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SUPERNATURAL IN SHAKESPEARE
THE D~TIC FUNCTIUN O~~ T~ oUPhittNATURAL
IN S1IA1\ESPEARE
By_
A Thesis
Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies
in Partial fulfilment of the Requirements
for the Degree
Master of Arts
McMaster University
September, 1.976.
i
Master of Arts. (1976) MCMASTER UNIVERSITY
(English) Hamilton, Ontario.
ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.
I would like to thank Dr. Jackson for his help and advice
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
page.
INTRODUCT I ON ••••• 1
iv.
INTRODUCTION
sense of the word, as the basic pulse that makes the play operate
the process that makes the play credible and convincing, The term
1
2
t'
any occUf~nces that cannot be rationally explained by the
prophecy, which pertain to the plot. The fact that these plays
deal with the definition of the witches, the ghost and the fairies
His readings of the plays in this light are cursory and orthodox.
in the fresh light they throw on the plays, but in all cases, the
critic:' concerned directed his study from another point of view.
A.D.Nuttal in Two Concepts of Allegory, my main secondary source
in chapter I, is concerned mainly with allegory and its metaphysical
and philosophical overtones. Miss f.M.Prosser" in Hamlet and
Revenge is interested in Hamlet's ghost from~a basically Christian
viewpoint.
I will attempt then, to suggest a comparatively new
way of approaching the supernatural in Shakespeare which is from
a dramatically interpretive angle. My study will be specific
rather then comparativ.e, although it will become evident that
Shakespeare usedthB superna'bu-ralcons,isterntlyas a: d;Fam1iltiG~
tool ,to portray similar ideas and" themes in allthr!3B plC3Ys, - namely,-
ambiguity, confusion, ambivalence and domination.
6
THE TEMPE5T
I am adopting.
1
out.
- as,r.
wilLdiscu.-ss.·.tb
. - - f'nr
~ -;,_ .. e r~]
. __ m nF:!n roo-----roo----
nhilnQnnhil"'J:ll -r-----
QnF:!I"'1l1",,+innR nn
w __ .. _ _ ..
8
are closely linked by the general premise that "things are not
insinuating.
island:
into something "rich and strange" yet this is not picked up again
the physicality of the storm until the second scene. We, the
the comic verve that Ariel brings to the scene when describing
it;
I am pursuing.
not told the details; instead she is lulled to sleep and the
about to work.
t
The next magical occ~ence he manipulates is the
also about the purpose of the magic that lulls Miranda to sleep
but he chose not to, perhaps to reflect the social truth that
place.
14
one step ah8~ of the action in this case, but are still
uncertain why the men were ever given a chance to kill the
does not repond to ihe peculiarity with the same esriousness and
perplex the two fools despite their denials: " Art thou afeard? /
and fertility:
·~To make coid nymphs chaste crowns; and thy broom groves
Whose shadow the dismissed bachelor loves,
Being lass lorn; thy pole clipt vineyard;
And thy sea marge, sterile and rocky hard, (IV.i.66)
However, his thoughts leave the stage and extend over the audience
into life itself in his existential conclusion;
We are such stuff
As dreams are made on; and our little life
Is rounded with a sleep.(Iv.i.I56)
','
Water with berries'ift't; •••
and then I lov'd thee,
And show'dt thee all the qualities of the isle •• o
F.or I am all the subjects that you have,
Which first was mine own King.
His simple, gentle attitude of trust, followadby, a,~reas6ned
discuss. The play is left open ended, with the note of menace
that attends the seriousness of his acts of bondage. The fact
that there is little repent :nce from the courtiers as a result
of the magic tricks, suggests that despite tyranny and domination,
man alone cannot change human nature or the face of reality.
This is realis~ in_Prospero's bitter reflections on his failure
to nnurture~ Caliban: U on whom my pains/ Humanely taken, all,
from all aspects. The words "Flout 'em and scout 'em ••• 1 Thought
II The fringed curtains of thy eye advance I And say what thou
them around the island like chessmen. This statement would seem
J
30
use of magic, despite the fact that the whole magical situation
the moral norm which measures and judges the actions of others.
the audience.
written was the masque which was "added for the second court
I
A.D.Nuttal, Two Concepts of Allegory; pp.I38-16o.
2Ibid • p.159.
31 -take the type of magic Prospera uses to be the polarized
opposite to that used by the witch, Sycorax and the witches
in Macbeth. He has the same type of control over nature
but does not exercise it for evil or wanton ends, and hence
his magic can be labelled 'white' rather than 'black'.
4William Shakespeare, The Tempest, Arden edition. All further
references will be to this edition.
5Twentieth Century InterpretatioMs of the Tempest,ed. SMith.
liThe Tempest", Bonamy Dobrae. p. tf-l
6
"The Tempest: A Problem Play,," R.Egan •. 5hakespear·eah..
Studies. VII.
HAMLET
thesis that Hamlet, not unlike Macbeth, is ':incited and "led on"
in London.'-in 1824, Tieck noted that the ghost spoke its part
P 1 ea d e d f o r G
e r t ru d e. . t
As b 0 th 1n t:. t
erpre~ .
10ns appear to b e
appears and reassess the dramatic cues the audience are given
of the ~host.
with the ghost. This would suggest then that the revelation itself,
ment on the ghost. When the cock crows,it "starts like a guilty
expressly states that spirits who roam at night and "dare not
the time Hamlet speaks ,with Horatio that Shakespeare can make
decision.
will recur again and again in his speech. This image of sexual
amble and you lisp ••• and make wantoness your ignorance." The
which is very similar to that used by the ghost, and shows Hamlet's
1\
obsessive association of sexual wantoness with physical filth:
"
"Do not spread the compost on the weeds / To make them ranker."
So did it mine,
And a most instant tetter barked about
~Most lazar-like with vile and loathsome crust
All my smooth body. - , ( I.v.70 )
As well as pursuing the emphasis on corruption in sensuous terms,
and waste: "Why may not imagination trace the noble dust of
vision, the ghost's next words can again ring with that same
irony I noted earlier: "But howsomever thou pursues this act •• "
that not only will he do this, but he will wipe away all "pressures
past" from his memory, "and thy commandment alone shall live."
message:
which will dominate his vision of Denmark and blind him to the
th~ ghost. However, the variety of ways in which the ghost has
mind." The main point which seems to command respect for the
and bring them into effect, the more his actions bring about
and Guildenstern, which are carried out: "I will delve one yard
below their mines / And blow them at the moon." Yet the nature
In the same way, the ghost has two sides, and at different times
ghost falls across the whdle play, not only as I have shown,
t
9 h os. • t cone l
C • 5'. 1.1. ew~s '
us~on 1.5 seems t 0 a dm~ra'
' bl y summarJ.se
. my
·'.MACBHTH
are ambiguous. The characters within the play are fearful and
But ~t±s-6tr~nge:
And oftentimes, to win us to our harm,
The instruments of Darkness tell us truths;
Win us with honest trifles, to be;ray's
In deepest consequence.(I.iii.I22)5
This quotation outlines the main dramatic focus of the
it prompts for its own sake, unlike our interest in the ghost
foul and foul is fair:/ Hover through the fog and filthy air."
Their chant over the cauldron later on, reaffirms this: "Double,
cases, the sisters are necessary for what they initiate and the
powers of evil they symbolise, rather than for what they are
desires promotion and yet would not venture for its gain.
obsessiveness of his fervour and yet will not act against it.
Present fears
Are less than horrible imaginings.
My thought, whose murther yet is but fantastical,
Shakes so my single state of man,
That function is smother'd in surmise
And nothing is, but what is notO(I.iii.I37)
The "horrible imaginings " of his ambitious nature are at odds
of extreme preoccupation.
his fate which he knows to be set against him, and yet which
sons are to succeed him and yet defies that fate, trusting in
judgement.
Macbeth had replied~ "I dare do all that may become a man;/
moral reluctance~ "What hands are ~here7 he: They pluck out
which way they walk for fear / The very s~ones prate of my
murder and yet, while it avoids his hand and seems to lead him
presents him with a symbol of his purpose, while his eyes are
heart felt and indicate the way in which his personal philosophy
is changing:
progressively _ stronger.
~
The second subjective supernatural occurence is the
~
did it." His horror is vivid and real and shows strongly his
despite the knowledge that his success will appall him. This
his ego insists upon this kind of behaviour t while his more
banquet horror in this way: "My s~range and self abuse/ Is the
initiate fear that wants hard use,. / We are yet but young.·.. in deed. II
change of attitude in his total lack of fear: "How now, you s~cret,
and more exact than the logic of the plot."I9 In this dramatic
thoroughly explores:
I
Spalding ,.JJ.ll§lbtg_·than....D"f'dUpnolg"gX. He deals adequatl31y with this
qUBstion of definition.
2 Cur ry J s t~~~.,fL"E!:riJ,QJl9l1bi.,f;ia(21~1 p • 6 I
3 R aginald Scot 1 I!:lfLlLi,sc,Q¥~:'.:L§ of..JrJi tg,!l£.f,Ef J'!...t. p" 6 I" "These can
pass from place to place in the air invisible ••• they ride and flfa
in tho air.
4 5sB footnote 3 in chapter I.
r.::
"'~1illia!Tl Shakespeare, t1ac£~.b., Arden sdi tion. All further: :csferences
will be to this edition.
65.T.CGleridget9Jl~k~~ea~ar~~,p.6B.
7§hsj,!s:8~~aJ':!1§Jl..frr,.Ellledies, ed. Lerner. p. I80f.
el 1bid • p.I84.
9\~ilson Kni.ght 9 l,he..JJheel_of Fj:l:£.·, p" I 53"
I~.CoBrad18Y, S~~~~~~r9~~' p.350~
IIIntrodwction to Arden ed. ~a£bethJ p. Ivi.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
PRIHAHY SOURCES
Shakespeare, William. The Tempes\, ed.. Frank Kermode .. London: He thuen , 1962.
SECONDARY SOURCES
Egan,M.F. The Ghost in Hamlet. New York: Books for Libraries, 1951.
E11iot,G.R. Scotrrge and Minister. Durham, N.Carolina: Duke University Press, 1951.
Thiselton Dyer, Rev. Eglk ~ore in Shakespe~. New York: Dover Publications, 1883.
Tillyard,E. \"1. Shakespeare f s Problem Plays. London: Toronto Press, 19.50.