Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T20:51:38.079Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

M.O.A.L "What should that alphabetical position portend?" An Answer to the Metamorphic Malvolio*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Peter J. Smith*
Affiliation:
Nottingham Trent University

Abstract

This paper is an attempt to answer the riddle set up by Malvolio's cryptic question which occurs in the box-tree scene (2.5) of Twelfth Night. The essay surveys a number of alternative solutions proposed by critics, editors, and actors. All are found, in their own ways, to be wanting: some are exposed as literal minded, too arcane, reliant upon language games that are unavailable to a theater audience or flawed by chronology. As the first step in decoding the puzzle, the paper rehearses a Renaissance view of semantics, according to which sense arises from utterances quintessentially — not, as modern linguistics would have it, approximately. Language, that is, is shown to signify inherently rather than conventionally. This linguistic veracity is shown to condemn Malvolio as he repeats an acrostic which he doesn't perceive, even while he utters it. The paper proposes that M.O.A.I. alludes to Sir John Harington's The Metamorphosis Of A Iax.

Type
Studies
Copyright
Copyright © Renaissance Society of America 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

I am indebted to Alan Brissenden who alerted me to his work on the history of As You Like It and to Catherine Burgass, Greg Walker, Roger Warren, and the anonymous Renaissance Quarterly referee who read drafts of this essay and made valuable suggestions. During 1997, earlier versions were presented at the Universities of Sheffield Hallam, Hawaii at Manoa, Tours, New South Wales, Newcasde, Monash, and La Trobe, and I am grateful to Steven Earnshaw, Philip Shaw, Andre1 Lascombes, Richard Madelaine, Mark Gaundett, Clive Probyn, and John Gillies respectively for their invitations and to members of the seminars. Finally, the publication of this piece by the Renaissance Society of America is fitting tribute to the intellectual vitality and cultural warmth of Richard J. Larschan, Jim Panos, Peg Panos, and my colleagues and students at the University of Massachusetts, 1996-97.

References

Allen, Percy. Times Literary Supplement 1859 (18 September 1937): 675.Google Scholar
Barton, Anne. The Names of Comedy. Cambridge, 1990.Google Scholar
Briggs, Julia. This Stage-Play World: English Literature and its Background, 1580-1625. Oxford, 1983.Google Scholar
Brockbank, Philip, ed. Players of Shakespeare. Cambridge, 1985.Google Scholar
Brown, John Russell. “More About Laughing at ‘M.O.A.I.’ (A Response to Inge Leimberg).” Connotations 1 (1991): 187-90.Google Scholar
Callaghan, Dympna. “And all is semblative a woman's part': Body Politics and Twelfth Night.” Textual Practice 7 (1993): 428-52.Google Scholar
Camden, William. Remaines of a Greater Worke Concerning Britaine. London, 1605.Google Scholar
Carroll, William C. The Metamorphoses of Shakespearean Comedy. Princeton, 1985.Google Scholar
Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Riverside Chaucer. Ed. Larry D. Benson et al. Oxford, 1987.Google Scholar
Cox, Lee Sheridan. “The Riddle in Twelfth Night.” Shakespeare Quarterly 13 (1962): 360.Google Scholar
Culler, Jonathan. Saussure. London, 1976.Google Scholar
Decker [sic], Tho[mas] and Webster, Iohn. West-Ward Hoe. London, 1607.Google Scholar
Foard [sic], John and Decker [sic], Tho[mas]. The Suns-Darling: A Moral Masque. London, 1656.Google Scholar
Goldberg, Jonathan. “Textual Properties.” Shakespeare Quarterly 37 (1986): 213-17.Google Scholar
Hackel, Heidi Brayman. “'Rowme’ of Its Own: Printed Drama in Early Libraries.” In A New History of Early English Drama, ed. John D. Cox and David Scott Kastan, 113-30. New York, 1997.Google Scholar
SirHarington, John. A Nevv Discovrse of A Stale Svbiect, Called The Metamorphosis of AIAX. London, 1596.Google Scholar
Hassel, R. Chris Jr. “The Riddle in Twelfth Night Simplified.” Shakespeare Quarterly 25 (1974): 356.Google Scholar
Hotson, Leslie. The First Night of Twelfth Night. London, 1954.Google Scholar
Hunt, Maurice. “Malvolio, Viola, and the Question of Instrumentality: Defining Providence in Twelfth Night.” Studies in Philology 90 (1993): 277-97.Google Scholar
Hutton, Henry. Follies Anatomic or Satyres and Satyricall Epigrams. London, 1619.Google Scholar
Jonson, Ben. The Alchemist. Ed. EH. Mares. London, 1978.Google Scholar
Leimberg, Inge. “‘M.O.A.I.’ Trying to Share the Joke in Twelfth Night 2.5 (A Critical Hypothesis).” Connotations 1 (1991): 7895.Google Scholar
Leimberg, Inge. “Maria's Theology and Other Questions (An Answer to John Russell Brown).” Connotations 1 (1991): 191-96.Google Scholar
Lewis, Cynthia. “A Fustian Riddle'?: Anagrammatic Names in Twelfth Night.” English Language Notes 22 (1984-85): 3237.Google Scholar
Middleton, Thomas. The Famelie of Love. London, 1608.Google Scholar
Middleton, Thomas. A Chaste Maid in Cheapside. Ed. Alan Brissenden. London, 1968.Google Scholar
Montaigne, , The Essayes of Michael Lord of Montaigne. Trans. John Florio. London, 1891.Google Scholar
Mowat, Barbara A. “The Theater and Literary Culture.” In A New History of Early English Drama, ed. John D. Cox and David Scott Kastan, 213-30. New York, 1997.Google Scholar
Nabbes, Thomas. Microcosmus. A Morall Maske. London, 1637.Google Scholar
Ovid, . The xv. Bookes of P. Ouidius Naso, EntituledMetamorphosis [sic]. Trans. Arthur Golding. London, 1584.Google Scholar
Partridge, Eric. Shakespeare's Bawdy. 3rd ed. London, 1968.Google Scholar
Pearson, D'Orsay W. “Gulled into an Tword, or, Much Ado About a Pronoun.” Journal of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association 8 (1987): 119-30.Google Scholar
Petronella, Vincent F. “Anamorphic Naming in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night.” Names 35 (1987): 139-46.Google Scholar
Pitcher, John. “Names in Cymbeline.” Essays in Criticism 43 (1993): 116.Google Scholar
Plato, . Cratylus. Trans. N.H. Fowler. London, 1926.Google Scholar
Puttenham, George. The Arte of English Poesie. Ed. Gladys Doidge Willcock and Alice Walker. Cambridge, 1936.Google Scholar
Scragg, Leah. ‘“Her C's, her U's, and her T's: why that?’ A New Reply for Sir Andrew Aguecheek.” Review of English Studies n. s. 42 (1991): 116.Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William. Twelfth Night. Ed. Horace Howard Furness. Philadelphia and London, 1901.Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William. The Riverside Shakespeare. Ed. G. Blakemore Evans et al. Dallas, 1974.Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William. Twelfth Night. Ed. J.M. Lothian and T.W. Craik. London, 1975.Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William. The Complete Works. Ed. Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor. Oxford, 1988.Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William. As You Like It. Ed. Alan Brissenden. Oxford, 1994.Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William. Twelfth Night. Ed. Roger Warren and Stanley Wells. Oxford, 1994.Google Scholar
Smith, Peter J. “Ajax by any other Name would Smell as Sweet: Shakespeare, Harington and Onomastic Scatology.” In Tudor Theatre: Emotion in the Theatre, ed. Andre” Lascombes, 125-58. Bern, 1996.Google Scholar
Taylor, John. The Praise of Hempseed. London, 1623.Google Scholar
Taylor, John. A Common Whore With all these graces grac'd Shee's very honest, heautifull and chaste. London, 1635.Google Scholar
Tilley, M. P.., ed. A Dictionary of the Proverbs in England in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Ann Arbor, 1950.Google Scholar
Tobin, J.J.M. “Malvolio and His Capitals.” American Notes and Queries 23 (1985): 6971.Google Scholar
Walker, Jeffrey. “Anagrams and Acrostics: Puritain Poetic Wit.” In Puritan Poets and Poetics: Seventeenth-Century American Poetry in Theory and Practice, ed. Peter White, 247-57. Pennsylvania and London, 1985.Google Scholar
Ziff, Larzer. Puritanism in America: New Culture in a New World. London and New York, 1973.Google Scholar