When a friend told me he was reading Coriolanus for the first time, I joined him. It was not among my favorite plays when I was young, for reasons I no longer remember. Of no other play have I so radically revised my judgment. I’m taken with William Hazlitt’s assessment: “Any one who studies it may save himself the trouble of reading Burke’s Reflections [on the Revolution in France], or Paine’s Rights of Man.” With Julius Caesar, it is Shakespeare’s most discerning study of power and politics.
Today I read Shakespeare for abject pleasure. I’m with Nabokov’s poet John Shade in Pale Fire, who says: “First of all, dismiss ideas, and social background, and train the freshman to shiver, to get drunk on the poetry of Hamlet or Lear, to read with his spine and not with his skull.” Kinbote asks “You appreciate particularly the purple passages?" and Shade replies: “Yes, my dear Charles, I roll upon them as a grateful mongrel on a spot of turf fouled by a Great Dane.”
Among the
pleasures this time is learning or relearning unfamiliar words. Take vamp. In Act III, Scene 1, Coriolanus
says: “You wish / To vamp a body with a dangerous physick, / That’s sure of
death without.” This usage is puzzling. As a noun, I know it to mean a dangerously
seductive woman. And then there’s jazz: “A simple section like a riff,”
according to the lexicon at A Passion for Jazz, “designed to be repeated as
often as necessary, especially one at the beginning of a tune.” I think of the
obvious examples: Paul Desmond’s “Take Five” performed by the Dave Brubeck
Quartet, and Miles Davis’ “So What.”
The OED gives many definitions including one
that’s musical, but with no reference to jazz and with citations dating from no
later than the nineteenth century: “To improvise or extemporize (an
accompaniment, tune, etc.).” No mention of the common usage, as verb and noun, among
jazz musicians -- a repeated figure that, in layman’s language, sets the groove
for the performance. Dr. Johnson’s definition has nothing to do overtly with
music: “To piece an old thing with some new part.”
This is
where it gets complicated. Vamp in Coriolanus, according to centuries of editors and scholars,
may be a misreading for jump, imp or
even purge. I’m no musicologist but I
vote for vamp. Here’s the late Terry
Teachout in Duke: A Life of Duke
Ellington (2013) describing a recording of “Old Man Blues” (1930): “After
an eight-bar vamp-till-ready introduction, it
gets under way not with the customary full-band theme statement but with
an improvised duet by Tricky Sam Nanton and Barney Bigard, followed by an even
more startling change of key.”
[I can’t resist: Cole Porter’s “Brush Up Your Shakespeare” (Kiss Me, Kate): “If she says your behavior is heinous,/Kick her right in the Coriolanus.”]
I don't love Coriolanus, as it's hard to love, but it is a great play. I especially like the relationship between Coriolanus and his mother.
ReplyDeleteYou threw in all your favorite lines from past references to this play or from your prodigious memory.
ReplyDeleteThe first scenes of Coriolanus set me back: it was strange territory that made me wonder if Shakespeare actually wrote it. The lines seemed so prosaic and unlike him.