Margaret to do her cursing for her. In the scene where Richard wooes so persistently for her daughter’s hand, it appears something uncertain whether she is really beguiled and won by his wizard rhetoric, or whether she only temporizes, and feigns a reluctant acquiescence, and so at last fairly outwits him. Most critics, I believe, have taken the former view; but I am far from seeing it so: for her daughter’s hand is firmly pledged to Richmond already, and she is in the whole secret of the plot for seating him on the throne. So I take it as an instance of that profound yet innocent and almost unconscious \guile which women are apt to use in defence of those they lWe, and which so often proves an overmatch for all the resources of deliberate craft. The two Princes are charmingly discriminated, and the delineation of them, though compressed into a few brief speeches, is an exquisite piece of work. The elder is inquisitive, thoughtful, cautious in his w^h, hardly knowingKING RICHARD THE THIRD. 167 whether to fear his uncle or not, and, with a fine instinctive tact, veiling his doubt under a pregnant equivoque. The younger is pert, precocious, and clever, and prattles out his keen childish wit, in perfect freedom from apprehension, and quite innocent of the stings it carries. Their guileless intelligence and sweet trustfulness of disposition make a capital foil to the Satanic subtlety and virulent intellectuality of Richard. This drama has, in my judgment, many and great faults, some of which I have noted already. Certain scenes and passages excepted, the workmanship in all its parts, in language, structure of the verse, and quality of tone, is greatly below What we find in the Poet’s later plays. In many places, there is an overstudied roundness of diction and regularity of movement; therewithal the persons often deliver themselves too much in the style of set speeches, and rather as authors striving for effect than as men and women stirred by the real passions and interests of life; there is at times an artificial and bookish tang in the dialogue, and many strains of elaborate jingle made by using the same word in different senses; — all smacking as if the Poet wrote more from what he had read in books, or heard at the theatre, than from what his most prying, quick, and apprehensive ear had caught of the unwritten drama of actual and possible men. In illustration of the point, I may aptly refer to the hero’s soliloquy when he starts so wildly from his “ fearful dream ” ; some parts of which are in or near the Poet’s best style, others in his worst. The good parts I have quoted already, and those are indeed good enough: the rest is made up of forced conceits and affectations, such as Nature utterly refuses to own; albeit the plays and novels of that time were generally full of them. Here is a brief specimen: “What do I fear ? myself? there’s none else by : Richard loves Richard ; that is, I am I. Is there a murderer here ? No ; — yes, I am :168 Shakespeare’s characters. Then fly. Wliat, from myself ? Great reason why, — Lest I revenge myself upon myself. Alack, I love myself. Wherefore ? for any good That I myself have done unto myself ? O, no ! alas, I rather hate myself For hateful deeds committed by myself.” It is hard to believe that Shakespeare could have written this at any time of his life, or that the speaker was meant to be in earnest in twisting such riddles; but he was. Some have indeed claimed to see a reason for the thing in the speaker’s state of mind; but this view is, to my thinking, quite upset by the better parts of the same speech. On the whole, then, I should say that in this piece the author is struggling and vibrating between the native impulses of his genius and the force of custom and example; or like one just passing out of youth into manhood, and fluctuating between the two. For even so, in some of his plays, the Poet seems going more by fashion th^n by inspiration, or consulting now what is within him, now what is around him. And I think it stands to reason, that he could not have reached his own high ways of art without first practising in the ways already open and approved. Of course, as experience gradually developed his native strength, and at the same time taught him what this was sufficient for, he would naturally throw aside more and more the aids of custom and precedent; since these would come to be felt as incumbrances in proportion as he grew able to do better without them. ' And this would naturally hold much more in his efforts at tragedy than at comedy. For the elements of comedy, besides being more light and wieldy in themselves, had been playing freely about his boyhood, and mingling in his earliest observation of human life and character: so that here he would be apt to cast himself more quickly and unreservedly upon Nature, as he had been used to meet and converse with her. Tragedy, on the other hand, must in reason have been to him a much more artificial thing; andKING RICHARD THE THIRD. 169 he would needs require both a larger measure and a stronger faculty of observation and experience, before he could find the elements of it in Nature, and become able to digest and modulate them into the many-toned yet severe and nicely-balanced harmony of Dramatic Art. Is it not clear, then, that in proportion as he lacked the power to grasp and wield the forces of tragedy, in his first efforts in that kind, he would be mainly governed by what stood before him, and that the adventitious helps and influences of the time would be prominently reproduced in his work? Therefore it is, no doubt, that his earlier comedies are so much more Shakespearian in style and spirit and characterization than his tragedies of the same period. For can it be questioned that such a man so circumstanced would both find himself and make others find him sooner in comedy than in tragedy ? At all events, it is certain that his earlier labours in both kinds were, to a great extent, specimens of imitation; though, indeed, of imitation surpassing its models. It seems in fact to have been through the process of imitation that his character and idiom got worked out into free and self-reliant action. So that, as I have elsewhere remarked, it is a great mistake to regard Shakespeare as one with whom the ordinary laws and methods of intellectual growth and virtue had little or nothing to do. He must indeed have been a prodigious infant; yet an infant he unquestionably was; and had to proceed by the usual paths from infancy to manhood, however unusual may have been the ease and speed of his passage. Dowered perhaps with such a portion of genius as hath fallen to no other mortal, still his powers had to struggle through the common infirmities and incumbrances of our nature. For, assuredly, his mighty mind was not born full-grown and ready-furnished for the course and service of Truth, but had to creep, totter, and prattle; much study, observation, experience, in a word, a long, severe tentative process being required to insinew and discipline and regulate his genius into power. VUL. II. 8170 shakespeaee’s characters. KING HENRY THE EIGHTH. King Henry the Eighth was undoubtedly among the latest of the Poet’s writing: Mr. White indeed thinks it was the very last; nor am I aware of any thing that can be soundly alleged against that judgment. The play was never printed till in the folio of 1623. It is first heard of in connection with the burning of the Globe theatre, on the 29th of June, 1613: at least I am fully satisfied that this is the piece which was on the stage at that time. Howes the chronicler, recording the event »me time after it occurred, speaks of “the house being filled with people to behold the play of Henry the Eighth.” And we have a letter from Thomas Lorkin to Sir Thomas Puckering, dated “London, this last of June,” with the following: “No longer since than yesterday, while Burbadge’s company were acting at the Globe the play of Henry the Eighth, and there shooting off certain chambers in way of triumph, the fire catched, and fastened upon the thatch of the house, and there burned so furiously, as it consumed the whole house.” But the most particular account is in a letter from Sir Henry Wotton to his nephew, dated July 6, 1613: “Now, to let matters of State sleep, I will entertain you at the present with what happened this week at the Jankside. The King’s Players had a new play called All is True, representing some principal pieces in the reign of Henry the Eighth, which was set forth with many extraordinary circumstances of pomp and majesty. Now King Henry making a masque at the Cardinal Wolsey’s house, and certain cannons being shot oft* at his entry, some of the paper or other stuff wherewith one of them was stopped did light on the thatch, where, being thought at first but an idle smoke, and their eyes being more attentive to the show, it kindled inwardly, and ran round like a train, consuming within less than an hour the whole house to the very ground. This was the fatal period of that virtuousKING HENRY THE EIGHTH. 171 fabric; wherein yet nothing did perish but wood and straw, and a few forsaken cloaks.” Some of the circumstances here specified clearly point to the play which has come down to us as Shakespeare’s. Sir Henry, to be sure, speaks of the piece by the title 44 All is True ”; but the other two authorities describe it as 44 the play of Henry the Eighth.” And it is worth noting that Lorkin, in stating the cause of the fire, uses the very word, chambers, which is used in the original stage-direction of the play. So that the discrepancies in regard to the name infer no more than that the play then had a double title, as many other plays also had; the one referring to the moral character, the other to the historical substance, of the drama. And the name used by Sir Henry is unequivocally referred to in the Prologue, the whole argument of which turns upon the quality of the piece as being true. Then too the whole play, as regards the kind of interest sought to be awakened, is strictly correspondent with what the Prologue claims in that behalf; the Poet being here, more than in any other case, studious of truth in the historic sense, and adhering, not always indeed to the actual order of events, but with singular closeness throughout to their actual import and form. There is nothing fictitious in the material of the work. A sort of historical conscience, a scrupulous fidelity to Fact, is manifestly the ethical law of the piece; as if the author had here undertaken to set forth a drama made up emphatically of 44 chosen truth,” insomuch that it might justly bear the significant title All is True. The piece in performance at the burning of the Globe theatre is described by Wotton as a new play ; and it will hardly be questioned that he knew well what he was saying. The internal evidence of the piece itself all draws to the same conclusion as to the time of writing. In that part of Cranmer’s prophecy which refers to King James, we have these lines:172 Shakespeare’s characters. “ Wherever the bright Sun of heaven shall shine, The honour and the greatness of his name Shall be, and make new nations: he shall flourish. And, like a mountain cedar, reach his branches To all the plains about him.” On a portrait of King James once owned by Lord Bacon, the King is styled Imperii Atlantici Conditor. And all agree that the first allusion in the lines just quoted is to the founding of the colony in Virginia, the charter of which was renewed in 1612, the chief settlement named Jamestown, and a lottery opened in aid of the colonists. The last part of the quotation probably refers to the marriage of the King’s daughter Elizabeth with the Elector Palatine, which took place in February, 1613. The marriage was a theme of intense joy and high anticipations to the English people, as it seemed to knit them up with the Protestant interest of Germany ; — anticipations destined indeed to a sad reverse in the calamities that fell upon the Elector’s House: which reverse, however, has been amply made up since; the same union having given to England her present royal family, and thereby done much to prepare the way for that close alliance between her and the Germanic States which has stood firm through the most trying periods of European history. Concurrent with these notes of seeming Ilusión to passing events, are the style, language, versification, and psychagogic refinement of the workmanship itself; in all which respects it is hardly distinguishable from Corio-lanus and the other plays known to have been of the Poet’s latest period. All which considered, I am quite at a loss why so many editors and critics should have questioned whether Shakespeare’s drama were the one in hand at the burning of the Globe theatre. They have done this partly under the assumption that Shakespeare’s play could not have been ncvi at that time. But I cannot find such assumption at all sustained by any arguments they have produced. It is true a piece described as “The Interlude of King Henry the"KING HENRY THE EIGHTH. 178 Eighth” was entered at the Stationers’ in February, 1605. There is, however, no good reason for ascribing this piece to Shakespeare: on the contrary, there is ample reason for supposing it to have been a play by Samuel Rowley, entitled “When you see me you know me, or the famous chronicle history of King Henry the Eighth,” and published in 1605. Some, again, urge that Shakespeare’s play must have been written before the death of Elizabeth, which was in March, 1603. This is done on the ground that the Poet would not have been likely to glorify her reign so largely after her death. And because it is still less likely that during her life he would have glorified so highly the reign of her successor, therefore resort is had to the theory, that in 1613 the play was revived under a new title, which led Wotton to think it a new play, and that the Prologue was then written, and the passage referring to James interpolated. But all this is sheer conjecture, and is directly refuted by the Prologue itself, which clearly supposes the forthcoming play to be then in performance for the first time, and the nature and plan of it to be wholly unknown to the audience: to tell the people they were not about to hear “ A noise of targets, or to see a fellow In a long motley coat guarded with yellow,” had been flat impertinence in case of a play that had been on the stage several years before. In short, the whole argument of the Prologue pointedly infers the piece to be just what Sir Henry calls it, “a new play,” and would have been a point-blank insult to the audience according to the conjecture in question. As to the passage touching James, I can perceive no such signs as have been alleged of its being an after-insertion: the awkwardness of connection, which has been affirmed as betraying a second hand or a second time, is altogether imaginary: the lines knit in as smoothly and as logically with the context, before and after, as any other lines in the speech.174 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. Nor can I discover any indications of the play’s having been written with any special thought of pleasing Elizabeth. The design, so far as she is concerned, seems much rather to have been to please the people, by whom she was allbeloved during her life, and, if possible, still more so when, after the lapse of a few years, her prudence, her courage, and her magnanimity save where her female jealousies were touched, had been set off by the blunders and infirmities of her successor. For it is well known that the popular feeling ran back so strongly to her government, that James had no way but to fall in with the current, notwithstanding the strong causes which he had, both public and personal, to execrate her memory. The play has an evident making in with this feeling, unsolicitous, generally, of what would have been likely to make in, and sometimes boldly adventurous of what would have been sure to make out, with the object of it. Such an appreciative delineation of the meek and honourable sorrows of Catharine, so nobly proud, yet in that pride so gentle and true-hearted; her dignified submission, wherein her rights as a woman and a wife are firmly and sweetly asserted, yet the sharpest eye cannot detect the least swerving from duty; her brave and eloquent sympathy with the plundered people, pleading their cause in the face of royal and reverend rapacity, this too with an energetic simplicity which even the witchcraft of Wolsey’s tongue cannot sophisticate; and all this set in open contrast with the worldly-minded levity, and the equivocal or at least qualified virtue, of her rival, and with the headstrong, high-handed, conscience-shamming selfishness of the King; — surely the Poet must have known a great deal less, or a great deal more, than anybody else, of the haughty daughter of that rival and that King, to have thought of pleasing her by such a representation. Dr. Johnson was first in the judgment that the Prologue and Epilogue to this play w^ere not written by Shakespeare. I have not the slightest doubt that he was right. And, inKING HENEY THE EIGHTH, 175 fact, I believe all the critics who have since given any special heed to the matter have tied up in the same conviction. I am equally clear also in the same judgment touching the Epilogues to The Tempest and King Henry the Fourth, and the Chorus to the fourth Act of The "Winter's Tale. Nor indeed does it seem possible that any one having a right taste for Shakespeare should judge otherwise, after comparing those pieces with the Prologue to Troilus a?id Cressida, the Chorus to the Second Part of King Henry the Fourth, and the Choruses in King Henry the Fifth ; all of which ring the true Shakespearian gold for workmanship in that kind. It wras very common for the dramatic writers of the time to have such trimmings of their plays done by some friend. Who wrote the Prologue and Epilogue to the play in hand is by no means easy to decide. The well-known intimacy and friendship between Ben Jonson and Shakespeare naturally carry our thoughts to honest Ben; and, to the best of my judgment, the qualities of the workmanship render it not unlikely that he may have been the man; though there is in this case equally good, perhaps better, reason for ascribing the matter to John Fletcher. There is withal some ground for the further judgment that considerable portions of the play itself were not written by Shakespeare. Several points are relied upon as making for this opinion ; most of which are something too vague for logical handling, being rather addressed to the feelings than to the discursive faculty. I must rest with noting briefly the item of versification. And here the most available argument, if not the strongest, grows from the large excess of lines with amphibractic endings. This is the most constant and most striking peculiarity of Fletcher’s verse, making its movement rather languid and feeble in comparison with Shakespeare’s, where lines with iambic endings are almost always largely in excess. For example, take the speech of Charles in Fletcher’s Elder Brother, ii. 4: —176 shakespeaee’s characters. “ I have forgot to eat and sleep with reading, And all my faculties turn into study : ’Tis meat and sleep. What need I outward garments, When I can clothe myself with understanding ? The stars and glorious planets have no tailors ; » Yet ever new they are, and shine like courtiers : The seasons of the year find no fond parents; Yet some are arm'd in silver ice that glisters, And some in gaudy green come in like masquers ; And silk-worm spins her own suit and her lodging, And has no aid nor partner in her labours. Why should we care for any thing but knowdedge ? Or look upon the world, but to contemn it ? ” Here we have thirteen amphibractic endings in succession, without one iambic. Fletcher does not indeed very often carry the thing so far as that; but generally, I think, his lines ending with amphibrachs are not less than five or six to one; which proportion is as generally reversed in Shakespeare. This argument, pushed to the upshot, would consign many whole scenes, and indeed full half the play, to Fletcher. In particular, it would take away from Shakespeare the whole scene of Buckingham’s execution, ii. 1; also, the whole scene of Catharine, Wolsey, and Campeius, iii. 1; also, the whole scene of Catharine’s death, iv. 2; and finally, the whole of Cranmer’s magnificent prediction near the close. Unfortunately, however, for the argument, it seems to kill itself by proving too much. For I do not well see how, by this rule, we can except the superb dialogue of Wolsey and Cromwell in Act iii., scene 2 ; though I believe this whole scene is left to Shakespeare by those who would assign all the other portions specified to Fletcher. If, for instance, Wolsey’s soliloquy, beginning, “ Farewell, a long farewell to all my greatness,” and his last speech to Cromwell, may pass as Shakespeare’s, it does not appear, so far at least as the argument in question goes, why those other portions may not also be left to him. That soliloquy and that speech have the same or nearly the same excess ofKING HENRY THE EIGHTH. 177 amphibractic endings; yet, to my sense, there is nothing in the play more like Shakespeare or less like Fletcher in all other respects. Nor indeed do I find the scenes in question relishing particularly of Fletcher save in the one point of the forenamed excess. The truth seems to be, that Shakespeare’s verse became less and less studious of iambic ending as he advanced in life; the comparative frequency of line£ ending with amphibrachs being one of the most special traits of his later style. Nevertheless I am far from disowning altogether Fletcher’s partnership in the play, some portions of which, it seems to me, relish decidedly of his hand in certain other characteristics ; such as the hollow, affected piquancy and falsetto spiritedness of conversation in the third and fourth scenes of Act i., and the forced-feebleness of wit in the last scene but one. Nor should I scruple at all to give up the scene of the coronation, iv. 1. Certainly, if these and perhaps a few other passages were written by Shakespeare, I should say his hand must have lapsed from its cunning at the time. And indeed I think the play as a whole may be not unfitly remarked as showing the Poet’s genius in a course of alternate fadings and revivings, or as flickering through turns of faintness and of splendour. We know nothing of the disease which finally took him off; but it seems not unlikely that his great mind was already struggling with the foe. And the calm and holy sweetness of Catharine’s death-scene, so different from any thing else in his works, may well be felt to have been written with chastened and tender thoughts of his own mortality hovering about him. The historical matter of the play, so far as relates to the fall of Wolsey and the divorce of Catharine, was derived originally from George Cavendish, who was gentleman-usher to the great Cardinal, and himself an eye-witness of much that he describes. His Life of Master Wolsey is among the best specimens extant of the older English literature; the narrative being set forth in a clear, simple, manly 8 * L178 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. eloquence, which the Poet, in some of his finest passages, almost literally transcribed. Whether the book had been printed in Shakespeare’s time, is uncertain; but so much of it as fell w ithin the plot of the drama had been embodied in the chronicles of Holinshed and Stow^e. The fifth Act is remarkable as yielding a further disclosure of the Poet’s reading. The incidents and, in many cases, the very words, are taken from Fox the martyrologist, whose Acts and Monuments of the Church, first published in 1563, had grown to be a very popular book in the Poet’s time. The “ fierce vanities ” displayed in the Field of the Cloth of Gold, with an account of which the play opens, occurred in June, 1520, and the death of Buckingham in May, 1521. The court assembled for the divorce began its work on the 18th of June, 1529, and wras dissolved, without concluding any thing, on the ,23d of July. On the 17th of October following, Wolsey resigned the Great Seal, and died on the 29th of November, 1530. In July, 1531, Catharine withdrew from the Court, and took up her abode at Ampthill. Long before this time, the King had been trying to persuade Anne Boleyn, one of the Queen’s Maids of Honour, to be a sort of left-handed wife to him; but an older sister of hers had already held that place, and had enough of it: so she wras resolved to be his right-handed wife, or none at all; and, as the Queen would not recede from her appeal to the Pope, Anne still held off till she should have more assurance of the divorce being carried through. In September, 1532, she was made Marchioness of Pembroke, and was privately married to the King on the 25th of January, 1583. Cranmer became Archbishop of Canterbury the next March, and w-ent directly about the business of the divorce, which wras finished on the 24th of May. This was followed, in June, by the coronation of the new Queen, and in September, by the birth and christening of the Princess Elizabeth. Soon after the divorce, Catharine removed to Kimbolton, where, in the course of the next year, 1534, she had to digest the slaughter of her steadfast friends, Fisher and More;KING HENRY THE EIGHTH. 179 as the peculiar temper of the King, being then without the eloquence of the great Cardinal or the virtue of the good Queen to assuage it, could no longer be withheld from such repasts of blood. Catharine died on the 8th of January, 1536, which was some two years and four months after the birth of Elizabeth; a transposition of events very helpful to the purpose of the drama, without any harm to the substantial truth of history. As for the matter of Cranmer and the Privy Council in Act v., this did not take place till 1544, more than eleven years after the event with which the play closes; another judicious departure from the actual order of things. The aptness of the matter for just stage-effect was evident enough, and it is used to that end with no little skill; but, as the plan of the piece required it to wind up with the christening of Elizabeth, the Poet could nowise avail himself of that matter but by anticipating and drawing it back to an earlier time. Thus far we have only a principle of dramatic convenience for the transposition. But there is really a much deeper reason. For the passage yields the most pertinent and forcible instance of that steady support of Cranmer by the King which was necessary to prepare the way for the final establishment of the Reformation on Elizabeth’s coming to the crown. And the main interest of the drama, viewed as a wdiole, was clearly meant to turn on that renovation of mind and soul which was to take its beginnings from or along with the establishing of the Reformed Faith: a strong forecast to this effect runs as an undercurrent through the play, now and then rising to the surface in hopeful and joyous anticipation; while the whole ends by projecting the thoughts far onward to the glories thence resulting. So that the matter in question, though later in time than the birth of Elizabeth, nevertheless stood in true logical antecedence to the ushering-in of that new era in the national life which was to illustrate her reign, and with the prevision of which the drama was to conclude.180 Shakespeare’s characters. It is a question of no little interest, how far and in what sort the Poet here stands committed to the Reformation; if at all, whether more as a religious or as a national movement. He certainly shows a good mind towards Cranmer; but nothing can be justly argued from this, for he shows the same quite as much towards Catharine; and the King’s real motives for putting her away are made plain enough. There are however several expressions, especially that in Cranmer’s prophecy touching Elizabeth, —44 In her days God shall be truly known,” — which indicate pretty clearly how the Poet regarded the great ecclesiastical question of the time; though it may be fairly urged that in all these cases he does but make the persons speak characteristically, without practising any ventriloquism about them. Not that I have any doubt as to his being what would now be called a Protestant. That he was most truly and wisely such, is quite evident, I think, in the general complexion of the piece, which, by the way, is the only one of his plays where this issue enters into the structure and life of the work. Surely no man otherwise minded would have selected and ordered the materials of a drama so clearly with a view to celebrate Elizabeth’s reign, all the main features of which were identified with the Protestant interest by foes as well as friends. But, whether he were made such more by religious or by national sympathies, is another question, and one not to be decided so easily. For the honour and independence of England were then so bound up with that cause, that the Poet’s sound English -heart, and the strong current of patriotic sentiment that flowed through his veins, were enough of themselves to secure it his unreserved adhesion. That there was, practically, no breath for the stout nationality of old England but in the atmosphere of the Reformation, left no choice to such a thorough-going Englishman as Shakespeare everywhere approves himself. All which sets off the more clearly the Poet’s judicial calmness in giving to the characters severally their due, and in letting them speak out freely and inKING HENRY THE EIGHTH. 181 their own way the mind that is within them. That, in his view, they could best serve his ends by being true to themselves, is sufficient proof that his ends were right. The social and civil climate of England as shown in this piece is very different from that in the other plays of the historical series. A new order of things has evidently sprung up and got firm roothold in the land. Nor have we far to seek for the causes of this. All through the time of Henry the Eighth, owing to the long frenzy of civil slaughter which had lately possessed the nation, the English people, as I have elsewhere remarked, were in nervous dread of a disputed succession. >In the course of that frenzy, the old overgrown nobility became greatly reduced in numbers and crippled in strength, so as to be no longer an effective check upon the constitutional head of the State. The natural effect was to draw the throne into much closer sympathy with the people at large: the King had to throw himself more and more upon the commons; which of course brought on a proportionable growth of this interest. So, in these scenes, we find the commons highly charged with a sense of their rising stre’ 0th, and the rulers, from the King downwards, quailing oefore their determined voice. The best chance of power and consequence is felt to be by “ gaining the love of the commonalty.” On the other hand, the people being thus for the first time brought into direct intercourse with the throne, and being elated with the novelty of having the King with them, become highly enthusiastic in his cause; they warm up intensely towards his person, and are indeed the most obsequious of all orders to any stretches of prerogatives that he may venture in then-name ; the growth of his power being felt by them as the growth of their own. So that this state of things had the effect for a while of greatly enhancing the power of the crown. Henry the Eighth was almost if not altogether autocratic in his rule. Both he and Elizabeth made themselves directly responsible to the people, and the people in turn made them all but irresponsible.182 SHAKESPEAKE’S CHARACTERS. Nor do the signs of a general transition process stop here. Corresponding changes in ideas and manners are going on. Under the long madness of domestic butchery, the rage for war had in all classes thoroughly spent itself. Military skill and service is no longer the chief, much less the only path to preferment and power. Another order of abilities has come forward, and made its way to the highest places of honour and trust. The custom is gradually working in of governing more by wisdom, and less by force. The arts of war are yielding the chief seat to the arts of peace: learning, eloquence, civic accomplishment, are disputing precedence with hereditary claims: even the highest noblemen are getting ambitious of shining in the new walks of honour, and of planting other titles to nobility than birth and family and warlike renown; insomuch that the princely Buckingham, graced as he is with civil abilities, and highly as he \ alues himself upon them, complains that “ a beggar’s book outworths a noble’s blood.” This new order of things has its crowning exponent in Wolsey, whose towering greatness in the State is because he really leads the age in the faculties and resources of solid statesmanship. But his rapid growth of power and honour not only turns his own head, but provokes the envy and hatred of the old nobility, wdiose untamed pride of blood naturally resents his ostentatious pride of merit. And he has withal in large measure the overgrown upstart’s arrogance towards both the class from which he sprang and the class into which he has made his way. Next to Wolsey, the King himself, besides having strong natural parts, was the most accomplished man in the same arts, and probably the ablest statesman that England had in his time. But his nature was essentially coarse, hard, and sinister; his refinement was but skin-deep, and without any roothold in his heart; and, from the causes already noted, his native infirmities got pampered into the ruffianism, at once cold and boisterous, wrhich won him the popular designation of “ bluff King Hal,” and which is artfully disguised indeed by theKING HENRY THE EIGHTH. 183 Poet, yet not so but that we feel its presence more than enough in the play. The characterization of this drama, at least in all the leading persons, is thoroughly Shakespearian. But I cannot think the piece a happy instance of the Poet’s skill in dramatic architecture. Judged by the standard which Shakespeare himself supplies, the play must be pronounced not very well organized. I have already stated what seems to be the governing thought, namely, the establishment of the Reformation, and the grandeur of England thence resulting : yet I have to own that the several parts, though noble in themselves, and though not wanting in historical connection, seem to have no clear principle of dramatic concert and unity, no right artistic centre. They rather give the impression of having been put together arbitrarily, and not under any organic law. The various threads of interest do not pull together, nor show any clear intelligence of each other. The matter is well stated by Gervinus: “ The interest first clings to Buckingham and his designs against Wolsey, but with the second Act he* leaves the stage ; then Wolsey draws the attention increasingly, and he too disappears in the third Act; meanwhile our sympathies are drawn more and more to Catharine, who also leaves the stage in the fourth Act: then, after being thus shattered through four Acts by circumstances of a tragic character, we have the fifth Act closing with a merry festivity, for which we are not prepared, and crowning the King’s base passion with victory, in which we take no warm interest.” The interest, however, of the several portions is deep and genuine while it lasts. We are carried through a series of sudden and most affecting reverses. One after another, the184 Shakespeare’s characters. First, we have Buckingham in the full-blown pride of rank and talents. He is wise in counsel, rich in culture and accomplishment, of captivating deportment, learned and eloquent in discourse. A too self-flattering sense of his strength and importance has made him insolent and presumptuous ; and his self-control has failed from the very elevation that rendered it most needful to him. In case of Henry’s dying without issue, he was the next male heir to the throne in the Beaufort branch of the Lancastrian House. So he plays with aspiring thoughts, and practises the arts of popularity, and calls in the aid of fortune-tellers to feed his ambitious schemes, and at the same time by his haughty bearing stings the haughtiness of Wolsey, and sets that wary, piercing eye in quest of matter against him. Thus he puts forth those leaves of hope which, as they express the worst parts of himself, naturally provoke the worst parts of others, and so invite danger while blinding him to its approach; till at length all things within and around are made ripe for his upsetting and ruin; and while he is exultingly spreading snares for the Cardinal, he is himself caught and crushed with the strong toils of that master hand. Next, we have the patient and saintly Catharine sitting in state with the King, all that she would ask being granted ere she asks it; sharing half his power, and appearing most worthy of it when most free to use it. She sees blessings flowing from her hand to the people, and the honour and happiness of the nation reviving as she pleads for them; and her state seems secure, because it stands on nothing but virtue, and she seeks nothing but the good of all within her reach. Yet even now the King is cherishing in secret the passion that has already supplanted her from his heart, and his sinister craft is plotting the means of divorcing her from his side, and at the same time weaving about her such a net of intrigue as may render her very strength and beauty of character powerless in her behalf; so that before she feels the meditated wrong all chance of redress is foreclosed, andWOLSEY. 185 she is left with no defence but the sacredness of her sorrows. Then we have the overgreat Cardinal, wdio, in his plenitude of inward forces, has cut his way and carried himself upward over whatever offered to stop him. He walks most securely when dangers are thickest about him; and is sure to make his purpose so long as there is any thing to hinder him; because he has the gift of turning all that would thwart him into the ministry of a new strength. His cunning hand quietly gathers in the elements of power, because he best knows how to use it, and wdierein the secret of it lies: he has the King for his pupil and dependent, because his magic of tongue is never at a loss for just the right word at just the right time. By his wisdom and eloquence he assuages Henry’s lawless tempers, and charms his headstrong caprice into prudent and prosperous courses, and thus gets the keeping of his will. That he can always sweeten the devil out of the King, and hold him to the right, is hardly to be supposed; but even when such is not the case he still holds the King to him by his executive ability and art in putting the wrong smoothly thrc/ugh. His very power, however, of rising against all opposers serves, apparently, but to aggravate and assure his fall, when there is no further height for him to climb; and at last, through his own mere oversight and oblivion, he loses all, from his having no more to gain. Yet in all these cases, inasmuch as the persons have their strength inherent, and not adventitious, therefore they carry it with them in their reverses; or rather, in seeming to lose it, they augment it. For it is then seen, as it could not be before, that the greatness which was in their circumstances served to obscure that which was in themselves. Buckingham is something more and better than the gifted and accomplished nobleman, when he stands before us unpropped and simply as “ poor Edward Bohun ”; his innate nobility being then set free, and his mind falling back upon its naked self for the making good his title to respect. Wol-186 Shakespeare’s characters. sey, also, towers far above the all-performing and all-powerful Cardinal and Chancellor who “ bore his blushing honours thick upon him,” when, stripped of every thing that fortune and favour can give or take away, he bestows his great mind in parting counsel upon Cromwell; when he comes, “ an old man broken with the storms of State,” to beg “ a little earth for charity ”; and when he has really “ felt himself, and found the blessedness of being little.” Nor is the change in our feelings towards these men, after their fall, merely an effect passing within ourselves: it proceeds in part upon a real disclosure of something in •them that was before hidden beneath the superinducings of place and circumstance. Their nobler and better qualities shine .out afresh when they are brought low, so that from their fall we learn the true causes of their rising. And because this real and true exaltation springs up naturally in consequence of their fall, therefore it is that from their ruins the Poet builds “such noble scenes as draw the eye to flow.” Wolsey is indeed a superb delineation, strong, subtile, comprehensive, and profound. All the way from his magnificent arrogance at the start to his penetrating and persuasive wisdom on quitting the scene, the space is rich with deep and telling lines of character. The corrupting influences of place and power have stimulated the worser elements of his nature into an usurped predominance: pride, ambition, duplicity, insolence, vindictiveness, a passion for intriguing and circumventing arts, a wilful and elaborate stifling of conscience and pity, confidence in his potency of speech making him reckless of truth and contemptuous of simplicity and purity, — these are the faults, all of gigantic stature, that have got possession of him. When the reverse, so sudden and decisive, overtakes him, its first effect is to render him more truthful. In the great scene, iii. 2, where Norfolk, Suffolk, and Surrey so remorselessly hunt him down with charges and reproaches, his conscience is quickly stungWOLSEY. 187 into resurgence ; with clear eye he begins to see, in their malice and their ill-mannered exultation at his fall, a reflection of his own moral features, and with keen pangs of remorse he forthwith goes to searching and hating and despising in himself the things that show so hateful and so mean in his enemies ; and their envenomed taunts have the eflect rather of composing his mind than of irritating it. To be sure, he at first stings back again; but in his up-workings of anger his long-dormant honesty is soon awakened, and this presently calms him. His repentance, withal, is hearty and genuine, and not a mere exercise in self-cozenage, or a fit of self-commiseration : as he takes all his healthy vigour and clearness of understanding into the process, so he is carried through, a real renovation of the heart and rejuvenescence of the soul: his former sensibility of principle, his early faith in truth and right, which had been drugged to sleep with the high-wines of state and pomp, revive ; and with the solid sense and refreshment of having triumphed over his faults and put down his baser self, his self-respect returns ; and he now feels himself stronger with the world against him than he had been with the world at his beck. As the first practical fruit of all this, and the best proof of his earnestness in it, he turns away his selfishness, and becomes generous, preferring another’s welfare and happiness to his own : for so he bids Cromwell fly from him, and bestow his services where the benefits thereof will fall to the doer ; whereas a selfish man in such a case would most of all repine at losing thè aid and comfort of a cherished and trusted servant. Finally, in his parting counsel to Cromwell, there is a home-felt calmness and energy of truth, such as assures us that the noble thoughts and purposes, the deep religious wisdom, which launched him, and for some time kept with him, in his great career, have been reborn within him, and are far sweeter to his taste than they were before he had made trial of their contraries. No man could speak such words as the following, unless his whole soul were in them:188 SHAKE SPEAEE’s CHAEACTEES. “ Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition : By that sin fell the angels; how can man, then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by’t ? Love thyself last; cherish those hearts that hate thee: Corruption wins not more than honesty. Still in thy right hand carry gentle peace, To silence envious tongues. Be just, and fear not: Let all the ends thou aim’st at be thy country’s, Thy God’s, and truth’s : then if thou fall’st, 0 Cromwell, Thou fall’st a blessed martyr.” The delineation of Catharine differs from the two foregoing, in that she maintains the same simple, austere, and solid sweetness of mind and manners through all the changes of fortune. Yet she, too, rises by her humiliation, and is made perfect by suffering, if not in herself, at least to us; for it gives her full sway over those deeper sympathies which are necessary to a just appreciation of the profound and venerable beauty of her character. She is mild, meek, and discreet; and the harmonious blending of these qualities with her high Castilian pride gives her a very peculiar charm. Therewithal she is plain in mind and person; has neither great nor brilliant parts ; and of this she is fully aware, for she knows herself thoroughly : but she is nevertheless truly great,—and this is the one truth about her which she does not know, — from the symmetry and composure wherein all the elements of her being stand and move together: so that she presents a remarkable instance of greatness in the whole, with the absence of it in the parts. How clear and exact her judgment and discrimination! yet we scarce know whence it comes, or how. From the first broaching of the divorce, she knows the thing is all a foregone conclusion with the King; she is also in full possession of the secret why it is so: she feels her utter helplessness, being, as she is, in a land of strangers, with a capricious tyrant for the party against her, so that no man will dare to befriend her cause with honest heartiness; that no trial there to be had can be any thing but a mockery of justice, forCATHARINE. 189 the sole purpose will be to find arguments in support of what is predetermined, and to set a face of truth on a body of falsehood: she has no way therefore but* to take care of her own cause; her only help lies in being true to herself; and indeed the modest, gentle, dignified wisdom with which she schools herself to meet the crisis is worth a thousand-fold more than all the defences that any learning and ingenuity and eloquence could frame in her behalf. Her power over our better feelings is in no small degree owing to the impression we take, that she sees through her husband perfectly, yet never in the least betrays to him, and hardly owns to herself, what mean and hateful qualities she knows or feels to be in him. It is not possible to overstate her simple artlessness of mind; while nevertheless her simplicity is of such a texture as to be an overmatch for all the unscrupulous wiles by which she is beset. Her betrayers, with all their mazy craft, can neither keep from her the secret of their thoughts nor turn her knowledge of it into any blemish of her innocence; nor is she less brave to face their purpose than penetrating to discover it. And when her resolution is fixed, that “ nothing but death shall e’er divorce her dignities,” it is not, and we feel it is not, that she holds the accidents of her position for one iota more than they are worth; but that these are to her the necessary symbols of her honour as a wife, and the inseparable garments of her delicacy as a woman; and as such they have so grown in with her life, that she cannot survive the parting with them; to say nothing of how they are bound up with her sentiments of duty, of ancestral reverence, and of self-respect. Moreover many hard, hard trials have made her conscious of her sterling virtue: she has borne too much, and borne it too well, to be ignorant of what she is and how much better things she has deserved ; she knows, as she alone can know, that patience has had its perfect work with her: and this knowledge of her solid and true worth, so sorely tried, so fully proved,190 Shakespeare’s characters. enhances to her sense the insult and wrong that are put upon her, making them eat like rust into her soul. One instance deserves special noting, where, by the pe-culiar use of a single word, the Poet well illustrates how Catharine u guides her words with discretion,” and at the same time makes her suggest the long, hard trial of temper and judgment which she has undergone. It is in her dialogue with the two Cardinals, when they visit her at Bridewell: “ Bring me a constant woman to her husband, One that ne’er dream’d a joy^ beyond his pleasure ; And to that woman, when she has done most, Yet will I add an honour, — a great patience How much more is here understood than is expressed! By the cautious and well-guarded but pregnant hint conveyed in the last three words, the mind is thrown back upon the long course of trials she has suffered, and still kept her suffering secret, lest the knowledge thereof should defeat the cherished hope of her heart; with what considerate forbearance and reserve she has struggled against the worst parts of her husband’s character; how she has wisely ignored his sins against herself, that so she might still keep alive in him a seed of grace and principle of betterment; thus endeavouring by conscientious art to make the best out of his strong but hard and selfish nature. Yet all this is so intimated as not to compromise at all the apprehensive delicacy which befits her relation to him, and belongs to her character. The scope of this suggestion is well shown by a passage in the Life of Wolsey, referring to things that took place some time before the divorce was openly mooted. The writer is speaking of Anne Boleyn : “ After she knew the King’s pleasure and the bottom of his secret stomach, then she began to look very haughty and stout, lacking no manner of jewels and rich apparel that might be gotten for money. It was therefore judged by-and-by through the Court of every man, that she being in such favour mightTHE KING. 191 work masteries with the King, and obtain any suit of him for her friend. All this while, it is no doubt but good Queen Catharine, having this gentlewoman daily attending upon her, both heard by report and saw with her eyes how it framed against her good ladyship: although she showed neither unto Mistress Anne Boleyn nor unto the King any kind or spark of grudge or displeasure; but accepted all things in good part, and with wisdom and great patience dissembled the same, having Mistress Anne in more estimation, for the King’s sake, than she was before.” Catharine in her seclusion, and discrowned of all but her honour and her sorrow, is one of the Poet’s very noblest and sweetest deliverances. She there leads a life of homely simplicity. Always beautiful on the throne, in her humiliation she is more beautiful still. She carries to the place no grudge or resentment or bitterness towards any; nothing but faith, hope, and charity; a touching example of womanly virtue and gentleness; hourly in Heaven for her enemies ; her heart garrisoned with “ the peace that passeth all understanding.” Candid .and plain herself, she loves and honours plainness and candour in others; and it seems a positive relief to her to hear the best spoken that can be of the fallen great man who did more than all the rest to work her fall. Her calling the messenger “ a saucy fellow,” who breaks in so abruptly upon her, discloses just enough of human weakness to make us feel that she is not quite an angel yet; and in her death-scene we have the divinest notes of a “ soul by resignation sanctified.” The portrait of the King, all the circumstances considered in which it was drawn, is a very remarkable piece of work, being no less true to the original than politic as regards the author: for the cause which Henry had been made to serve, though against his will, and from the very rampancy of his Tices, had rendered it a long and hard process for the nation to see him as he was. The Poet keeps the worst parts of his character mainly in the background, veiling them192 Shakespeare’s characters. withal so adroitly and so transparently as to suggest them to all who are willing to see them: in other words, he does not directly expose or affirm his moral hatefulness, but places it silently in facts, and so makes him characterize himself in a way to be felt: nay, he even makes the other persons speak good things of him, but at the same time lets him refute and reprove their words by his deeds. At all events, the man’s hard-hearted and despotic capriciousness is brought to points of easy inference; yet the matter is carried by the Poet with such an air of simplicity as if he were hardly aware of it; though, when one of the persons is made to say of Henry, “ His conscience has crept too near another lady,” it is manifest that Shakespeare understood his character perfectly. His little traditional peculiarities of manner, which would be ridiculous, but that his freaky fierceness of temper renders them dreadful; and his mixture of hypocrisy and fanaticism, which endeavours to misderive his bad passions from Divine sources, and in the strength of which he is enabled to believe a lie, even while he knows it to be a lie, and because he wishes it true ; — all these things are shown up, without malice indeed, but without mercy too. In the whole matter of the divorce, Henry is felt to be acting from motives which he does not avow : already possessed with a criminal passion for which he is lawlessly bent on making a way, he still wants to think he has strong public reasons for the measure, and that religion and conscience are his leading inducements; and he shows much cunning and ability in pressing these considerations into view : but it is plain enough that he rather tries to persuade himself they are true than really believes them to be so; though there is no telling how far, in this effort to hide the real cause from the world, he may strangle the sense of it in his own breast. All this, however, rather heightens the meanness than relieves the wickedness of his course. The power or the poison of self-deceit can indeed work wonders; and in such cases it is often extremely difficult to judge whetherANNE BOLEYN. 193 a man is wilfully deceiving others or unconsciously deceiving himself: in fact, the two often slide into each other, so as to compound a sort of honest hypocrisy, or a state between belief and not-belief: but Henry wilfully embraces and hugs and holds fast the deceit, and rolls all arguments for it as sweet morsels under his tongue, because it offers a free course for his carnal-mindedness and raging self-will. But the history of his reign after the intellect of Wolsey and the virtue of Catharine were removed is the best commentary on the motives that swayed him at this time; and there I must leave him. In the brief delineation of Anne Boleyn tlfere is gathered up the essence of a long story. She is regarded much less for what she is in herself than for the gem that is to proceed from her; and her character is a good deal screened by the purpose of her introduction, though not so much but that it peeps significantly through. With little in her of a positive nature one way or the other; with hardly any legitimate object-matter of respect or confidence, she appears notwithstanding a rather amiable person; possessed with a girlish fancy and hankering for the vanities and glit-terings of state, but having no sense of its duties and dignities. She has a kindly heart, but is so void of womanly principle and delicacy as to be from the first evidently elated by those royal benevolences which to any just sensibility of honour would minister nothing but humiliation and shame. She has a real and true pity for the good Queen, which however goes altogether on false grounds; and she betrays by the very terms of it an eager and uneasy longing after what she scarcely more fears than hopes the Queen is about to lose. As for the true grounds and sources of Catharine’s noble sorrow, she strikes vastly below these, and this in such a way as to indicate an utter inability to reach or conceive them. Thus the effect of her presence is to set off and enhance that deep and solid character of whose soul truth is not so much a quality as the very 9 VOL. II. M194 SHAKESPE ARE’S CHARACTERS. substance and essential form; and who, from the serene and steady light thence shining within her, much rather than from acuteness or strength of intellect, is enabled to detect the duplicity and serpentine policy which are playing their engines about her. For this thorough integrity of heart, this perfect truth in the inward parts, is as hard to be deceived as it is incapable of deceiving. I can well imagine that, with those of the Poet’s audience who had any knowledge in English history, — and many of them no doubt had much, — the delineation of Anne, broken off as it is at the height of her fortune, must have sent their thoughts forward to reflect how the self-same levity of character, which lifted her into Catharine’s place, soon afterwards drew upon herself a far more sudden and terrible reverse. And indeed some such thing may be needful, to excuse the Poet for not carrying out the truth of history from seed-time to harvest, or at least indicating -the consummation of that whereof he so faithfully unfolds the beginnings. The moral effect of this play as a whole is very impressive and very just. And the lesson evolved, so far as it admits of general statement, may be said to stand in showing how sorrow makes sacred the wearer, and how, to our human feelings, suffering, if borne with true dignity and strength of soul, covers a multitude of sins; or, to carry out the point with more special reference to Catharine, it consists, as Mrs. Jameson observes, in illustrating how, by the union of perfect truth with entire benevolence of character, a queen, and a heroine of tragedy, though “ stripped of all the pomp of place and circumstance,” and without any of “the usual sources of poetical interest, as youth, beauty, grace, fancy, commanding intellect, could depend on the moral principle alone to touch the very springs of feeling in our bosoms, and melt and elevate our hearts through the purest and holiest impulses.”SHAKESPEARE’S CHARACTERS. TRAGEDIES. ROMEO AND JULIET. The story which furnished the ground-work of The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet was exceedingly popular in Shakespeare’s time. The original author of the tale as then received was Luigi da Porto, whose novel, La Giuli-etta, was first published in .1535. From him the matter was borrowed and improved by Bandello, who published it in 1554. Bandello represents the incidents to have occurred when Bartholomew Scaliger was lord of Verona; and the Veronese, wdio believe the tale to be historically true, fix its date in 1803, when the family of Scaliger held the government of the city. The story is next met with in the French version of Belleforest, and makes the third in his collection of Tragical Histories. These were avowedly taken from Bandello. Some of them however vary considerably from the Italian; as, for example, in this piece Bandello brings Juliet out of her trance in time to hear Romeo speak and see him die; and then, instead of using his dagger against herself, she dies of a broken heart; whereas the French orders this matter the same as we have it in the play. The earliest English version of the tale that has come down to us is a poem entitled The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet, written by Arthur Brooke, and published in 1562. This purports to be from the Italian of Bandello; but it agrees with the French version in making±96 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. the heroine’s trance continue till after the death of her lover. In some respects, however, the poem has the character of an original work; the author not tying himself strictly to any known authority, hut drawing somewhat on his own invention. I say known authority, because in his introduction to the poem Brooke informs us that the tale had already been put to work on the English stage. As the play to which he refers has not survived, we have no means of knowing how the matter was there handled. In 1567, five years after the date of Brooke’s poem, a prose version of the same tale was published by William Paynter in his Palace of Pleasure, a collection of stories made up from divers sources, ancient and modern. This is merely a literal translation from the French of Belle-forest, and by no means skilfully done, at that; though the interest of the tale is such as to triumph over the bungling workmanship of the translator. These two are the only English forms of an earlier date than the tragedy, in which the story has reached us. But the contemporary notices of it are such and so many as to infer that it must have been a popular favourite. This popularity was doubtless owing in a large measure to the use of the story in dramatic form. We have seen that the matter had been set forth on the stage before the publication of Brooke’s poem. That so great and general a favourite should have been suffered to leave the stage after having tried its strength there, is not probable; so that wTe may presume it to have been kept up on the boards in one form or another, till Shakespeare took it in hand, and so far eclipsed all who had touched it before, that their labours were left to perish. Whether the Poet availed himself of any earlier drama on the subject, is not known. ISTor, in fact, can we trace a connection between the tragedy and any other work, except Brooke’s poem. That he made considerable use of this, is abundantly certain from divers verbal resemblances, as well as from a general likeness in the matter and the orderingROMEO AND JULIET. 197 of the incidents. Perhaps I ought to add, that in sentiment, imagery, and versification the poem has very considerable merit, and, on the whole, may take rank among the best specimens we have of the popular English literature of that period. It is written in rhyme, the lines consisting alternately of twelve and fourteen syllables. The tragedy was first printed in 1597, and copies of that date are still extant. It is evident from certain internal marks, that this edition was surreptitious, or at least unauthorized. The authorship is not stated in the title-page; but we have the words, “ As it hath been often, with great applause, publicly played.” The next issue of the play was in a quarto pamphlet dated 1599, with the following on its title-page: “ The most excellent and lamentable Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, newly corrected, augmented, and amended. As it hath been sundry times publicly acted by the Right-Honourable the Lord Chamberlain’s Servants.” The same text was reprinted in the same form in 1609, and again at a later period, which however cannot be ascertained, the edition being undated. The play reappeared in the folio of 1623. Of course the Poet would hardly have undertaken to rewrite the play, had he not supposed he could make important changes for the better. Accordingly the second issue is a decided improvement on the first. How much the play was augmented is shown in that the text of 1597 is not quite three-fourths as long as that of 1599. And the difference of the two copies in respect of quality is still greater ; while the changes are such as hardly to consist with the old notion of the Poet having been a careless or a hasty writer. For instance, the speech of Juliet on taking the sleeping-draught, and also that of Romeo just before he swallows the poison, are mere trifles in the first copy as compared with what they are in the second. The improvement in these cases and in many others is such as may well cause us to regret that the Poet did not carry his older198 Shakespeare’s characters. and riper hand into some parts of the play which he left unchanged. The date more commonly assigned for the writing of the tragedy in its original form is 1596. This allows only a space of about two years between the writing and rewriting of the play; and I fully agree with Knight and Yerplanck that the second issue shows such a measure of progress in judgment, in the cast of thought, and in dramatic power, as would naturally infer a much longer interval. And there is one item of internal evidence which would seem to throw the original composition as far back as the year 1591. This is in what the Nurse says when prattling of Juliet’s age: “ ’Tis since the earthquake now ejeven years; and she was wean’d ” ; which has been often quoted as a probable allusion to the earthquake'that happened in England in the Spring of 1580, and “ caused such amazedness among the people as was wonderful for the time.” But arguments of this sort are very apt to pass for more than they are w^orth; and the most that I should affirm, with much confidence, is that the tragedy was written before 1595. The cast of thought and imagery, but especially the large infusion of the lyrical element, naturally associates it to the same stage of art and authorship which produced A Midsummer-Night's Dream ; the resemblance of the two plays in these respects being, I think, too marked to escape any studious eye, well practised in discerning the Poet’s different styles. And a comparison of Domeo and Juliet with the poetical portions of King Henry the Fourth, which was published in 1598, will suffice for concluding that the former must have been written at least several years before the latter. We have seen that nearly all the incidents of the tragedy w^ere borrowed. In fact, the Poet’s invention herein is confined to the duel of Mercutio and Tybalt, and the meeting of Romeo and Paris at the tomb. In the older English versions of the tale, there is a general fight between the partisans of the two houses; when, after many have beenKOMEO AND JULIET. 199 killed and wounded on both sides, Romeo comes in, tries to appease with gentle words the fury of Tybalt, and at last kills him in self-defence. The Poet’s change in this point is highly judicious, as bringing in a large accession of dramatic life and spirit. In the older versions, also, Paris shows a cold and selfish policy in his love-suit, which dishonours both himself and the object of it. Shakespeare elevates him with the breath of nobler sentiment; and the character of the heroine is proportionably raised by the pathos shed round her second lover from the circumstances of his death. Moreover the incidents, throughout, are managed with the utmost skill for dramatic effect; so that what was before a lazy and lymphatic narrative is made redundant of animation and interest. In respect of character, also, the play has little of formal originality beyond Mercutio and the Nurse; who are as different as can well be imagined from any thing that was done to the Poet’s hand. And all the other characters, though the forms of them are partly borrowed, are set forth with an idiomatic sharpness and vitality of delineation, to which the older versions of the tale make no approach. But what is most worthy of remark on this point is, that Shakespeare just inverts the relation of things: before, the persons served but as a sort of frame-work to support the story; here the story is used but as canvas for the portraiture of character and life. So that, notwithstanding the large borrowings, the play has eminently the stamp of an original work; and, which is more, an acquaintance with the sources drawn upon nowise abates our sense of its originality. Before proceeding further, I must make some abatements from the indiscriminate praise which this drama has of late received. For criticism, in its natural and just reaction from the mechanical methods formerly in vogue, has run to the opposite extreme of unreserved special-pleading, and hunting out of nature after reasons for unqualified ap-200 Shakespeare’s characters. proval; by which course it stultifies itself without really helping the subject. Now I cannot deny, and care not to disguise, that some parts of this play are sadly blemished with ingenious and elaborate affectations. For instance, Romeo, in the first dialogue he holds with Benvolio, has the following about love : “ 0 heavy lightness ! serious vanity! Misshapen chaos of well-seeming forms ! Feather of lead, bright smoke, cold fire, sick health ! Still-waking sleep, that is not what it is ! ” This string of antithetical conceits seems absurd enough. To be sure, the passage occurs before the hero’s soul has been fired by the vision of Juliet, and while his mind is busy with the dreamy, moonshine image of Rosaline; and he may be excused for playing with these smoke-wreaths of fancy, inasmuch as the true flame is not yet kindled in his heart. I must add, that such was the most approved way of describing love in Shakespeare’s time, and for some ages before: Petrarch and Chaucer used it, and divers old English poets and ballad-makers abound in it. But the best defence of it in this case is, that such an affected way of speaking not unaptly shows the state of Romeo’s mind under a passion that is self-generated, instead of being inspired by an external object. At all events, as compared with his style of speech after meeting with Juliet, it serves to mark the difference between being love-sick and being in love. But no such excuse will hold in several other cases; especially when we have the heroine dallying with similar quirks of fancy even in her most impassioned moments; as in the dialogue she has with the Nurse on first hearing of Tybalt’s death and Romeo’s banishment. Yet Knight boldly justifies these fantastical strains, as being “ the results of strong emotion seeking to relieve itself by violent efforts of the intellect, that the will may recover its balance.” Which is either a piece of far-fetched attorneyship, or else it is too deep for my comprehension. No, no! such things are plain disfigurements and blemishes, and criticism willROMEO AND JULIET. 201 best serve its proper end by calling them so. And if there be any good apology for them, doubtless it is, that they grew from the general custom and conventional pressure of the time, and were written before the Poet had by practice and experience worked himself above custom into the original strength and rectitude of his genius. I care not how much they are set down as faults of the age, not of the man, so they do not pass for other than faults. And I submit that any unsophisticated criticism, however liberal and broad, will naturally regard them as the effects of imitation, not of mental character, because they are out of keeping with the general style of the piece, and strike against the grain of the sentiment which that style inspires. We experience an unpleasant hitch of the sympathies whenever we come upon those passages; as if the author were obtruding his own crotchets upon us, instead of leaving us to the native and free transpiration of his characters. It should be noted withal, that the fault disappears after the third Act, and is met with in none of those passages which were new in the second edition. Bating certain considerable drawbacks on this score, the play gives the impression of having been all conceived and struck out in the full heat and glow of youthful passion; as if the Poet’s genius were for the time thoroughly possessed with the spirit and temper of the subject; while at the same time the passion is so pervaded with the light and grace of imagination, that it kindles only to ennoble and exalt. For richness of poetical colouring, — dispensed with lavish hand indeed, but yet so managed as not to interfere either with the development of character or the proper dramatic effect, but rather to help them both, — it may challenge a comparison with any of the Poet’s dramas. Of course, this play as a whole derives its character and idiom from the passion of the hero and heroine, all the parts being fused together in the energy of that. It is therefore as much a tragedy of love as Hamlet is a tragedy 9 *202 shakespeaee’s characters. of thought. And it is the only one of Shakespeare’s plays which proceeds, throughout, with supreme reference to that passion. Touching the unity of feeling which marks this drama, — an unity that has both its organic law and its efficient cause in that same passion, — Coleridge has a strain of criticism that ought always to go wuth the subject: “ Read Romeo and Jidiet: all is youth and Spring; youth with its follies, its virtues, its precipitances; Spring with its odours, its flowers, and its transiency: it is one and the same feeling that commences, goes through, and ends the play. The old men, the Capulets and the Montagues, are not common old men; they have an eagerness, a heartiness, a vehemence, the effect of Spring: with Romeo, his change of passion, his sudden marriage, and his rash death, are all the effects of youth; whilst in Juliet love has*all that is tender and melancholy in the nightingale, all that is voluptuous in the rose, with whatever is sweet in the freshness of Spring; but it ends with a long deep sigh, like the last breeze of an Italian evening.” In accordance with what is here noted, we find every thing on the run ; all the passions of the drama are in the same fiery-footed and unmanageable excess : the impatient vehemence of old Capulet, the furious valour of Tybalt, the brilliant volubility of Mercutio, the petulant loquacity of the Nurse, being all but so many issues of the reigning irritability and impetuosity. Amid this general stress of impassioned life, old animosities are rekindled, old feuds have broken out anew; while the efforts of private friendship and public authority to quench the strife only go to prove it unquenchable, the same violent passions that have caused the tumults being brought to the suppression of them. The prevalence of extreme hate serves of course to generate the opposite extreme; out of the most passionate and fatal enmities there naturally springs a love as passionate and fatal. With dispositions too gentle and noble to share in the animosities so rife about them, the hearts of the lovers are rendered thereby the more alive andROMEO ANT> JULIET. 203 open to impressions of a contrary nature; the fierce rancour of their Houses only swelling in them the emotions that prevent their sympathizing with it. Thus the Poet carries us smoothly along through all the aching joys and giddy transports of the lovers, by his manner of disposing the objects and persons about them; the leading passion, intense as it is, being so associated with others of like intensity, that we receive it without any sense of disproportion to nature; whereas, if cut out of the harmony in which it moves, it would seem overwrought and improbable. For who does not see how the feelings are here raised and sustained by a continuity of impression running from person to person, and thus authenticating the whole? In other words, we have no difficulty in sympathizing with the main part, because all the parts are in sympathy with each other. And the Poet secures this result with so much ease as not to betray his exertions; his means are hidden in the skill with which he uses them; and we forget the height to which he soars, because he has the strength of wing to bear us along with him, or rather gives us wings to rise with him of ourselves. One of the plainest things in human life, and yet one of the hardest for men to learn, is, that Nature will have her course in one shape or another. The more you put down her rights, the more you will be put down in turn by her wrongs. If you repress her native passions by factitious rules and manners, first you know those passions will somehow combine with your machinery of repression : the very prison of ice, with which you think to freeze up her outlets, will nurse an inward volcano, to explode against you. And such is the general condition of life depicted in this drama. It is a most artificial state of society, where all the safety-valves of nature are closed up by an oppressive conventionality, and where the better passions, being clogged down to their source, have turned their strength into the worse. People must live all by rule, nothing by instinct; that is,204 Shakespeare’s characters. their life is to be a form impressed from without, not unfolded from within. But the spontaneous forces of nature will assert themselves either for good or for evil. We have a choice outcropping of this in the first scene of the play ; where it is evident that the underlings of the two Houses have caught the fury of their masters, and are spiteful and quarrelsome for no other reason than that their natural fires are so much stifled beneath the artificial crust. They must needs fight, because to ape their betters has become a passion with them ; which could hardly be the case, but that passion and imitation have got forced into an unnatural mixture or alliance ; for it is against the proper instinct of passion to be imitative. To take another view of the matter : Principle and impulse are often spoken of as opposed to each other. And, as men are, such is indeed too often the case ; but in ingenuous natures, and in well-ordered societies, the two grow forth together, each serving to unfold and deepen the other ; so that we have principle warmed into impulse, and impulse fixed into principle. This gives us what may be described as a character informed with noble passions. And, say what we will, bad passions will have the mastery of a man, unless there be good ones to countervail them. For Reason, do the best she can, is not enough : men must love ; and their proper safeguard is in having their love married to truth and virtue. When such is the case, the state of man is at peace and unity : otherwise, he is a house divided against itself, where principle and impulse strive each for supremacy, and rule by turns ; headlong and sensual in his passions, cunning and selfish in his reason. Now this fatal divorce of reason and passion is the rule of life as represented in this drama. The generous impulses of nature are overborne! and stifled by a discipline of selfishness. Boldly calculative where they ought to be impassioned, people are of course blindly passionate where they ought to be deliberate and cool. Even marriage is plainly stripped of its sacredness, made an affair of expediency, notTHE LOVEES. 2 of religion, insomuch that a previous union of hearts is t couraged, lest it should interfere with a prudent union o. hands. Thus the hearts of the young are, if possible, kept sealed against all deep and strong impressions, and the development of the nobler impulses foreclosed by the icy considerations of interest and policy. Think you that Nature can with impunity be thus oppressed ? She will revolt. Amidst this heart-withering tyranny of custom, the hero and heroine stand out the unschooled and unspoiled creatures of native sense and native sensibility. Art has tried its utmost upon them, but Nature has proved too strong for it. In the silent creativeness of youth their feelings have insensibly matured themselves; and they come before us glowing with the warmth of natural sentiment, with susceptibilities deep as life, and waiting only for the kindling touch of passion. To go through life with a set of feelings ready-made, brewed together for social convenience, and then pumped into them, was a destiny which, from their innate strength of soul, they could not embrace. So that they exemplify the simplicity of nature thriving amidst the most artificial manners: nay, they are the more natural for the excess of art around them; as if nature, driven from the hearts of others, had taken refuge in theirs. Principle, however, is as strong in them as passion: they have the purity as well as the impulsiveness of nature; and because they are free from immodest desires, therefore they put forth no angelic pretensions. Idolizing each other, they would nevertheless make none but permitted offerings. Not being led by the conventionalities of life, they therefore are not to be misled by them: as their hearts are joined in mutual love, so their hands must be joined in mutual honour; for, while loving each other with a love as boundless as the sea, they at the same time love in each other whatsoever is pure and precious in their unsoiled imaginations. Thus their fault lies, not in the nature of their passion, but in its excess, — that they love each other in aSHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. gree that is due only to their Maker: but tms is a natural reaction from that idolatry of interest and self which pervades the rest of society, turning marriage into merchandise, and sacrificing the holiest instincts of nature to avarice, ambition, and pride. The lovers, it is true, are not much given to reflection, because this is a thing that can come to them only by experience, which they are yet without. Life lies glittering with golden hopes before them, owing all its enchantment perhaps to the distance: if their bliss seems perfect, it is only because their bounty is infinite; but such bounty and such bliss “ may not with mortal man abide.” Bereft of the new life they have found in each other, nothing remains for them but the bitter dregs from which the wine has all evaporated; and they dash to earth the stale and vapid draught, when it has lost all the spirit that caused it to foam and sparkle before them. Nevertheless it is not their passion, but the enmity of their Houses, that is punished in their death; and the awful lesson we read in their fate is against that barbarism of civilization which makes love excessive by trying to exclude it from its rightful place in life, and which subjects men to the just revenges of Nature, because it puts them upon thwarting her noblest purposes. Were we deep in the ways of Providence, we might doubtless forecast from the first, that these two beings, the pride and hope of their respective friends, would, even because themselves most innocent, fall a sacrifice to the guilt of their families; and that in and through their death would be punished and healed those fatal strifes and animosities which have made it at once so natural and so dangerous for them to love. It has been aptly remarked that the hero and heroine of this play, though in love, are not love-sick. Romeo, however, as we have seen, is something love-sick before his meeting with Juliet. His seeming love for Rosaline is but a matter of fancy, with which the heart has little or nothing to do. That Shakespeare so intended it, is plain fromROMEO. 207 what is said about it in the Chorus at the end of the first Act, especially the two quaint lines, — “Now old desire doth in his death-bed lie, And young affection gapes to be his heir.” The same thing is worked out, with a higher grace of art and a much riper insight of nature, in the case of the lovesick Duke Orsino, of Twelfth Night, in his wordy, sighful quest of Olivia. There is evidently no soul-seizure nor any thing genuine about it; and Orsino himself knows it was only a mock-spell, as soon as he gets disenchanted. Accordingly Romeo’s first passion is airy, affected, fantastical, causing him to think much of his feelings, to count over his sighs, and play with language, as pleased with the figure he is making; wThich shows that his thoughts are not so much on Rosaline, or any thing he has found in her, as on a figment of his own mind, which he has baptized into her name, and invested with her form. This is just that sort of love with which people often imagine themselves about to die, but which they always manage to survive, and that, without any further harm than the making them somewhat ridiculous. For when a man is truly in love, it is not his own health, but the health of another person, that he thinks about. Romeo’s love is a thing infinitely different. A mere idolater, Juliet converts him into a true worshipper; and the fire of his new passion burns up the old idol of his fancy. Love works a sort of regeneration upon him: his dreamy, sentimental fancy giving place to a passion that interests him thoroughly in an external object, all his fine energies are forthwith tuned into harmony and eloquence, so that he becomes a true man, with every thing clear and healthy and earnest about him. As the Friar suggests, it was probably from an instinctive sense that he was making love by rote, and not by heart, that Rosaline rejected his suit. The dream, though, has the effect of preparing him for the reality, while the contrast between them helps our appreciation of the latter.208 Shakespeare’s characters. Hazlitt pronounces Romeo to be Hamlet in love; than which he could not well have made a greater mistake. In all that most truly constitutes character, the two, it seems to me, have nothing in common. To go no further, Hamlet is all procrastination, Romeo all precipitancy: the one reflects so much that he cannot act; the other acts first, and does his reflecting afterwards. With Hamlet, it is a necessity of nature to think; with Romeo, to love : the former, studious of consequences, gets entangled with a multitude of conflicting passions and purposes; the latter, absorbed in one passion and one purpose, drives right ahead, regardless of consequences. It is this necessity of loving that, until the proper object appears, creates in Romeo an object for itself: hence the love-bewilderment in which he first comes before us. Which explains and justifies the suddenness and vehemence of his passion, while the difference between this and his fancy-sickness amply vindicates him from the reproach of inconstancy. Being of passion all compact, Romeo of course does not generalize, nor give much heed to abstract truth. Intelligent, indeed, of present facts and occasions, he does not however study to shape his feelings or conduct by any rules: he therefore sees no use of philosophy in his case, unless philosophy can make a Juliet; nor does he care to hear others speak of what they do not feel. He has no life but passion, and passion lives altogether in and by its object: therefore it is that he dwells with such wild exaggeration on the sentence of banishment. Thus his love, by reason of its excess, exalting a subordinate into a sovereign good, defeats its own security and peace. Had he stayed himself more on general considerations of life; had he tempered his interest in the transient with a due thoughtfulness of the permanent; he would have been a wiser man indeed, but not so entire a lover. Yet there is a sort of instinctive rectitude in his passion, which makes us rather pity than blame its excess; and we feel that death comes to him through it, not for it. WeROMEO. 209 can scarce conceive any thing more full of manly sweetness and gentleness than his character. Love is the only thing wherein he seems to lack self-control; and this is the very thing wherein self-control is least a virtue. He will peril his life for a friend, hut he will not do a mean thing to save it; has no pride and revenge to which he would sacrifice others, hut has high and hrave affections to which he will not shrink from sacrificing himself. Thus even in his resentments he is in nohle contrast with those about him. His heart is so preoccupied with generous thought, as to afford no room for those furious transports which prove so fatal in others : where their swords jump in wild fury from the scabbards, his sleeps quietly by his side: but then, as he is very hard to provoke, so is he very dangerous when provoked. For so it is when Tybalt would force him to a duel: “ Romeo still speaks him fair, bids him bethink How nice the quarrel is ; and this he urges With gentle breath, calm look, knees humbly bow’d.” He will not be stung out of his propriety by words of insult. But when he learns that the mad fire-spouter has killed his bold friend Mercutio, and is coming back in triumph, then all his manhood boils with irrepressible energy : ‘ ‘ Away to heaven, respective lenity ! And fire-ey’d fury be my conduct now ! — How, Tybalt, take the villain back again That late thou gav’st me ; for Mercutio’s soul Is but a little way above our heads, Staying for thine to keep him company : Either thou, or I, or both, must go with him.” In all this affair he plays the man, and all the parts of honour are held true to their just aim; thus exemplifying in perfect form the great law of heroism, that he who rightly fears to do wrong has nothing else to fear. Shakespeare has few passages in a higher pitch of eloquence than Romeo’s soliloquy at the tomb; where we have a tempest of various emotions, love, sorrow, pity, regret, N210 Shakespeare’s characters. admiration, despair, all subdued and blended in a strain of the most plaintive, sweetly-solemn music : “ What said my man, when my betossed soul Did not attend him as we rode ? I think He told me Paris should have married Juliet: Said he not so ? or did I dream it so ? Or am I mad, hearing him talk of Juliet, To think it was so ? — 0, give me thy hand, One writ with me in sour misfortune’s book ! I’ll bury thee in a triumphant grave, — A grave ! 0, no ! a lantern, slaughter’d youth ; For here lies Juliet, and her beauty makes This vault a feasting presence full of light. —• How oft, when men are at the point of death, Have they been merry ! — 0, my love ! my wife ! Thou art not conquer’d ; beauty’s ensign yet Is crimson in thy lips and in thy cheeks, And Death’s pale flag is not advanced there. — Tybalt, liest thou there in thy bloody sheet ? 0, what more favour can I do to thee, Than with that hand that cut thy youth in twain, To sunder his that was thine enemy ? Forgive me, cousin ! — Ah, dear Juliet! Why art thou yet so fair ? Shall I believe That unsubstantial Death is amorous ; And that the lean abhorred monster keeps Thee here in dark to be his paramour ? For fear of that, I still will stay with thee ; And never from this palace of dim night Depart again: here, here will I remain With worms that are thy chambermaids ; 0, here Will I set up my everlasting rest; And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars From this world-wearied flesh.” With what vividness every article of this speech tells of the speaker’s whereabout! All is surpassingly idiomatic of the spot, supremely characteristic of the man; not a thought, not an image, not a word, that could have come from any one but Romeo, or could have come from him at any other time, or in any other place. How prompt, how piercing, how kindling, his mental eye! seeing every thingJULIET. 211 just, as it is, and yet, from his preternatural illumination of mind, looking every thing full of his own passion, and turning it into something rich and rare. For his essential grace of imagination, touched with new virtue, as it is, by the genius of the place, beautifies all the dishonours of the grave, and sweetens its very offences into dearness: he sees but the presence of his Juliet; and he knows no home, no paradise but that; and whatever shares in that is precious to his sense. — Such is the strength, such the elevation, such the spiritualizing power of wedded love, as here depicted! Mr. Hallam — a man who weighs his words well before speaking them — gives as his opinion, that “it is impossible to place Juliet among the great female characters of Shakespeare’s creation.” Other critics of high repute, especially Mrs. Jameson, take a different view : but this may result in part from the representation being so charged, not to say overcharged, with poetic warmth and splendour, as to hinder a cool and steady judgment of the character. For the passion in which Juliet lives is most potently infectious: one can hardly venture near enough to see what and whence it is, without falling under its influence : while in her case it is so fraught with purity and tenderness, and self-forgetting ardour and constancy, and has so much withal to challenge a respectful pity, that the moral sense does not easily find where to fix its notes of reproof. And if, in her intoxication of soul and sense, she loses whatever of reason her youth and inexperience can have gathered, the effect is breathed forth with an energy and elevation of spirit, and in a transporting affluence of thought and imagery, which none but the sternest readers can well resist, and which, after all, there may be not much virtue in resisting. I have to confess, however, that Juliet appears something better as a heroine than as a woman, the reverse of which commonly holds in the Poet’s delineations. But then she is a real heroine, in the best sense of the term ; her woman-212 shakespeaee’s chaeactees. hood being developed through her heroism, not eclipsed nor obscured by it. Wherein she differs from the general run of tragic heroines, who act as if they knew not how to be heroic without becoming something mannish or viraginous j the trouble with them being, that they set out with a special purpose to be heroines, and to approve themselves such: whereas Juliet is surprised into heroism, and acts the heroine without knowing it, simply because it is in her to do so, and, when the occasion comes, she cannot do otherwise. It is not till the marriage with Paris is forced upon her, that her proper heroism displays itself. All her feelings as a woman, a lover, and a wife, are then thoroughly engaged; and because her heart is all truth, therefore it stands a fixed necessity with her, either “ to live an unstain’d wife to her sweet love,” or else to die. To avert what is to her literally an infinite evil, she appeals imploringly to father, to mother, and the Nurse, in succession ; nor is it till she is cast entirely on her own strength that she finds herself sufficient for herself. There is something truly fearful in the resolution and energy of her discourse with the Friar; yet we feel that she is still the same soft, tender, gentle being whose breath was lately so rich and sweet with words pf love. “ God join’d my heart and Romeo’s, thou our hands ; And ere this hand, by thee to Romeo seal’d, Shall be the label to another deed, Or my true heart with treacherous revolt Turn to another, this shall slay them both. Therefore, out of thy long-experienc’d time, Give me some present counsel ; or, behold, ’Twixt my extremes and me this bloody knife Shall play the umpire, arbitrating that Which the commission of thy years and art Could to no issue of true honour bring.” When told the desperate nature of the remedy, she rises to a yet higher pitch, her very terror of the deed inspiring her with fresh energy of purpose. And when she comes toJuliet. 213 the performance, she cannot indeed arrest the workings of her imagination, neither can those workings shake her resolution: on the contrary, in their reciprocal action each adds vigour and intensity to the other; the terrific images which throng upon her excited fancy developing within her a strength and courage to face them. In all whicl^there is indeed much of the heroine, but then the heroism is the free, spontaneous, unconscious outcome of her native womanhood. It is well worth noting how the different qualities of the female character are in this representation distributed. Juliet has both the weakness and the strength of a woman, and she has them in the right, that is, the natural places. For, if she appears as frail as the frailest of her sex in the process of becoming a lover, her frailty ends with that process: weak in yielding to the touch of passion, she is thenceforth strong as a seraph. Thus it is in the cause of the wife that the greatness proper to her as a woman transpires. Moore, in his Life of Myron, speaks of this as a peculiarity of the Italian women; but surely it is nowise peculiar to them, save that they may have it in a larger measure than others ; though even that is doubtful. For I think the general rule of women everywhere is, that the easiest to fall in love are the hardest to get out of it, and at the same time the most religiously tenacious of their honour in it. It is very considerable that Juliet, though subject to the same necessity of loving as Romeo, is nevertheless quite exempt from the delusions of fancy, and therefore never gets bewildered with a love of her own making. The elements of passion in her do not act, it is against her nature that they should act, in such a way as to send her in quest of an object: indeed those elements are a secret even to herself: she suspects not their existence, till the proper object appears, because it is the inspiration of that object that kindles them. Her modesty, too, is much like Romeo’s honour; that is, it is a living attribute of her character, and214 Shakespeare’s characters. not a result of conventional pressure. She therefore does not try to disguise or conceal from herself the impulses of her nature, because they are justly sanctified to her by the religion of her heart. On this point, especially with reference to the famous soliloquy at the beginning of the second scene of the third Act, I will leave her in the hands of Mrs. Jameson; who with a rare gift to see what is right joins an equal felicity in expressing it. “ Let it be remembered,” says she, “ that in this speech Juliet is not supposed to be addressing an audience, nor even a confidante; and I confess I have been shocked at the utter want of taste and refinement in those who, with coarse derision, or in a spirit of prudery yet more gross and perverse, have dared to comment on this beautiful Hymn to the Night, breathed out by Juliet in the silence and solitude of her chamber. She is thinking aloud ; it is the young heart c triumphing to itself in words ’; and her impatience, to use her own expression, is truly that of ‘ a child before a festival, that hath new robes and may not wear them.’ ” The Nurse is in some respects another edition of Mrs. Quickly, though in a different binding. The character has a tone of reality that almost startles us on a first acquaintance. She gives the impression of a literal transcript from actual life; which is doubtless owing in part to the predominance of memory in her mind; as in her account of Juliet’s age, where she cannot go on without bringing in all the accidents of the subject just as they fell out in the order— of place and time. And she has a way of repeating tlie__ same thing in the same words, so that it strikes us as a fact_ cleaving to her thoughts, and exercising a sort of fascination over them. She is idealized indeed, but rather idealized into the dirt than out of it. This general passiveness of mind naturally makes her whole character “ smell of the shop.” She takes the print of circumstances without the least mitigation, and holds it unmodified by any force from within. And she has a cer-THE NURSE. 215 tain vulgarized air of rank and refinement, as if, priding herself on the confidence of her superiors, she had caught and assimilated their manners to her own vulgar nature. In this mixture of refinement and vulgarity, both elements are made the worse for being together; for, like all who ape their betters, she exaggerates whatever she copies; or, borrowing the proprieties of those above her, she turns them into their opposite, because she has no sense of propriety. Without a particle of truth or honour or delicacy; one to whom life has no sacredness, virtue no beauty, love no holiness ; a woman, in short, without womanhood ; she abounds however in serviceable qualities; has just that low menial shrewdness which at once fits her to be an instrument, and makes her proud to be used as such. Yet she acts not so much from a positive disregard of right as from a lethargy of conscience; or as if her soul had run itself into a sort of moral dry-rot through a leak at the mouth. Accordingly in her basest acts she never dreams but that she is a pattern of virtue. And because she is thus unconscious and, as it were, innocent of her own vices, therefore Juliet thinks her free from them, and suspects not but that beneath her petulant, vulgar loquacity she has a vein of womanly honour and sensibility. For she has, in her way, a real affection for Juliet: whatsoever would give pleasure to herself, that she will do any thing to compass for her young mistress; and, until love and marriage become the question, there has never been any thing to disclose the essential oppugnancy of their natures. When, however, in her noble agony, Juliet appeals to the Nurse for counsel, and is met with the advice to marry Paris, she sees at once what her soul is made of; that her former praises of Romeo were but the offspring of a sensual pruriency easing itself with talk; that in her long life she has gained only that sort of experience which works the debasement of its possessor; and that she knows less than nothing of love and marriage, because she has worn their prerogatives without any feeling of their sacredness.216 SHAKESPEAKE’s CHARACTERS. Mercutio is one of the instances which strikingly show the excess of Shakespeare’s powers above his performances. Though giving us more than any other man, still he seems to have given but a small part of himself. For we feel that he could have gone on indefinitely with the same exquisite redundancy of life and wit which he has started in Mercutio. As aiming rather to instruct us with character than to entertain us with talk, he lets off just enough of the latter to disclose the former, and then stops, leaving the impression of an inexhaustible abundance withheld to give scope for something better. From the nature of the subject he had to leave unsatisfied the desire which in Mercutio is excited. Delightful as the man is, the Poet valued, and makes us value, his room more than his company. It has been said that he was obliged to kill off Mercutio, lest Mercutio should kill the play. And, sure enough, it is not apparent how he could have kept Mercutio and Tybalt in the play without spoiling it, nor how he could have kept them out without killing them: for so long as they live they must needs have a chief hand in whatever is going on about them; and they can scarce have a hand in any thing, without turning it, the one into a comedy, the other into a butchery. The Poet, however, so manages them and their fate as to aid rather than interrupt the proper interest of the piece; the impression of their death, strong as it is, being overcome by the sympathy awakened in us with the living. Mercutio is a perfect embodiment of animal spirits acting in and through the brain. So long as the life is in him his blood must dance, and so long as the blood dances the brain and tongue must play. His veins seem filled with sparkling champagne. Always revelling in the conscious fulness of his resources, he pours out and pours out, heedless whether he speaks sense or nonsense; nay, his very stumblings seem designed as triumphs of agility; he studies, apparently, for failures, as giving occasion for further trials, and thus serving at once to provoke his skill and to set it off. Full ofFRIAR LAURENCE. 217 the most companionable qualities, he often talks loosely indeed, but not profanely; and even in his loosest talk there is a subtilty and refinement both of nature and of breeding, that mark him for the prince of good fellows. Nothing could more finely evince the essential frolicsomeness of his composition, than that, with his ruling passion strong in death, he should play the wag in the face of his grim enemy, as if to live and to jest were the same thing with him. Of Mereutio’s wTit it were vain to attempt an analysis. From a fancy as quick and aerial as the Aurora Borealis, the most unique and graceful combinations come forth with almost inconceivable facility and felicity. If wit consists in a peculiar briskness, airiness, and apprehensiveness of spirit, catching, as by instinct, the most remote and delicate affinities, and putting things together most unexpectedly and at the same time most appositely, then it can hardly be denied that Mercutio is the prince of wits as well as of good fellows. I have always felt a special comfort in the part of Friar Laurence. How finely his tranquillity contrasts wuth the surrounding agitation! And how natural it seems that from that very agitation he should draw lessons of tranquillity ! Calm, thoughtful, benevolent, withdrawing from the world, that he may benefit society the more for being out of it, his presence and counsel in the play are as oil poured, yet poured in vain, on troubled waters. Sympathizing quietly yet deeply with the very feelings in others which in the stillness of thought he has subdued in himself, the storms that waste society only kindle in him the sentiments that raise him above them; while his voice, issuing from the heart of humanity, speaks peace, but cannot give it, to the passions that are raging around him. Schlegel has remarked with his usual discernment on the skill with which the Poet manages to alleviate the miracle of the sleeping-potion; and how, by throwing an air of VOL. II. 10218 Shakespeare’s characters. mysterious wisdom round the Friar, he renders us the more apt to believe strange things concerning him; representing him as so conjunctive and inward with Nature, that incredulity as to what he does is in a great measure forestalled by impressions of reverence for his character. “ How,” says he, “does the Poet dispose us to believe that Friar Laurence possesses such a secret? He exhibits him first in a garden, collecting herbs, and descanting on their wonderful virtues. The discourse of the pious old man is full of deep meaning: he sees everywhere in Nature emblems of the moral world; the same wisdom with which he looks through her has also made him master of the human heart. In this way, what would else have an ungrateful appearance, becomes the source of a great beauty.” Much fault has been found with the winding-up of this play, that it does not stop with the death of Juliet. Looking merely to the uses o£ the stage, it might indeed be better so; but Shakespeare wrote for humanity as well as, yea, rather than, for the stage. And as the evil fate of the lovers springs from the bitter feud of their Houses, and from a general stifling of nature under a hard crust of artificial manners, he wisely represents their fate as reacting upon and removing the cause. We are thus given to see and feel that they have not suffered in vain; and the heart has something to mitigate and humanize its over-pressure of grief. The absorbing, devouring selfishness of society generates the fiercest rancour between the leading families, and that rancour issues in the death of the very members through whom they had thought most to advance their rival pretensions; earth’s best and noblest creatures are snatched away, because, by reason of their virtue, they can best afford to die, and because, for the same reason, their death will be most bitterly deplored. The good old Friar indeed thought that by the marriage of the lovers the rancour of their Houses would be healed. But a Wiser than he knew that the deepest touch of sorrow was required, toROMEO AND JULIET. 219 awe and melt their proud, selfish hearts; that nothing short of the most afflicting bereavement, together with the feeling that themselves had both caused it and deserved it, could teach them rightly to “ prize the breath they share with human kind,” and remand them to the impassioned attachments of nature. Accordingly the hatred that seemed immortal is buried in the tomb of the faithful lovers; families are reconciled, society renovated, by the storm that has passed upon them; the tyranny of selfish custom is rebuked and broken up by the insurrection of nature which itself has provoked; tears flow, hearts are softened, hands joined, truth, tenderness, and piety inspired, by the noble example of devotion and self-sacrifice which stands before them. Such is the sad but wholesome lesson to be gathered from the story of “Juliet and her Romeo.” It may have been remarked, that I habitually speak of Shakespeare’s men and women as if they were veritable flesh-and-blood persons, actual “ travellers between life and death,” just as we are. Whatever of folly or absurdity there may be in such a course, I must plead guilty to it. If it be asked why I so speak of them, the apswer is, because I cannot help it. To me their virtues are as true as those of the friends I have loved and mourned, their sorrows as real and as close to the heart as any I have felt or pitied. I have much the same life in their society as in that of my breathing fellow-travellers, with this addition, that I know sickness cannot wither their bloom, nor death make spoil of their sweetness. Sometimes indeed they appear to me, with all their thoughts and feelings, more real, more living, than the human forms I see about me, and even than myself. So it is with the characters of this play; so it is with those of many others. And as often as I renew my intercourse with them, I am reminded of an incident related by Wordsworth in one of his smaller poems. An eminent British artist being on a visit at the Escurial, a220 Shakespeare’s characters. venerable monk was guiding him through the convent, and showing him the paintings; and as they both stood with eyes intent on Titian’s picture, of the Last Supper, “The hoary Father in the Strangers ear Breath’d out these words : ‘ Here daily do we sit, Thanks given to God for daily bread, and here, While thinking of my brethren, dead, dispers’d, Or chang’d and changing, I not seldom gaze Upon this solemn company unmov’d By shock of circumstance or lapse of years, Until I cannot but believe that they, They are in truth the substance, we the shadows.’” JULIUS CAESAR. The Tragedy of Julius (Lesar was not printed till in the folio of 162B. But the text is there given in so sound and clear a state as to leave little cause to regret the lack of earlier copies. The date of the writing has been variously argued, some placing the work in the middle period of the author’s labours, others among the latest; and, as no clear contemporary notice or allusion had been produced, the question could not be determined. Mr. Collier argued that the play must have been on the stage before 1603, his reason, being as follows. Drayton’s Mortimeriados appeared in 1596. The poem was afterwards recast by the author, and published again in 1603 as The Barons’ Wars. The recast has the following lines, which were not in the original form of the poem: “ Such oue be was, of him we boldly say, In whose rich soul all sovereign powTers did suit; In whom in peace the elements all lay So mix'd, as none could sovereignty impute : That’t seem’d when Heaven his model first began, In him it show’d perfection in a man."JULIUS CÆSAR. 221 Here we have a striking resemblance to what Antony says of Brutus in the play : “His life was gentle ; and the elements ¡So mix’d in him, that Nature might stand up And say to all the world, This was a man.” Mr. Collier’s theory is, that Drayton, before recasting his poem, had either seen the play in manuscript or heard it at the theatre, and so caught and copied the language of Shakespeare. I confess there does not seem to me any great strength in this argument ; for the idea and even the language of the resembling lines was so much a commonplace in the Poet’s time, that no one could claim any special right of authorship in it. Nevertheless it is now pretty certain that the play was written as early as 1601, Mr. Halliwell having lately produced the following from Weever’s Mirror of Martyrs, which was printed that year : “ The many-headed multitude were drawn By Brutus’ speech, that Cæsar was ambitious ; "When eloquent Mark Antony had shown His virtues, who but Brutus then was vicious ? ” As there is nothing in the history that could have suggested this, we can only ascribe it to some acquaintance with the play: so that the passage may be justly regarded as decisive of the question. The style alone of the drama led me to rest in about the same conclusion long ago. And I the rather make something of this matter, because it involves a good exercise of mind in discriminating the Poet’s different styles ; which is a very nice art indeed, and therefore apt to render the perceptions delicate and acute. It has been said that a true taste for Shakespeare is like the creation of a special sense ; and this saying is nowhere better approved than in reference to his subtile variations of language and style. For he began with what may be described as a preponderance of the poetic element over the dramatic. As we trace his222 SHAKESPEARE S CHARACTERS. course onward, we may, I think, discover a gradual rising of the latter element into greater strength and prominence, until at last it had the former in complete subjection. Now, where positive external evidence is wanting, it is mainly from the relative strength of these elements that I argue the probable date of the writing. And it seems to me that in Julius Ccesar the diction is more gliding and continuous, and the imagery more round and amplified, than in the dramas known to have been of the Poet’s latest period. But these distinctive notes are of a nature to be more easily felt than described ; and to make them felt examples will best serve. Take, then, a sentence from the soliloquy of Brutus just after he has pledged himself to the conspiracy : “ ’Tis a common proof, That lowliness is young ambition’s ladder, Whereto the climber-upward turns his face ; But, when he once attains the upmost round, He then unto the ladder turns his back, Looks in the clouds, scorning the base degrees By which he did ascend.” Here we have a full, rounded period in which all the elements seem to have been adjusted, and the whole expression set in order, before any part of it was written down. The beginning foresees the end, the end remembers the beginning, and the thought and image are evolved together in an even continuous flow. The thing is indeed perfect, in its way, still it is not in Shakespeare’s latest and highest style. Now compare with this a passage from The Winter's Tale: “ When you speak, sweet, I’d have you do it ever : when you sing, I’d have you buy and sell so ; so give alms ; Pray so ; and for the ordering your affairs, To sing them too : when you do dance, I wish you A wave o’ the sea, that you might ever do Nothing but that ; move still, still so, and own No other function.”JULIUS CLESAR. 223 Here the workmanship seems to make and shape itself as it goes along, thought kindling thought, and image prompting image, and each part neither concerning itself with what has gone before, nor what is coming after. The very sweetness has a certain piercing quality, and we taste it from clause to clause, almost from word to word, as so many keen darts of poetic rapture shot forth in rapid succession. Yet the passage, notwithstanding its swift changes of imagery and motion, is perfect in unity and continuity. Such is, I believe, a fair illustration of what has long been familiar to me as the supreme excellence of Shakespeare’s ripest, strongest, and most idiomatic style. Antony and Cleopatra is pre-eminently rich in this quality.; but there is enough of it in The Tempest, The Winter’s Tale, Coriolanus, and King Henry the Eighth, to identify them as belonging to the same stage and period of authorship. But I can find hardly so much as an earnest of it in Julius Ccesar ; and nothing short of very strong positive evidence would induce me to class this drama with those, as regards the time of writing. The historical materials of this play were taken from the Lives of Julius Caesar, of Brutus, and of Antony, as set forth in North’s translation of Plutarch. In nearly all the leading incidents, the charming old Greek is minutely followed ; though in divers cases those incidents are worked out with surpassing fertility of invention and art. Any thing like an abstract of the Plutarchian matter, besides overfilling my space, would be little else than a repetition in prose of what the drama gives in a much better form. It may be well to add, that on the 13th of February, B. C. 44, the feast of Lupercalia was held, when the crown was offered to Caesar by Antony. On the 15th of March following, Caesar was slain. In November, B. C. 43, the Triumvirs, Octavius, Antony, and Lepidus, met on a small island near Bononia, and there made up their bloody pro-224 SHAKESPEAKE’S OHARACTEI scription. The overthrow of Brutus and Cassius near Philippi took place in the Fall of the next year. So that the events of the drama cover a period of something over two years and a half. It has been rightly observed that Shakespeare .-shows much judgment in the naming of his plays. From this observation, however, several critics, as Gildon and Schle-gel, have excepted the play in hand, pronouncing the title a misnomer, on the ground that Brutus, and not Caesar, is