The World of Shakespeare's Sonnets: an Introduction by Robert Matz
Author:Robert Matz
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: General Fiction
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers
Published: 2012-08-30T00:00:00+00:00
Though the black mistress may grant her favor (including sexual favors) to others, Shakespeare complains that she is âcruelâ to him. Renaissance sonneteers often use the word âcruelâ to describe the customarily aloof courtly beloved. Shakespeare warns the black mistress that too much âdisdainâ on her part may lead him to express âthe manner of my pity-wanting pain.â Returning cruelty for cruelty, Shakespeare will âspeak illâ of the black mistress, angrily describing how she lacks (is âwantingâ) pity for his love pains.
Surprisingly, Shakespeare does not advise the black mistress to love him in order to avert his anger. He advises her to pretend to love him, as physicians pretend to their dying patients that they are healthy: although she does not love him (âthough not to loveâ) she should tell Shakespeare that she does (âyet, love, to tell me soâ). She should âbear thine eyes straight, though thy proud heart goes wide.â She should seem to have eyes only for Shakespeareânot the roving eyes of misogynist complaintâeven though these âstraightâ eyes disguise whatâs in her proud and undependable heart.
This sonnet is remarkable because Shakespeare acknowledges that the slanders he threatens will be unfair and unfairly believed: âNow this ill-wresting world is grown so bad / Mad slanderers by mad ears believèd be.â The âill-wresting worldâ interprets thingsâwrests meaningsâin the most âillâ way possible.55 In this bad world both the slanderer of a woman and those who believe him are mad. These lines remind us of the importance and vulnerability of womenâs sexual reputations in the Renaissance, as well as nearly mad attacks on women in Shakespeareâs day, brought to a low art in Swetnamâs 1615 Arraignment. Shakespeareâs criticism in this sonnet of slanders against women also recalls the plot of Othello, just as the slanders themselves do. When Othello calls Desdemona a âwhore,â Emelia rightly says she âwill be hanged if some eternal villain..., have not devised this slander.â56 In Othello Shakespeare sees both the deviser of the slander and the one who believes himâIago and Othelloâas âmad.â
But the very advice this sonnet gives to avoid âmadâ slander is the stuff of slander. If the mistress should bear her eyes âstraightâ even though her heart goes âwideâ she will be sexually deceitful, only pretending to love Shakespeare. Shakespeareâs knowing injunctions to be âwiseâ and his promise to âteach thee witâ insinuate this deceit. Both âwiseâ and âwitâ in Shakespeareâs day can have overtones of craftiness. Shakespeare does not expect of the black mistress that she can truly love him, only that she can be crafty enough to dissimulate love.
This expectation reaffirms just the kind of slanders the sonnet apparently dismisses. It also creates, in a subtly mocking manner, a double-bind for the black mistress. If she does not demonstrate her love for Shakespeare he will slander her. But if she does show her love for Shakespeare, she will not only be vulnerable to slander for her deceit, but also prove slanders of women to be true rather than âmad.â
Shakespeare follows this pattern elsewhere in the black mistress sonnets.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell & Bill Moyers(925)
Half Moon Bay by Jonathan Kellerman & Jesse Kellerman(911)
A Social History of the Media by Peter Burke & Peter Burke(879)
Inseparable by Emma Donoghue(844)
The Nets of Modernism: Henry James, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and Sigmund Freud by Maud Ellmann(738)
The Spike by Mark Humphries;(719)
A Theory of Narrative Drawing by Simon Grennan(706)
The Complete Correspondence 1928-1940 by Theodor W. Adorno & Walter Benjamin(703)
Ideology by Eagleton Terry;(659)
Bodies from the Library 3 by Tony Medawar(648)
Culture by Terry Eagleton(646)
World Philology by(645)
Farnsworth's Classical English Rhetoric by Ward Farnsworth(641)
A Reader’s Companion to J. D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye by Peter Beidler(614)
Adam Smith by Jonathan Conlin(606)
Game of Thrones and Philosophy by William Irwin(592)
High Albania by M. Edith Durham(589)
Comic Genius: Portraits of Funny People by(581)
Monkey King by Wu Cheng'en(575)
