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What Are Shakespeare's Romance Plays? |
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Towards the end of his career, William Shakespeare, the great English playwright, moved away from plays that could be easily defined as comic or tragic. His final works combined elements of both genres, and are commonly called “tragi-comedy” or romance plays. Four plays are usually classified by experts under the romance heading: Pericles, Cymbeline The Winter’s Tale, and The Tempest. Shakespeare’s romance plays have several features in common. In all four plays, a long standing conflict or injustice is resolved. Unlike in the tragedies, potentially tragic endings are avoided by redemption or penitence of a flawed character. Romance plays often feature supernatural events, such as the use of magic, and extraordinary events, such as shipwrecks, reuniting of long-lost families and improbable disguises. Unlike the comedies, where endings come about as happy compromises between extremes, romance endings often seem staged or contrived to make every character as happy as possible. The first of Shakespeare’s romance plays is Pericles, believed to be written around 1608. In the play, Pericles is a prince who sails around the world hiding from a wicked, life-long enemy. He marries a foreign princess but is led to believe she dies in childbirth. Pericles is later told by a treacherous friend that his daughter Marina has also died. Through an improbable series of events including a visitation from the Goddess Diana, Pericles learns that his wife and daughter are actually still alive, and the family is finally reunited. Cymbaline, the second of the romance plays, was changed from its original designation of a tragedy. The story involves Imogen, the daughter of King Cymbeline, who goes into hiding after being falsely accused of adultery. Imogen meets up with her older brothers, who had been kidnapped 20 years before by a man named Belarius in retaliation for his unjust banishment by King Cymbeline. At the conclusion of the play, nearly every character comes forward with information leading to the discovery of Imogen and Belarius’ innocence, and furthermore uncovering a plot by Cymbeline’s second wife to kill Imogen and place her own son on the throne. As a result, Imogen and her husband are reunited, peace is declared, and the twin sons are reunited with their family. The Winter’s Tale is a redemption story set over two decades. King Leontes of Sicilia discovers too late the innocence of his wife Hermione, whom he accused of adultery with his friend King Polixenes of Bohemia. Sixteen years pass, and Leontes continues to mourn his wife and her child, whom he ordered killed. When Polixenes, King of Bohemia, objects to his son Florizel marrying a shepherdess named Perdita, the young couple flees to Sicilia. Strange events conspire to reveal Perdita as Leontes’ lost daughter, reunite Leontes with the magically resurrected Hermione, and join the kingdoms of Sicilia and Bohemia through the marriage of Perdita and Florizel. In The Tempest — Shakespeare’s final play — Prospero, the exiled Duke of Milan, returns to power when a provident shipwreck deposits his traitorous brother Antonio on his magical island. The Tempest is considered the most magic-oriented of the romances, as the setting of the play is a magic-filled island populated by sprites, fairies and a half-fish, half-human monster named Caliban. When Prospero’s daughter, Miranda, falls in love with one of the shipwrecked men, Prospero decides to abandon his magic and return to Milan. His brother repents his crimes and the whole company departs for Italy, leaving Caliban in charge of the island. The romance plays are not to be taken as realistic, but are rather to be enjoyed for their lush settings and surprise twists. The poetry of the romance plays is considered by some to be Shakespeare’s most mature and beautiful. Experts are divided as to why Shakespeare left his popular tragedies behind to work in this field. Some scholars suggest he was merely following fashion, but that theory is not universal. Many scholars believe that Shakespeare was planning his retirement from the busy world of London, and through the romance plays sought a happy ending to his own life.
Written by
Jessica Ellis
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