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THE THE IDOLS OF TRIBE THE IDOLS ~'t" T.\!.; '!.~Hf:E~ A STUDY OF 'l'!-1~ HC' £ 8? '..~rn: COMMENTATOR :;1 SHAl~.BSPEAiIB1 3 TRAGiIDIES By Anthony Stuart Brennan, M.A. A 'I'hesis Submitted to the Facd ty cf ;raduate Studies in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy McMaster University (October) 1967 Doctor of Philosophy (1967) McMaster Unbersity (English) Hamilton, Ontario Title: The Idols of the Tribe: A Study of the Role of the Commentator in Shakespeare's Tragedies. Author: Anthony Stuart Brennan, B.A. (Oxford University) M.A. (McMaster University) Supervisor: Professor B. W. Jackson Number of Pages: vii, 382 Scope and Contents: General problems concerning Shakespeare's ethical stance are related to the role of the commentator in his drama. A survey of Elizabethan and Jacobean drama indicates that there was a development from formal choric devices toward commentating characte~s who are absorbed into the dramatic structure. Factors which may have influenced Shakespeare's use of the commentating figure are suggested. After a preliminary study of Shakespeare's methods of presentine commentnry in his history plays, the thesis concentrates on the varied ways in which Shakespeare develops the role of the commentator in his major tragedies. The conclusion relates the problems which Shakespeare examines by means of this distinctive feature of his tragic vision to the work of other major Renaissance writers. v There arc and can be only two ways of searching into and di.scovering truth. The one flies from the senses and particulars to the most general axioms, and from these principles, the truth of which it takes for settled and immovable, proceed::> to judemcnt and to the discovery of middle axioms. And this way is now in fashion. 'l'he other derives axioms from the senses and particulars, rising by a general and unbroken ascent, so that it arrives at the most eirneral axioms last of all.· This is the true way, but as yet untried. The Idols of the Tribe have their foundation in human nature itself, and in the tribe or race of men. For it is a false assertion that the sense of man is the measure of all things. On the contrary, all perceptions as well or' the sense as of the mind are according to the measure of the individual and not according to the measure of the universe. And the human understanding is like a false mirror, which receiving rays irregularly, and discolors the nature of thingc distort~ by mingling its own nature with it. 1 Francis Bacon, The New Organon and Related Writings, ed., by F. H. Anderson (New York, 1960), XIX, p. 43. 2 . Ibid., XLI, p. 48. ii TO MY PARENTS iv PREFACE I have used the Tudor Edition of Shakespeare's Complete Workf:', edited by Peter Alexander, throughout this study. The Bibliography contains a selective list of the works which I have found useful in conducting this study. Complete references for the footnotes are supplied. I have also included references for the minor drnmatjc works whi.ch I have discussed. I have not, however, included references to the works of the major dramatists which I examined since such works are generally available and my discussion does not involve reference to any specific edition. I would like to acknowledge help from several sources in the preparation of this thesis. First and foremost I wish to thank Dr. B. W. Jackson who has supervised my work. His patient criticism, perceptive suggestions and constant encouragement have helped me immeasurably in shapine this thesis into its final form. He has, indeed, given the imprcssior. of being "As one, in suff'ring all, that suffers nothing". My thanks are due also to the trustees of the Queen Elizabeth II Ontario Scholarship whose grant enabled me to undertake this research. I am grateful to the Graduate Studies Office at McMaster for the travel grants which enabled me to make indispensable visits to the Folger Shakespeare Library. I owe a debt of ·gratitude to Maurice James who first aroused my interest in Shakespeare and helped to shape my ideas with his own profound enthusi~sm ann scholarship. Finally, I would like to thank my wife whose sympathy and encouragement have helped me throughout the writing of thio thesis. Her criticisms and suggestions have been a constant resource for me in clarifyjng my ideas. vi TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter Page PREFACE vi I. INTRODUCTION 1 II. CHORUSES AND COMMENTATORS 28 III. SHAKESPEARE'S COMMENTATQRS - POSSIBLE INFLUENCES 58 IV. COMMENTARY IN THE HISTORY PLAYS 98 v. -'CYNICAL COMMENTATORS 143 VI. ROMEO AND JULIET 193 VII. MENENIUS 211 VIII. .IENOBARBUS 234 IX. HORATIO 259 x. KING LEAR 279 XI. CONCLUSION 349 BIBLIOGRAPHY 372 vii I INTRODUCTION l I am concerned in this study with a group of secondary characters in Shakespeare's tragedies whose dramatic functions have been too readily taken for granted. Characters such as Enobarbus, Horatio, Apemantus and Lear's Fool are often regarded as comfortingly straightforward, known entities that can be labelled "choric11 , base camps from which to begin the desperate struggle of scaling the major peaks - the tragic heroes. Far from being simple and obvious, the function of such characters is of the very essence of the complicated process of tragedy. It is through the views of characte~s such as Mercutio, Friar Laurence, .Kent and Menenius that the problems of the tragic hero are re-examined from a different perspective. There is no way of fitting such characters into a rigid pattern. They are not used unvaryir.~ly in a conventional way to serve a simple dramatic function. They respond in distinctly individual ways to the particular circumstances of the tragic world in which they find themselves. Often friend to the hero, they are as liY:ely to turn up in _Fool's motley, as servant, as cynic, or trusted counsellor. There is no epithet which will adequately cover all of them. I shall call them generally and most frequently 'commentators', though some of them fit more comfortably into that role than others, some maintaining a role of detached observation, others becoming embroiled in action. They are commentators in the sense that they usually offer an independent viewpoint which we car.. iistin­ guish from that of the hero, a version of events based usually on a see~ingly detached evaluation wiich contrasts with the versions of those enmeshed in the action. I shall also call some of the characters 'plain-dealers', 'truth­ 2 tellers•, 'blunt, honest men', 'worldly-wise observers' when a sue~ de8cri~tion seems to pinpoint more clearly a particular aspect of their commentary. Obviously each tragic world in Shakespeare is isolated, with separate problems which demand different solutions. Yet all of these characters seem to have certain broad-based functions in common. Many of them attempt to draw the hero away from the dizzying heights of tragic involvement to a more fartiliar and established world, or they try to interpret the world in which they find themselves in what, in more normal conditions, might be seen to be a realistic way. Almost all of them are, in their various ways, blessed with the belief that they can see the world through clear eyes, and that in a reasonable, common-sensical way they can perceive truths about the nature of their world which seem to be obscured from those around them. I think that Shakespeare was constantly aware that certain of the secondary characters must be used to bridge the gap which the development of tragic situations interposes between hero and audience. The unifying factor in a study of such characters is that they seem to be used in a distinctive way to communicate effectively the impact of tragedy to an audience. The tragic heroes are remarkable and unusual characters and it is not to be thought that we can easily have traffic with such men. They have to be interpreted to us, translated or transmitted through a variety of mediums ­ our representatives in the tragic world who find themselves far from the normal world which we, the audience, inhabit. It is generally recognized that we would be unable to comprehend fully the tragedy of Liar if we did not see it set against the more 'normal' preoccupations of the Fool, Kent and Poor Tom. In face of Lear's titanic anger on the heath, his vagabond entourage bend their entire efforts to the accomplishment of one seemingly very simple and normal task - they struggle to find shelter for Lear, to get him in out of the rain. 3 This normal reaction to the weather tests the will and wit of all· charocters around Lear for the entire central section of the play. It is the interposit~on of these characters, whose endeavours in contrast to Lear's preoccupations seem ludicrous, which enables an audience to understand more 'clearly the extraordinary nature of Lear's struggle with the gods and his need for divine retribution to punish his daughters. It has long been a critical commonplace that Lear's world is much more appallingly tragic by virtue of its contrast with the world of Gloucester. Because Gloucester is both bewildered by his situation and seeks consolation in commonplace sentiments that are the coin of a much more general attitude to grief and distress, Lear's world is distanced by contrast but also made more apprehensible because of the careful gradation of tragic forces. A .. ­ younger brother abusing his ear against an elder brother is closer to fathe~'s normal experience than a king carving up his realm on the basis of a competition in rhetoric. We are not at home in any part of the Lear world but we can bear to be in it and can' open ourselves to its terrible meanings more successfully because Gloucester's family shares the same world. Shakespeare's tragic world is above and beyond us but it reaches us and affects us deeply because of its complex portrayal of secondary characters sucked into the trigic whirlpool, characters who can relate easily to an audience because they, too, are bewildered and appalled by the magnitude of events around them. I take it that the whole world of the tragi~ro as a literary fiction, as an intensification of even abnormal experience, was beyond the experience of every member of the Elizabethan audience. The term 'normal', then, as referring to the commentators, is used relatively. These characters in Shakespeare's tragedies operate on assumptions which are more nearly in conformity with those of the real world with which the Elizabethans, in their vast multiplicity of

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I have used the Tudor Edition of Shakespeare's Complete Workf:', edited by Peter Alexander .. relevance of Keat's views see: Clifford Leech,"The '•Capability• of Shakespeare", .. critics such as D. G. James2, Arthur Sewe113, and Geoffrey Bush4, who have emphasized .. In Ajax it makes no pretenc
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