Half a century ago my professor in “Advanced Shakespeare” urged us to pay closer attention to the lesser plays and not dwell obsessively on the acknowledged masterpieces – Hamlet, King Lear, et al. For the final paper he suggested I write about Measure for Measure, a play I hadn’t read before enrolling in his class. It’s a tonally curious work, not a conventional comedy, so reading it makes more sense than trying to stuff it into a box. In his Lectures on Shakespeare (ed. Arthur Kirsch, 2000), Auden tells us the play is about three things: “the nature of justice, the nature of authority, and the nature of forgiveness.” He describes Claudio as a “hard case,” adding, “hard cases make bad law, but there is no law without at least some hard cases.”
In the September 1997
issue of Chronicles, I read the acceptance speech Richard Wilbur
delivered when receiving the 1996 T.S. Eliot Award for Creative Writing, including
this passage:
“[P]oetry, which aspires
to the fullest possible consciousness, masters bad thoughts by uttering them perfectly.
I think that Shakespeare must have rejoiced when he got our fears of the grave
into one horrible line: ‘To lie in cold obstruction and to rot.’”
Wilbur doesn’t identify
the play but Claudio jumps out at me. The quoted line is from Act III, Scene 1.Claudio is in prison, awaiting execution, and says, rather blandly, “Death is a
fearful thing,” to which his sister Isabella replies, “And shamed life a
hateful.” Now Claudio grows eloquent and sounds like an unlikely mingling of Dante
and Philip Larkin:
“Ay, but to die, and go we
know not where;
To lie in cold obstruction
and to rot;
This sensible warm motion
to become
A kneaded clod; and the
delighted spirit
To bathe in fiery floods,
or to reside
In thrilling region of
thick-ribbed ice;
To be imprison’d in the
viewless winds,
And blown with restless
violence round about
The pendent world; or to
be worse than worst
Of those that lawless and
incertain thought
Imagine howling: ’tis too
horrible!
The weariest and most
loathed worldly life
That age, ache, penury and
imprisonment
Can lay on nature is a
paradise
To what we fear of death.”
Hazlitt praises “the
dramatic beauty of this scene and the effect of Claudio’s passionate attachment
to life.” Death is the force that turns a human into an inert thing – “a
kneaded clod.” Claudio is exuberant in his wish to go on living. He sings. As Wilbur
says, “[T]here is indeed a sort of rapture in any line of verse which articulately
braves the darker areas of our experience.” He quotes Auden’s great elegy for Yeats who urges poets to “Sing of human unsuccess / In a rapture of distress.”
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