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MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR
The MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR is no doubt a very amusing play, with a
great deal of humour, character, and nature in it: but we should
have liked it much better, if any one else had been the hero of it,
instead of Falstaff. We could have been contented if Shakespeare had
not been 'commanded to show the knight in love'. Wits and
philosophers, for the most part, do not shine in that character; and
Sir John himself by no means comes off with flying colours. Many
people complain of the degradation and insults to which Don Quixote
is so frequently exposed in his various adventures. But what are the
unconscious indignities which he suffers, compared with the sensible
mortifications which Falstaff is made to bring upon himself? What
are the blows and buffetings which the Don receives from the staves
of the Yanguesian carriers or from Sancho Panza's more hard-hearted
hands, compared with the contamination of the buck-basket, the
disguise of the fat woman of Brentford, and the horns of Herne the
hunter, which are discovered on Sir John's head? In reading the
play, we indeed wish him well through all these discomfitures, but
it would have been as well if he had not got into them. Falstaff in
the MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR is not the man he was in the two parts of
HENRY IV. His wit and eloquence have left him. Instead of making a
butt of others, he is made a butt of by them. Neither is there a
single particle of love in him to excuse his follies: he is merely a
designing, bare-faced knave, and an unsuccessful one.
The scene with Ford as Master Brook, and that with Simple, Slender's
man, who comes to ask after the Wise Woman, are almost the only ones
in which his old intellectual ascendancy appears. He is like a
person recalled to the stage to perform an unaccustomed and
ungracious part; and in which we perceive only 'some faint sparks of
those flashes of merriment, that were wont to set the hearers in a
roar'. But the single scene with Doll Tearsheet, or Mrs. Quickly's
account of his desiring 'to eat some of housewife Keach's prawns',
and telling her 'to be no more so familiarity with such people', is
worth the whole of the MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR put together. Ford's
jealousy, which is the mainspring of the comic incidents, is
certainly very well managed. Page, on the contrary, appears to be
somewhat uxorious in his disposition; and we have pretty plain
indications of the effect of the characters of the husbands on the
different degrees of fidelity in their wives. Mrs. Quickly makes a
very lively go-between, both between Falstaff and his Dulcineas, and
Anne Page and her lovers, and seems in the latter case so intent on
her own interest as totally to overlook the intentions of her
employers. Her master, Doctor Caius, the Frenchman, and her fellow
servant Jack Rugby, are very completely described. This last-
mentioned person is rather quaintly commended by Mrs. Quickly as 'an
honest, willing, kind fellow, as ever servant shall come in house
withal, and I warrant you, no tell-tale, nor no breed-bate; his
worst fault is, that he is given to prayer; he is something peevish
that way; but nobody but has his fault.' The Welsh Parson, Sir Hugh
Evans (a title which in those days was given to the clergy) is an
excellent character in all respects. He is as respectable as he is
laughable. He has 'very good discretions, and very odd humours'. The
duel-scene with Caius gives him an opportunity to show his 'cholers
and his tremblings of mind', his valour and his melancholy, in an
irresistible manner. In the dialogue, which at his mother's request
he holds with his pupil, William Page, to show his progress in
learning, it is hard to say whether the simplicity of the master or
the scholar is the greatest. Nym, Bardolph, and Pistol, are but the
shadows of what they were; and Justice Shallow himself has little of
his consequence left. But his cousin, Slender, makes up for the
deficiency. He is a very potent piece of imbecility. In him the
pretensions of the worthy Gloucestershire family are well kept up,
and immortalized. He and his friend Sackerson and his book of songs
and his love of Anne Page and his having nothing to say to her can
never be forgotten. It is the only first-rate character in the play,
but it is in that class. Shakespeare is the only writer who was as
great in describing weakness as strength.
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