Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Shakespeare’s Language and the Language of Shakespeare’s Time
- ‘I’ll plague thee for that word’: Language, Performance, and Communicable Disease
- The Language of the Spectator
- Marlowe’s Edward II: Penetrating Language in Shakespeare’s Richard II
- Hamlet’s Ear
- Secrecy and Gossip in Twelfth Night
- Shakespeare Rewriting Ovid: Olivia’s Interview with Viola and the Narcissus Myth
- ‘Voice Potential’: Language and Symbolic Capital in Othello
- Household Words: Macbeth and the Failure of Spectacle
- Erring and Straying Like Lost Sheep: The Winter’s Tale and The Comedy of Errors
- The ‘Shakespearian Gap’ in French
- Reading the Early Modern Text
- Shakespeare and the Metamorphosis of the Pentameter
- Rereading Illustrations of the English Stage
- Nietzsche’s Hamlet
- ‘Strange and woonderfull syghts’: The Tempest and the Discourses of Monstrosity
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 1996
- Professional Shakespeare Productions in the British Isles, January–December 1995
- 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times, and Stage
- 3 Editions and Textual Studies
- Books Received
- Index
Household Words: Macbeth and the Failure of Spectacle
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- Shakespeare’s Language and the Language of Shakespeare’s Time
- ‘I’ll plague thee for that word’: Language, Performance, and Communicable Disease
- The Language of the Spectator
- Marlowe’s Edward II: Penetrating Language in Shakespeare’s Richard II
- Hamlet’s Ear
- Secrecy and Gossip in Twelfth Night
- Shakespeare Rewriting Ovid: Olivia’s Interview with Viola and the Narcissus Myth
- ‘Voice Potential’: Language and Symbolic Capital in Othello
- Household Words: Macbeth and the Failure of Spectacle
- Erring and Straying Like Lost Sheep: The Winter’s Tale and The Comedy of Errors
- The ‘Shakespearian Gap’ in French
- Reading the Early Modern Text
- Shakespeare and the Metamorphosis of the Pentameter
- Rereading Illustrations of the English Stage
- Nietzsche’s Hamlet
- ‘Strange and woonderfull syghts’: The Tempest and the Discourses of Monstrosity
- Shakespeare Performances in England, 1996
- Professional Shakespeare Productions in the British Isles, January–December 1995
- 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times, and Stage
- 3 Editions and Textual Studies
- Books Received
- Index
Summary
In her epic novel on the life of Macbeth, King Hereafter, Dorothy Dunnett suggests that one of the primary reasons for the eventual failure of her hero’s kingship is his inability to be perceived as sufficiently charismatic: ‘a diverse people in time of hardship need a priest-king. The English know that. Edward is anointed with holy oil: he has the power of healing, they say’. Although Dunnett’s Macbeth-figure – an Orkney jarl also known as Thorfinn – is very differently conceived from Shakespeare’s, each shares an unfortunate tendency towards the mundane. Most particularly, Shakespeare’s hero and his wife both, at certain crucial moments of their lives, strongly favour a low-key, occasionally almost bathetic vocabulary. This aspect of their characterization has been much mocked in the English comic and popular tradition: Bertie Wooster is continually amused by the concept of the cat i’ th’ adage, and Edmund Crispin’s irascible literary detective Gervase Fen, Oxford professor, gives the play very short shrift:
'Do!' exclaimed Fen. 'If it were done when 'tis done, then 'twere well it were done quickly.'
'What is that supposed to mean?'
'It isn't supposed to mean anything. It's a quotation from our great English dramatist, Shakespeare. I sometimes wonder if Hemings and Condell went off the rails a bit there. It's a vile absurd jingle.'
The point was, perhaps, made most strongly, and most elegantly, by Dr Johnson, fulminating on the 'lowness' of the diction in the 'Come, thick night . . . ' speech (though he mistakenly attributes this to Macbeth).
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- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 101 - 110Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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