(For information regarding my Shakespeare Lectures: georgewalllectures@gmail.com)

Friday, August 20, 2010

For several reasons, poetry is easier to understand when read aloud. Of course, with Shakespeare, we're dealing with drama as well. (Philosophy, too, come to think of it. Yeats summed up the relationship between poetry and philosophy this way: "For philosophy to be remembered, it has to be turned into poetry." Shakespeare, clearly, also knew that.) So all the more reason to do so. Over the next couple of posts, I'll be writing about this idea. Today, I'd like to discuss finding emotion in reading.
King Lear is a play that has as one of its themes the fact that we find wisdom through adversity. The two main characters, Lear and the Earl of Gloucester, both find knowledge through tremendous suffering. At one point in the play, Gloucester has lost everything - his family, his earldom, and in one of the most frightening scenes in drama, his eyesight. Shortly afterward, he is being led toward the cliffs of Dover, from which he plans to jump, by a poor man who is in fact his wrongfully-accused fugitive son, Edgar, in disguise. In the following excerpt, he first gives Edgar money, and then hopes that generosity will become a more frequent occurrence. Then he has an astonishing realization:

Here, take this purse, thou whom the heavens' plagues
Have humbled to all strokes: that I am wretched
Makes thee the happier: heavens, deal so still!
Let the superfluous and lust-dieted man,
That slaves your ordinance, that will not see
Because he doth not feel, feel your power quickly;
So distribution should undo excess,
And each man have enough.

Those of us fortunate to have what we need do not "see" because we do "not feel". With literature though, we have the opportunity, at least. Therefore, the best way to read is not simply to "see" the words, but to "feel" them, and reading aloud is the best way to do that. (Tomorrow, I'll discuss another scene from this incomparable play.)

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