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“Shakespeare leaves us all satisfied at the end of his plays.” Discuss this statement, referring to one or more plays by Shakespeare you have studied. To determine if Shakespeare leaves us satisfied at the end of his plays, we need to first understand what we mean by “satisfied”. At first sight, this appears to be true I think you need to qualify this – always? All plays? – Shakespeare always leave us feeling happy that we saw or read his play, and in some way fulfilled. But how, then, are we to account for the feeling of “utter desolation and waste”, to use AC Bradley’s phrase, which is so common to us on reading his tragedies? Where satisfaction is a purely happy feeling, and understood to mean invoking in the audience a feeling that all is right with the world, the statement is patently untrue – rare indeed is the audience that can watch scenes like the murder of Desdemona in Othello and the death of Cordelia in King Lear and believe that all is correct in the play-world. However, if we instead understand satisfaction to mean something more like Aristotle’s Catharsis, as put forth in his commentaries on the nature of tragedy in Poetics, we can begin to agree with the statement. Shakespeare’s plays universally involve characters who in some way clash with the world around them, and at the end of these plays they are without exception nullified, in some way. In comedies, for instance The Merchant of Venice, they are nullified by being married to another character (and thus, in modern culture as for the Elizabethans, fundamentally changing their legal and actual nature) and in tragedies, for instance Hamlet, they are nullified by simply dying. If, then, we take the literal meaning of Catharsis, “purging” or “purification”, we can resolve our dilemma, and it becomes clear that this does indeed take place in Shakespearean drama. In comedies, we are presented with a whole menagerie of characters that conflict with the world around them. Portia laments that she shall die “as chaste as Diana” if no one wins the contest set by her father, and Rosalind’s existence is fundamentally at odds with her status as the daughter of the “banished duke”, which means “doom lies upon her” as long as she stays. These characters step outside of the role that their society - and indeed the world they live in, from society to religion to the rest of the cast - would expect of them, and normally experience some hardship as a result of this. This is not to say that the characters are portrayed as bad, and indeed these characters are often shown to be in the right in their conflicts with society. No one would criticise Portia for her annoyance that her father has “hedged me by his wit”, and we feel entirely happy that she cheats the test slightly, by commanding Nerissa to “place a goblet of wine” on a contrary casket to mislead her suitors, and by commanding a hinting song (“tell me where is fancy bred / in the heart, or in the head…”) to be played while Bassanio chooses. Nonetheless, we must understand that for the Elizabethans especially Portia’s position as an active agent was fundamentally at odds with “The godwrit structure of the world”, to use Francis Bacon’s phrase, who was writing around the same time. This means that while we are expected to root for these characters who clash with their society, and to want them to come to a good end, we nonetheless want them to come to an end, and for the disconnect to go away. The course each play is fundamentally similar – in all of them, the plot revolves around the solution of this disjunction between character and world, and in the end we always observe this happening. Portia marries Bassanio and returns to Belmont with him, presumably no longer to dress up as “Balthazar”, and is at the end of the play essentially a different character to who she was at the start. Marriage, for Shakespeare, was as effective a way of nullifying a character as death. A detailed and perceptive discussion In Shakespearean tragedies, instead of the characters being married off, we see them simply dying. The same reasons for characters being out-of-place are present in tragedies, with characters like Macbeth or Hamlet in some way violating the norms of society, even if through no action of their own. Macbeth’s “vaulting ambition o’er leaps itself”, and Hamlet finds himself in the untenable position of needing to weigh up the moral evil of killing a king “on who’s property and most dear life “Shakespeare leaves us all satisfied at the end of his plays.” Discuss this statement, referring to one or more plays by Shakespeare you have studied. the state hangs upon”, and his duty to “fat all the region kites with bloody offal” in response to the murder of his father. In both of these cases, the characters simply could not fit into normal society, as indeed neither Portia nor Rosalind could in their original state. Again, this means that while we certainly root for these characters, we also are expected to – and while in this later time we may do so less, we still do - desire that the incongruity be resolved. We “implicitly yearn for the natural order to be restored”, to use H. Bloom’s phrase. We can feel that Hamlet’s death is the “crack[ing] of a noble heart”, but we still feel that perhaps his death is the best for all concerned. This is tied up tightly with the Aristotelian idea of characters having a great tragic flaw, which made it entirely impossible for them to coexist with the world. Othello’s “free and open nature” means that he is doomed, as surely as Hamlet’s inability to ignore either of the moral dictates that he is faced with sentences him to death. Shakespearean tragic characters are like his comic characters in that they clash with the world, and at the end of each play their nature is somehow changed to stop them doing this, achieving catharsis. Tragedy does this in the easiest possible way, by killing them. In both tragedy and comedy we observe characters that step out of their societally assigned roles being put back into them, either through marriage or through death, which for Shakespeare as today is the ultimate way to ensure that someone never clashes with anything ever again. This is partially a reflection of the dramatic ideal of “equilibrium” that had come from Attic Tragedy, which held that worlds existed in a steady state, and would automatically return to this state, reacting against any perturbations. Shakespeare seems to have subscribed to this ideal, and his plays can be thought of as an arc, starting with harmony and ending with harmony. As You Like It and other comedies conclude with an assurance that everything will be perfectly peaceful and blissful from then on: “Proceed, proceed. We will begin these rites, / As we do trust they'll end, in true delights”. Tragedies, however, take a more violent approach to “harmony”, instead achieving it through creating a sense of “desolation and waste” at the conclusion of the play. The ultimate equilibrium, after all, is a void, and this is what is created at the conclusion of tragedies. This is not a feature of all literature – modern authors especially make no efforts to force their characters back into static equilibrium at the end of their works. Jane Eyre ends with Jane just as headstrong as ever, and no indication that she will change. Shakespeare, seemingly, had a phobia of his characters remaining disjoint with the world around them and because it is entirely impossible to imagine Hamlet or any of the Shakespearean central characters existing in equilibrium after their plays, we see them in some way nullified. This ties into the literal meaning of Catharsis – to purge, as if through burning. Shakespeare burns away the emotional disconnect that we feel from his characters, leaving a sense of utter equilibrium at the end of his plays. Shakespearean characters, then, are complete – the very fact that there cannot be a “Hamlet II” is a sign that we as audience are “satisfied” or fulfilled, even if by force.you may need to make this link to the question a little earlier In conclusion, Shakespeare does leave us feeling cathartically satisfied at the end of all his plays. His plays are a story of a character, or group of characters, who clash with their world ceasing to do so. His comedies and tragedies differ in how they have this end up, with comedies doing it through changing the character’s nature while keeping them alive and tragedies doing it through the painful death of the character concerned. We must remember in declaring this, however, that the process of catharsis or satisfaction is not necessarily a positive experience, and while it does seem that the deaths of characters like Cordelia and Lear or Romeo and Juliet is a purifying experience, and Shakespearean tragedy always ends with the natural order being restored (Claudius dying in Hamlet, Antonio escaping death in The Merchant of Venice, the usurping duke giving up power in As You Like “Shakespeare leaves us all satisfied at the end of his plays.” Discuss this statement, referring to one or more plays by Shakespeare you have studied. It), they do also conjure a sense of “desolation and waste”. This, however, does not argue against them being fundamentally satisfying to the audience, as at the end of all of Shakespeare’s plays we accept that we cannot see these characters act any further, as they have completed their character arc, and the characters that we so adored are entirely negated. Thus, we must conclude that they do always leave us satisfied – whether we want to be or not. A very well structured and developed argument. There is not a great deal that I can add – great critical discussion of key points – and a range of texts included. Well done ET5