Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Shakespeare’s Romances since 1958: A Retrospect
- Puzzle and Artifice: The Riddle as Metapoetry in ‘Pericles’
- ‘Pericles’ in a Book-List of 1619 from the English Jesuit Mission and Some of the Play's Special Problems
- George Wilkins and the Young Heir
- Theatrical Virtuosity and Poetic Complexity in ‘Cymbeline’
- Noble Virtue in ‘Cymbeline’
- Directing the Romances
- Shakespeare and the Ideas of his Time
- The Letter of the Law in ‘The Merchant of Venice’
- Shakespeare’s Use of the ‘Timon’ Comedy
- Re-enter the Stage Direction: Shakespeare and Some Contemporaries
- The Staircases of the Frame: New Light on the Structure of the Globe
- Shakespeare in Max Beerbohm’s Theatre Criticism
- A Danish Actress and Her Conception of the Part of Lady Macbeth
- Towards a Poor Shakespeare: The Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford in 1975
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times, and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Index
- Plate Section
Theatrical Virtuosity and Poetic Complexity in ‘Cymbeline’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- Shakespeare’s Romances since 1958: A Retrospect
- Puzzle and Artifice: The Riddle as Metapoetry in ‘Pericles’
- ‘Pericles’ in a Book-List of 1619 from the English Jesuit Mission and Some of the Play's Special Problems
- George Wilkins and the Young Heir
- Theatrical Virtuosity and Poetic Complexity in ‘Cymbeline’
- Noble Virtue in ‘Cymbeline’
- Directing the Romances
- Shakespeare and the Ideas of his Time
- The Letter of the Law in ‘The Merchant of Venice’
- Shakespeare’s Use of the ‘Timon’ Comedy
- Re-enter the Stage Direction: Shakespeare and Some Contemporaries
- The Staircases of the Frame: New Light on the Structure of the Globe
- Shakespeare in Max Beerbohm’s Theatre Criticism
- A Danish Actress and Her Conception of the Part of Lady Macbeth
- Towards a Poor Shakespeare: The Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford in 1975
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times, and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Index
- Plate Section
Summary
In much the most helpful criticism of Cymbeline that I know, James Sutherland isolates two contrasting styles, one ‘impetuous, violent, straining after the maximum of intensity’, the other a ‘natural, easy, and unforced’ style. He describes illuminatingly the ‘new recklessness of expression’ in Arviragus’s
the bier at door,
And a demand who is’t shall die, I’ld say
My father, not this youth’:
(IV, ii, 22–4).Undertakers do not come round to the door like dustmen to demand a corpse - a corpse, too, that is not yet dead when they arrive. What Shakespeare has to express is an avowal of love that will go a stage further than that just made by Guiderius. . . Clutching at some means to express this thought powerfully, Shakespeare moves naturally enough to a choice between life and death, a choice involving the (supposed) father of Guiderius on the one hand and the boy on the other. . .
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 41 - 50Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1976