Shakespeare's writing style

William Shakespeare's style of writing was borrowed from the conventions of the day and adapted to his needs.

Shakespeare and His Friends at the Mermaid Tavern (1850, oil on canvas) by John Faed. The painting depicts (from left in back) Joshua Sylvester, John Selden, Francis Beaumont, (seated at table from left) William Camden, Thomas Sackville, John Fletcher, Sir Francis Bacon, Ben Jonson, John Donne, Samuel Daniel, Shakespeare, Sir Walter Raleigh, the Earl of Southampton, Sir Robert Cotton, and Thomas Dekker.

Overview

William Shakespeare's first plays were written in the conventional style of the day. He wrote them in a stylised language that does not always spring naturally from the needs of the characters or the drama.[1] The poetry depends on extended, elaborate metaphors and conceits, and the language is often rhetorical—written for actors to declaim rather than speak. For example, the grand speeches in Titus Andronicus, in the view of some critics, often hold up the action, while the verse in The Two Gentlemen of Verona has been described as stilted.[2][3]

Soon, however, William Shakespeare began to adapt the traditional styles to his own purposes. The opening soliloquy of Richard III has its roots in the self-declaration of Vice in medieval drama. At the same time, Richard's vivid self-awareness looks forward to the soliloquies of Shakespeare's mature plays.[4][5] No single play marks a change from the traditional to the freer style. Shakespeare combined the two throughout his career, with Romeo and Juliet perhaps the best example of the mixing of the styles.[6] By the time of Romeo and Juliet, Richard II, and A Midsummer Night's Dream in the mid-1590s, Shakespeare had begun to write a more natural poetry. He increasingly tuned his metaphors and images to the needs of the drama itself.

Shakespeare's standard poetic form was blank verse, composed in iambic pentameter with clever use of puns and imagery. In practice, this meant that his verse was usually unrhymed and consisted of ten syllables to a line, spoken with a stress on every second syllable. The blank verse of his early plays is quite different from that of his later ones. It is often beautiful, but its sentences tend to start, pause, and finish at the end of lines, with the risk of monotony.[7] Once Shakespeare mastered traditional blank verse, he began to interrupt and vary its flow. This technique releases the new power and flexibility of the poetry in plays such as Julius Caesar and Hamlet. Shakespeare uses it, for example, to convey the turmoil in Hamlet's mind:[8]

Sir, in my heart there was a kind of fighting
That would not let me sleep. Methought I lay
Worse than the mutines in the bilboes. Rashly—
And prais'd be rashness for it—let us know
Our indiscretion sometimes serves us well…

Prince Hamlet, in William Shakespeare, Hamlet, 5.2.4–8.[9]

After Hamlet, Shakespeare varied his poetic style further, particularly in the more emotional passages of the late tragedies. The literary critic A. C. Bradley described this style as "more concentrated, rapid, varied, and, in construction, less regular, not seldom twisted or elliptical".[10] In the last phase of his career, Shakespeare adopted many techniques to achieve these effects. These included enjambments, irregular pauses and stops, and extreme variations in sentence structure and length.[11] In Macbeth, for example, the language darts from one unrelated metaphor or simile to another in one of Lady Macbeth's well-known speeches:

                        Was the hope drunk,
Wherein you dress'd yourself? Hath it slept since?
And wakes it now, to look so green and pale
At what it did so freely?

Lady Macbeth, in William Shakespeare, Macbeth, I.VII.35–8.[12]
Pity (1795) by William Blake, is an illustration of two similes in Macbeth: "And Pity, like a naked new-born babe, / Striding the blast, or heaven's Cherubins, hors'd / Upon the sightless couriers of the air,".[13]

And in Macbeth's preceding speech:

And Pity, like a naked new-born babe,
Striding the blast, or heaven's Cherubins, hors'd
Upon the sightless couriers of the air,

Macbeth, in William Shakespeare, Macbeth, I.VII.21–3.[14]

The audience is challenged to complete the sense.[11] The late romances, with their shifts in time and surprising turns of plot, inspired a last poetic style in which long and short sentences are set against one another, clauses are piled up, subject and object are reversed, and words are omitted, creating an effect of spontaneity.[15][16]

Shakespeare's poetic genius was allied with a practical sense of the theatre.[17] Like all playwrights of the time, Shakespeare dramatised stories from sources such as Petrarch and Holinshed.[18] He reshaped each plot to create several centres of interest and show as many sides of a narrative to the audience as possible. This strength of design ensures that a Shakespeare play can survive translation, cutting and wide interpretation without loss to its core drama.[19] As Shakespeare's mastery grew, he gave his characters clearer and more varied motivations and distinctive patterns of speech. He preserved aspects of his earlier style in the later plays, however. In his late romances, he deliberately returned to a more artificial style, which emphasised the illusion of theatre.[20][21]

Form

In some of Shakespeare's early works, punctuation at the end of the lines strengthens the rhythm. He and other dramatists at the time used this form of blank verse for much of the dialogue between characters to elevate the poetry of drama.[22] To end many scenes in his plays he used a rhyming couplet, thus creating suspense.[23] A typical example occurs in Macbeth as Macbeth leaves the stage to murder Duncan:

[A bell rings.
    I go, and it is done: the bell invites me.
    Hear it not, Duncan; for it is a knell
    That summons thee to Heaven, or to Hell.    [Exit.

Macbeth, in William Shakespeare, Macbeth, II.I.62–4.[24]

His plays make effective use of the soliloquy, in which a character makes a solitary speech, giving the audience insight to the character's motivations and inner conflict.[25] The character either speaks to the audience directly (in the case of choruses, or characters that become epilogues), or more commonly, speaks to himself or herself in the fictional realm.[26] Shakespeare's writing features extensive wordplay of double entendres and clever rhetorical flourishes.[27] Humour is a key element in all of Shakespeare's plays. His works have been considered controversial through the centuries for his use of bawdy punning,[28] to the extent that "virtually every play is shot through with sexual puns."[29] Indeed, in the nineteenth century, popular censored versions of the plays were produced as The Family Shakspeare [sic] by Henrietta Bowdler (writing anonymously) and later by her brother Thomas Bowdler.[30] Comedy is not confined to Shakespeare's comedies, and is a core element of many of the tragedy and history plays. For example, comic scenes dominate over historical material in Henry IV, Part 1.[31]

Similarities to contemporaries

Besides following the popular forms of his day, Shakespeare's general style is comparable to several of his contemporaries. His works have many similarities to the writing of Christopher Marlowe, and seem to reveal strong influences from the Queen's Men's performances, especially in his history plays. His style is also comparable to Francis Beaumont's and John Fletcher's, other playwrights of the time.[32]

Shakespeare often borrowed plots from other plays and stories. Hamlet, for example, is comparable to Saxo Grammaticus' Gesta Danorum.[33] Romeo and Juliet is thought to be based on Arthur Brooke's narrative poem The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet.[34] King Lear is based on the story of King Leir in Historia Regum Britanniae by Geoffrey of Monmouth, which was retold in 1587 by Raphael Holinshed.[35] Borrowing plots in this way was not uncommon at the time. After Shakespeare's death, playwrights quickly began borrowing from his works, a tradition that continues to this day.[32]

Differences from contemporaries

Shakespeare's works express the complete range of human experience.[36] His characters were human beings[37] who commanded the sympathy of audiences when many other playwrights' characters were flat or archetypes.[38][39] Macbeth, for example, commits six murders by the end of the fourth act, and is responsible for many deaths offstage, yet still commands an audience's sympathy until the very end[40] because he is seen as a flawed human being, not a monster.[41] Hamlet knows that he must avenge the death of his father, but he is too indecisive, too self-doubting, to carry this out until he has no choice.[42] His failings cause his downfall, and he exhibits some of the most basic human reactions and emotions. Shakespeare's characters were complex and human in nature. By making the protagonist's character development central to the plot, Shakespeare changed what could be accomplished with drama.[43]

References

All references to Hamlet, unless otherwise specified, are taken from the Arden Shakespeare Q2. Under their referencing system, 3.1.55 means act 3, scene 1, line 55.[44]

All references to Macbeth, unless otherwise specified, are taken from the Arden Shakespeare second series. Under their referencing system, III.I.55 means act 3, scene 1, line 55.[45]

  1. Clemen 2005, p. 150.
  2. Frye 2005, pp. 105, 177.
  3. Clemen 2005, p. 29.
  4. Brooke 2004, p. 69.
  5. Bradbrook 2004, p. 195.
  6. Clemen 2005, p. 63.
  7. Frye 2005, p. 185.
  8. Wright 2004, p. 868.
  9. Hamlet 5.2.4–8.
  10. Bradley 1991, p. 91.
  11. Empson 2004, pp. 42–46.
  12. Macbeth I.VII.35–8.
  13. Macbeth I.VII.21–3.
  14. Macbeth I.VII.21–3.
  15. Empson 2004, pp. 36, 39.
  16. Keast 2004, p. 75.
  17. Gibbons 1993, p. 4.
  18. Gibbons 1993, pp. 1–4.
  19. Gibbons 1993, pp. 1–7, 15.
  20. Schoenbaum 2004, p. 13.
  21. Meagher 2003, p. 358.
  22. Jackson 2003, p. 64–68.
  23. Boulton 2014, pp. 78–79.
  24. Macbeth II.I.62–4.
  25. Clemen 1987, p. 11.
  26. Maurer 2005, p. 504.
  27. Mahood 1988, p. 9.
  28. Partridge 1947, p. xi.
  29. Wells 2004, p. 1.
  30. Wells 2004, pp. 19–20.
  31. Kastan 2002, p. 14.
  32. Holland 2013.
  33. Edwards 1985.
  34. Roberts 1902.
  35. Foakes 1997.
  36. Reich, Cunningham & Fichner-Rathus 2013, p. 354.
  37. Webster 2012, p. 194.
  38. Hunter 1997, p. 503.
  39. Leggatt 1983, p. 121.
  40. Collins 1989, p. 91.
  41. McCarthy 1998, pp. 234–40.
  42. Berryman 2001, pp. 114–16.
  43. Frye 2005, p. 118.
  44. Thompson & Taylor 2006.
  45. Muir 1984.

Sources

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