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inter a
journal
of political
volume
3/1
philosophy
autumn
"an
1972
exquisite platform":
utopia
gratitude, nature, and piety in on
the induction of the
king lear
taming of
shrew
ne and michael
"and in its
wake we
followed"
the political wisdom of mark twain
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"AN EXQUISITE PLATFORM": UTOPIA
Eva Brann
1.
Utopias Two
Political
as
Poetry
purporting to be by the poet laureate of Utopia were More's Utopia by his Dutch friend Peter Giles, whose house is the setting for the narrative. One of them says:1 poems
prefixed to
Me Utopie Void
Now I
cleped
haunt
of
Antiquity, herborough,
and
like to Plato's city,
am
Whose fame flieth the
Yea, like, Plato's For In
naked
The
to excell
plat
Plato's
what
with
Wherefore
not
name
hath
in
as
have I
same
With laws,
My
likely
and pass.
pen
words,
thorough;
world
or rather more
a
platted
briefly
glass,
fully,
performed
men, and treasure fitly.
Utopie, but
is Eutopie:
rather
rightly
felicity [21].
a place of
I
cannot resist first quoting from the original in the Utopian language and alphabet:
Bargol he
Agrama I
baccan
shaped
for
briefly
words"
by
in Plutarch's Lives,
it is
city [19].
Utopia
The
actuality.
where
given
philosophy
a philosophical
man
its
is
soma gymnosophaon.
poems make the same point.
in
which
other,
labarem bacha bodamilomin.
gymnosophon
one of all other without
Have
Both
maglomi
of the
made
surpasses other cities
original of
for the
"platted
this claim is to be found
work of
the Spartan
Lycurgus,
polity:
...
all
those
who
have
writ'.en well on
taken Lycurgus for their model,
words;
whereas
government
Lycurgus
which
none
have treated the individual of a complete philosophic
Greece [Lycurgus,
1
was
else
edition:
S. J.,
page
the
author,
could
so
raised
in writing
not
as
copy;
and
and
mere
but while
in reality, of a men in general
unattainable, he above all
Zeno, have
projects and
by
the example
the other lawgivers of
ch. xxxi].
references
are
in the text
J. H. Hexter (New Haven
References to
much
himself high
from Ralph Robinson's translation
are
Utopia, The Complete Works
and
Plato, Diogenes
as
philosophic character as
city
Quotations from the Ulopia
but the
politics,
leaving behind them, however,
works named
and
of
1551,
to the modern annotated Latin and English
of St. Thomas
London: Yale
in the text
are
by
More, Vol. 4,
ed.
E.
University Press, 1965).
standard
divisions.
Surtz,
Interpretation
2 Now the utterly
that
observation
obvious
"actual"
Utopia is
not
in
con way Sparta was can serve to introduce the question which a utopia has being. in the way cerning The answer to the question is not hard to formulate. Utopias are communities constructed in the imagination and expressed in words; is nothing but they are word pictures, a kind of poetry. Their What Utopia shares negatively: to put it their imaginative vividness. Or, quite
the
same
"reality"
Sparta is the absence of "naked words"; just as Lycurgus "would but made Sparta to embody them, so his laws to Utopia pictures its polity. Accordingly, Sir Philip Sidney includes the book Utopia among the poetic works in his Defense of Poesie and says of the
with
writing"
never reduce
Utopian poet:
.
.
the philosopher saith should
whatsoever
.
in
by
one
some
notion with
description,
image
an
doth
which
the imagination.
done;
perfect picture
gives a perfect picture of
so
he
as
coupleth
I say, for he
philosopher
the
sight
to the
a wordish
the
of
it
general
yieldeth
bestoweth but
the
nor possess
strike, pierce,
called political
city"
of the philosopher's
Utopias
as
seen
the
or whether
city,
"without
nature
of
poetry
be
to
remains
claiming that this "feigned
2.
be done, he
was
that whereof the
of
neither
may be It
Utopias, then,
very
it
soul
so
that other doth [para. 21].
much as
of
presupposeth
the particular example. A
the mind
powers of
he
whom
poet
it is
belong to Sidney
and
whether
is
the
is
image in the
an
perhaps
rather
faculty
right
in
particular
a place
in its
philosophy."
Daydreams
The first kind of exoteric
by
of imagining that Utopias suggest is daydreaming, a sort dreaming undertaken by one man in behalf of a band unified
a common
in the
desire. In the
playful web
Utopia
by More Peter
such as
case of the
of make-believe
and
first
his international
Giles'
this aspect is
utopia
factuality
spun
circle of
friends
Utopian language,
mellifluous
about
expressed
the island of
(3-45, 249-53),
and so persuasive was
this pleasant conspiracy that a certain cleric could be reported to have longing to be sent to Utopia by the Pope as bishop (43). In just
expressed a
More wrote to Erasmus telling of a daydream in which he had himself as the chosen king of Utopia "marching along crowned with a diadem of wheat, (c. December 4, very striking in my Franciscan 1516). There is a whole class of such Utopian daydreams. Among these are the foundation of More's reader Rabelais, the community founded by Gargan-
this vein seen
garb"
tua, the of
the
commonwealth makes
More's Utopia, which is called the Abbey Wish (Gargantua and Pantagruel, I, 5), and the simple Gonzales in The Tempest, who, like More,
son-in-law of the
Theleme,
himself
traries execute ...
for
no
Abbey of
king all
of
king of
of
a state.
In his
realm
things":
kind
Would I admit;
of
traffic
no name of
magistrate;
Gonzales
would
"by
con
An Exquisite Platform": Utopia Letters And
should not
use of
be known; riches, poverty,
service, none; contract, succession,
Bourn, bound All things in Without
3
of
land, tilth,
vineyard, none;
.
.
.
common nature should produce
sweat or endeavor
Such Utopias, be they but not willed.
more
.
.
.
[II, 1].
witty
or more
naive,
are
as
lands
wished
But this aspect of Utopias as Lands of Cockayne, places either of effort less virtue or easy pleasure, is inadequate. In fact, More's Utopia and almost every subsequent Utopian construction is a sober and disciplined place, which, although More's contemporaries delighted in its virtuous ways (e.g., 29), induces strong misgivings in more recent readers. These misgivings concern, interestingly enough, not the obvious weakness nature for which they were Engels in the Communist Manifesto as unscien tific and ultimately reactionary (III, 3). On the contrary, the dissatisfaction comes precisely from the apprehension of Utopias as practical proposals. Utopias offend because they are felt to be "static": monotonous, regiment ed, drably uniform, barrenly restrictive. So Mumford, for instance, thinks of every utopia as a kind of human machine, to be regarded as original social evil, as "kakotopia or hell"; while another writer entitles an article on More's Utopia "A Detestable State."2
Utopias, that
of
by
castigated
3.
irresponsibly diversionary
Marx
and
More Against His Own Utopia
The
most
significant
so often unacceptable
fact, however,
is More's
in considering why Utopias are his book. I shall give an
own relation to
list of items in respect to which More expressed disapprobation his own Utopian institutions. It includes almost every feature that is fundamental. He comments in his own behalf both at the end of the first and the second of its two books, in each case after Raphael Hythloday, the dis coverer of Utopia, has finished speaking. In the second book he says: abbreviated of
.
.
.
many things
came
to my mind
which
to be instituted and founded of
seemed
their chivalry and
also, yea,
and
in their
.
.
.
manners
chiefly, in that
which
is the of
and
laws
of
that people
reason, not only in the fashion
sacrifices and religion
nances, that is to say, in the community
money
in the
no good
and
principal
in
others
foundation
their life and
living
of of
their all
without
of
laws, but
their ordi
occupying
of
[245].
More still opposed Hythloday's most forcefully expressed opinion, that is "the only way to wealth in a commonality, if equality of wealth in his last year in the Tower, when should be brought in and this
established"
2
Utopias
and
Utopian
Thought,
ed.
F. E. Manuel (Boston: Beacon Press, 1966), ed. W. Nelson (Englewood
Twentieth Century Interpretations of U:opia, Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1968), p. 88. p.
15;
and
Interpretation
4
he
in the Dialogue of Comfort3 that if equally "it would be on the morrow after
wrote
out
the
all
wealth were portioned
than it was the
worse
For surely the rich man's substance is the wellspring of man's living"(II, 22). In fact, far from regarding communism, narrator, as Christian, More condemned it as one of the "horrible
fore.
of
.
.
be
day
the poor
.
Tyndale'
the Anabaptists in his Confutation of
Even
fundamental than the
more
his
with
heresies"
Answer. Utopians is their
s
communism of the
they think that all our actions, and in them the virtues themselves, be referred at last to pleasure as their end and and they regard religious ascetics as holy but not quite sane But More, who is reported in the Life written by his 227). (167, law Roper secretly to have worn a hair shirt next to his skin and to
love
".
of pleasure:
.
.
felicity,"
son-in-
have
that "a
from
his
punished
body
with
whips,4
considered,
perfect man should abstain not
only from
his
with
model
Pico, but
unlawful pleasures
lawful."5
Again,
Utopians
the
free
permit
of
choice
religion,
therefore
and
have no idea of heresy (221). More, on the other hand, argues in several places, for instance, in the Dialogue on Heresies (IV, 13), that heretical books should not be suffered to go abroad and that the burning of doctrinal
heretics is of the
"lawful,
sometimes
necessary, and
first Utopians to be baptized
much zeal
as to
immediately
Christianity
show
well done."6
and
preaches
Moreover,
the faith
one
with so
toleration in effect incompatible
(219). The Utopian
More
it
as
a
devilish
(Dialogue of Comfort, II, 16); condition
of
to the
priests recommend suicide
regards
the
incompatibility (191)
temptation
Utopians
More
desperately all
under
divorce
permit
opposed
sick
it
(187)
circumstances
unto
under
the
death;
the
More strenuously defends images in their worship (233) their necessity (Dialogue on Heresies, I, 3). How then did More manage to conjure up the image of an ideal commonwealth whose institutions were so thoroughly contrary to his own Utopians
use no
views?
Nicholas Harpsfield, in the first formal as follows:
biography
of
More,
speaks of
Utopia
But the book that beareth the
invention, for
profane matters,
so
as
pleasantly,
3
it
were
prick and price of all
is his Utopia. He
an exquisite
platform,
his
other
painteth me pattern
Latin books it forth
and example
of
witty
so
lively
of
a singular
and
Saint Thomas More, A Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation, ed. L. Miles and London: Indiana University Press, 1965), pp. 135, 136.
(Bloomington 4
William Roper
and
E. E. Reynolds (London 5
and
Nicholas Harpsfield, Lives of Saint Thomas More, New York: Everyman's Library, 1963), p. 25.
ed.
and
The English Works of Sir Thomas More, ed. W. E. Campbell (London: Eyre Spottiswoode, 1931), Volume the First: Early Poems, Pico della Mirandola,
Richard III, The Four Last Things, p. 378. 6 Ibid., Volume the Second: The Dialogue Concerning Heresies of Religion (= The Dialogue Concerning Tyndale), p. 301.
and
Matters
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia good
as
commonwealth,
yet, the best of
not
devising
the
and
probably
new
found lands declared
one of
the
such
the
people were
not
say
and
by
to be in one of the countries of the
state and
even of
any
Christians,
other even
that, saving in
be the
our
time.
7
answer to
More himself
while
and
found
commonwealth, I will
on what might seem to
are not
Portuguese,
a
sought out and
commonwealth
of
state
to pass any
rehearsed, but
me
his finger
put
absolute
Athenians', Prettily
the
nor
comparable.
Antwerp by Hythlodaye,
might seem
the Utopians
question
at
Americus Vespusius, that first
excellent
of the old nations
is
commonwealth
him
unto
unchristian,
Harpsfield has the
an
Romans'
said commonwealth
sea companions of
lands;
these
Lacedaemonians',
to the same neither the
others, the
all
5
was a
devout Christian. But that is not a sufficient explanation, for first of all, More's friends, for instance, the scholar Bude, thought of Utopia as life" possessing "the true wisdom of Christianity for public and private most
(11). And
be shown, his friends were deceived, have chosen to imagine "the best state of the on the one hand as pagan, but on the other, as pagan of such a sort that it might readily be mistaken for Christian. Thus, in sum, it appears that the first Utopia is not a mere dream, although it is a complex and characteristic product of the imagination as opposed to the intellect, a city which "without philosophy has shaped invention" for man a philosophical a very "witty and subtie almost uncorrupted
it does
even
if,
why More
not explain
as will
should
commonwealth"
city,"
to the point of perversity.
4.
Utopias Since
as
Products
of the
reflection on such
Imagination
a place ought
to begin
with
brief
a
inquiry
into the imagination itself, it seems justifiable to cite the treatise On the Imagination by Pico della Mirandola,8 the model of More's life, whose More had
biography
work, draws
composed
in his
Pico's treatise,
youth.
the whole tradition concerning the
on
a
faculty
Renaissance of
the
imag
Aristotle's De Anima. It is well to note ination, especially here that as a Christian work of moral intention the treatise deprecates the productive or poetic fantasy, while as a pre-Romantic summary it knows imagination as a faculty for the deliberate nothing of the form. But this will make no difficulty in the innovation of pure case of Utopian genres which will appear to be neither quite poetry, nor, on
Plato
and
"creative"
"artistic"
indeed, .
.
.
"art"
at all.
Pico
says:
the foundation-stone of the
discussion
have
we
exists a power of the soul which conceives and
serves,
to this
and
The
ministers
and
power
to, both the
has been
cursive
given the name
"phantasy"
can
product of
appeared"
(Greek:
7
Ibid.,
8
Gianfrancesco
p.
stasis
be
undertaken
...
fashions likenesses
reason
and
is that there of
things,
the contemplative
and
intellect;
phantasy or imagination [ch. IV].
called an
"arrest
of things that
phanthenton) or, as Plato says, a
have
"picture,"
110.
(New Haven: Yale
Pico della
Mirandola, On
University Press, 1930).
the
Imagination,
trans. H. Caplan
Interpretation
6 because "the
form
various appearances receive
a manner not unlike that
in
which painters
and are
depict the
fashioned
various and
will, in
at
dissimilar
things"
(ch. I). However, this deliberately constructive and com is not a power separable from the repro binatory ductive imagination that fashions a purified but particular likeness of an object of sense no longer naturally present (chs. II, IV). Men's lives are
forms
of
"phantasy"
productive
largely
by
governed
this power.
consigns, in the form
of
from without;
such
ination, acting
as a mean
for
supplies
(chs. with
between
become the
by
imag
that the
objects
sense and the rational part of
the soul,
the latter as objects of desire or ends of
action
VI).
V,
The
impressions,"
memories
sense
recognition
For it is to the imagination that the sense what it has drawn sense
"perpetual
modes of
imaginary
the imagination
communities
do indeed
seem
to be in
accord
described.
so
have the modes of pictures, although of pictures Hence they are usually accompanied by and views. Furthermore, since they are conceived in the maps, plans, power pictures of perfect and self-sufficient human as world-mirroring First
of
all,
Utopias
in
expressed
readily
wholes, they are,
speech.
or at
least the early
Utopias often
cos-
are, microcosms,
the whole world into the island or the his island of Christianopolis "a whole world in (ch. II), and Campanella's City of the Sun is in fact a cosmo logical model. The island of Utopia itself was once, to signify that it is mographic miniatures that project city.
Thus Andreae
calls
miniature"
a world unto
itself,
called
by
the occult name
highest, all-encompassing heaven. In this,
feigning A
power of
corroborative
by
offered progress
Utopias,
fantasy,
contrast
A Modern
onto
a
whole
which are
Furthermore, exhibit
the
brightly
which
Tolkien
calls
Wells fictive counter-earth, in
Utopia, in
which
styles of
life,
Utopian
projects contrast
and symbolic
usually
that
world-
"the Sub-creative
communities, because they
delineated
which signifies the
display
Utopias
to this original, premodern,
small, well-framed,
Utopian
"Abraxa,"
are
leaning
Art."9
mode
the trends to the
is of
original
place-pictures.
visually conceived, to one or the
other
form. Some Utopias, especially those celebrating Atlantis of Plato's Critias, display a somewhat
extreme of possible public
technique, hke sinister ritual
are
or
like Bacon's New Atlantis,
a mysterious
but
punctilious
magnificence; others, like Houyhnhnm Land in Gulliver's
depicted
itself,
the old
splendor,
with
is
rejoicing in sedate and sober its Franciscan monastic habits and as
rustic
Travels, decorousness; Utopia
absence of gilded ornament
fetters and chamber pots (153) furnished the first example of the latter style. And indeed, Swift [who numbered More in the unmatchable sextumvirate of statesmen that includes Socrates' name (III, 7)] said of his horses, which are falsely rumored to have "no gold
used
only to make
more existence than the
they have 9
not even
inhabitants
a name
for
Utopia"
of
(Prefatory Letter), that (IV, 12); thus they
the vice of pride
J. R. R. Tolkien, "On Fairy-Stories," Essays presented to Charles Williams (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1968), pp. 66-67.
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia are, in their simplicity of
is,
as we shall
calls
"quasi-christalline
imagination,
static
who
social
for
conditions
necessary
Circumstantially imagination to
Secondly, their origin
because it is in the and
painted
as
two-dimensional
and
apt phrase.
regard
whose essence
nature of the
appearances,"
utopia; it is
pervade
in Harpsfield's critics
a
Utopians,
the
cousins of
absence of pride and magnificence.
structures"10
"arrested
are
fleshless. Hence
invariably
life, first
see, precisely the
7
flatly formed,
It is this in
a good
though
motionless
does
character
"exquisite
an
utopia that offends
and
almost
platform,"
those modern
opportunity for experience as Utopias are what Levi-Strauss
and
mobility
such,
society.
they may be,
Utopias, as beings
of the
arrest motion.
Utopias show modes of place and time that are appropriate to
in
the imagination. in his Confessions,
writes of his imaginative memory as containing "the fields and spacious palaces of memory, where are the treasures of innumerable images, brought into it from things of all sorts
Augustine,
by
perceived
senses."
These images
the
can
be
recalled and reconstructed
at pleasure:
All this do I within, in that huge
heaven,
the
the earth, the
whenas with mine eyes
but the images
of
sea.
the
Most
.
court of .
them only
memory.
For there have I in
not swallow
are
them into
the things themselves
me
readiness
by
seeing,
now within
me,
[X, 8], a power
Utopias appear
imagination; they
my
Yet did I
I beheld them. Nor
The imagination then is at will.
.
of unreal
places
that can be visited
to have their origin in such voyages within
are places of
the imagination
expressed as
imaginary
Therefore almost all in fact have the form of narrations of voyages of discovery. The Odyssey is the prototype, and the narrator of Utopia Odysseus' is indeed compared to Odysseus (49). In fact, last discovery, places.
Phaeacia, is of nautical
in
almost a prototypical utopia:
beings
safe and stable
disporting themselves, luxury between nature
a sea
and
Sheared-off Land, forever lost to the world penetrated it (Odyssey, XIII, 146 ff.). But ness.
Utopian voyages
For
differ from
Utopias are not pure
land
not of
as we shall see
odysseys
artifice, and as once a
in the
human
mode of
inventions but images
earthly but
the Utopians
do,
Scheria, narrator
the
has
their fictitious-
whose existence
is
ardently desired. Hence their descriptions do not have the ingenious verisimilitude appropriate to tales of adventure. For while they (such as Utopia bore, strive "to bear a good countenance of on
one
level
truth"
Harpsfield says,
by
and
as Utopian accounts are
of
desire in
unreality
of
appearing at a time in which "many strange many conclusions were discovered"), insofar ardently interested in existence, being institutions of the imagination, they intrude the fact of the
reason of
and unknown nations
the places
their place
purposefully
and
"no-place."
"utopia"
means
10
Inaugural lecture
at
the College de France.
persistently
the very
word
Interpretation
8
But
what most
intimately
is that they tamper
characterizes Utopias
with
time.
They
do
present,
because the
so
and so
is
the
stamped with
impressions"
a commemorative
power,
empty future. Hence the past tense, in the "once of
resurrector
it,
it is
and
the past, Don
one
has
that
Quixote,
much
gold or
no
and
invariably
since Utopias
appropriately
behind
end
"Idylls"). An
in Plato's
promised
in
pleasure
in
realized
rather
which
"aching idyll, a genre
Timaeus,
by
presents
cities,
and
their
animates
which
putting
Sentimental
Poetry,
prepared
planned
old
an
as
of
account
Socrates'
for
imaginatively the
primeval
its fifty-four cities, corresponding in
with
City"
Amaurotum, the "Darkling London, and its unenclosed countryside
capital
fostered in harmonious balance with merry England behind that of the fallen
and
rampaging sheep the
no
present,
characterized as
the polity of the Republic was to be
English shires, its foggy but salubrious
the
utopia:
(I, 11). But
representing one. Thus they
actual
Schiller
"festivity"
the
number to the a
a picture of
paints
the first
return,"
a
that
the
this kind of utopia is the never-written tale
a
unspoiled
is
age
golden
civic myths
past,
than before (On Naive
moving picture, Athens (st. 24). So also Utopia
built like
an otherwise
going to law
no
the degenerate
for
of
example
the past,
bringing into
longer
no
accusations against a particular
stand as
"behind"
counterpart, the
with
common
ornament,
the pristine community share the nostalgia, the the
in
are often resurrections of a particular
private
is
simplifying imagination. That
and
"thine,"
"mine"
they
time"; hence the
a
upon
present or
past; it is
the
what
the imagination are often cast in the
this purifying
of
product
by
a power of
perfection, into the
seal of
left
sense
products of
paradigm
imagination is
sole source of the
the "perpetual
stocked with
and
present.
Sometimes in the later Utopias, the past is brought not into the present News from Nowhere, which is a revival Morris'
but into the future, as in of a pastoral England in
cinquecento
garb
projected
into
a
future
Here the device used for tampering with the time sequence is the Odyssean one of translation during sleep (Odyssey, XIII, 187), which century.
the narrator, like
Rip van Winkle, into the future, having con killed the crucial time of crisis during which the world is convert veniently ed into utopia; such future Utopias are not so much "feigned common projects
wealths"
as
half-hopeful
confirming contrary type
plans
presented
of modern
suppressed and the present projected nature arise
from dissatisfaction
the past are Utopias of
with
terror, in
in
pictures.
"utopia,"
Again
there
is
a
that in which the past is
into the future. Since
which the evils
by
Utopias
the present, those that do
their
draw
not
incipient in the
on
present
are (excepting some products of an invincibly optimistic era like Bellamy's Looking Backward) projected on a magnified scale into the frightening void
of
horror,
the future and
that
and
being
there the
their terrors. Such anti-utopias
history
as
progress, but in this
depicted
nature
of
with
fascinated
the imagination
are warnings
based
and
even
even
avid
glory in
on a modern notion of
case as pejorative progress.
The best-known
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia futurist
examples of
latter,
the
understand
Huxley's Brave New World
Utopias are
Nineteen Eighty-Four,
it is
and
9
that
significant
their nightmare
realization of
Orwell's
and
both, but
particularly the to depend primarily on
the obliteration of the past.
All this is this
draws
case
specifically
5.
not
to say that as
the intellect as well
a work of
out
and
carries
Time
and
of
imagination.
Utopia a reflection on
place
it
meaning (as contrasted
adverb
is,
that
not
"no
place
having
or, to
render
actually in
the
property
of place).
"un-
or
a possible
Utopia is
the
exis
"non-place"
"me-topia,"
with
the political
employs.
"no-place,"
"ou,"
tence"
place,"
of the
primarily
"Utopia"
of the negative
much
very
the
More's book shows itself most clearly as imagination in the special modes of time and (ou-topia) is Greek and means exact
not
imagination, but that thought in to their last conclusion the principles of
appropriate to a product
The Special Place
poetry, Utopia is
political
as
a place of
the
imagination worldly in all respects but that it lacks bodily existence, the quality of being there, that is, of real location. More signifies this by having Hythloday fail to specify exact geographic coordinates, although as the counterpart of England, he places Utopia as far south of the equator as England is north (197), and as a land reached by a member of Amerigo Vespucci's expedition (51), in the new world (so that ever since the Americas have been the place for the splendidly self-contradictory enterprise of
the
place
locating
(Un-country), friends
and
engaged
in
the river much
that More's
Utopia,
a place on earth
of the
intellect
heaven"
some of
the names, especially
"Anydrus"
(Waterless) (251). More
pleasantry concerning this lack
Hythloday although
(43). This
of
about which
Socrates
contrast says
and
his
geographic
how the
of
commissions
game underscores
feigned in the
in deliberate
"Achoria"
privative, like the land
came
to inquire further of
way
region,
are
giving each other circumstantial explanations to be omitted in the account (23) and earnest
placement,
location
Utopia). In addition,
of this
names
imagination, is
the claim also
in its
to Plato's polity, a product
that "it is
a pattern
laid up in
(st. 592).
Now, curiously, vague as is Utopia's location in place, its setting in time is very precise. Three exact dates are supplied: the date of its years before Hythloday's founding, according to the annals of Utopia 1 ,760
in 1516 (121), that is, in 244 b.c. ; the arrival Egyptians 1,200 years ago (109), that is, in the
Romans
account
of some
and
beginning
of
the
fourth century a.d.; and the arrival of Hythloday's company, who were left behind during Amerigo Vespucci's last voyage which took place in
1504. Each of these dates is significant. Utopia's present founded in the first year of the rule of King Agis IV of his life in an unsuccessful attempt to revive the long-lived perpetual
constitution of
had instituted "a
common
Sparta's way
of
original life"
government
was
Sparta,
lost
who
but far
short of
lawgiver, Lycurgus. Lycurgus
not unlike that of
Utopus
except
Interpretation
10 land
that
was
the disposal
held, though equally shared out, and not within holder; this latter provision had been nullified by a
privately the
of
law that, Plutarch says, was "the ruin of the best state of the common since it permitted the accumulation of wealth (Life of Agis, ch. V). Utopia is thus marked as Sparta's purer and stabler double. arrived just before The Romans and Egyptians note, no Greeks wealth,"
Constantine
bearers
the
of
Egypt
of
inventions
and
arts
useful
sectarian wisdom
the Roman state religion,
Christianity
made
might
be
Rome
of
understood
rising Christian faith. And finally, Hythloday a clever touch of humanistic learning (which
or
arrives a
that these the
of
to have come without
(159)
the texts of the waning Greek philosophy
either
so
perhaps
and
the news of the
with
a
monkey has
light load
well chewed
into).
The
have
They
three dates is to mark the Utopians as
effect of these
of the tragedies and a
passions, the
beginning
but
no genesis
wild people to that excellent and civil
world.
they
.
are
gentleness,
rises and
wherein
perfection
they
are not
bound
action and
passion, in
Christians,
the
fall of
by
the
particular
man.
beyond
natural
but
our,
being outside human, history.
all
conditions
the people of the
in human times, term, ahistoric, that
not
use a modern
from that
Hythloday
of
Utopus simply lifts a "rude and in all good fashions, humanity,
now go
(113). Hence they live in not atemporal but they are, to
is to say, they
declines
that arise from prior human
primeval
startlingly
historical
observes of
for
event
the Utopians
that if their chronicles are to be believed "cities were there before men here"
were
Adam, in the
(107). In
since
other
words, the Utopians
him, nor, it
they Genesis, namely antedate
sense of
would
are not
follow,
descended from
are
they
creatures
such as are capable of rebellion against
their creator.
More's friend Bude was therefore right when in his prefatory letter "Udepotia" named Utopia alternately (No-when) (11), if that is taken to mean something more significant than merely "at no namely, humanity." "outside the epoch of created But he was, as we shall see, "Hagnopolis" wrong in naming it also (Holy City) (13), that is, in he
time,"
considering it the New Jerusalem. [Here Bacon's new Pacific, that is to say, peaceful, Atlantis is more in the spirit of More's secular city, as Bacon signifies by calling the Atlantic capital "Bensalem" (Good Salem), "Hierousalem"
(Holy Salem)]. The diverse treatment of place and time in Utopia rests, of course, on the fact that communities very remote from each other in place yet share the same time. So the land Utopia is sufficiently an imaginary place in being simply a New World, terra incognita, but the Utopian inhabitants must be distinguished as being imaginary natures by living through a as opposed
to
time precisely parallel
6.
More's Utopia A very
good
as
to,
and
hence vividly distinguishable
the "First
City"
of
from,
ours.
Plato's Repubhc
way further to define Utopia as a city having its place see it in the light of its ostensible source
time in the imagination is to
and and
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia
11
defeated rival, the polity that is preeminently the product of the intellect, namely that set out in Plato's Republic. Plato is the name most frequent ly in Hythloday's mouth, although he has that reduced view of the Platonic teachings that will turn out to be appropriate to his enterprise. Now when he particularly speaks of "those things that Plato feigneth in his wealpublic or that the Utopians do in he is referring to Utopia's theirs,"
communism.
In Plato's dialogue Socrates
the
raises
question
"What is
justice?"
The
answering this question assumes that justice is to be found in the relation of the parts of the human soul and that political communities are way
of
magnified
expressions
of these
relations.
He therefore
constructs
a
se
cities, each arising by the addition of a part of the soul and corresponding to the dominance of that part, proceeding in order from the most supine and common to the most superior and rare constituent
quence of three
of the soul.
Now
city in which a common way of life obtains is only the third is under the dominion of the reasonable part of the soul, that is to say, which is ruled by philosopher kings. And even in this, the "philosophical only the rulers and their warrior auxiliaries live city,
the
which
city,"
communally: of mankind.
from the
".
.
.
They
other
to
no one was were
citizens
to be
have any
warrior
instead
of
of
athletes
annual
the ordinary possessions and
guardians, receiving
payment
only their
mainte
(st. 543). This is the first principle of unity of the philosopher's city; the second, and as Socrates acknowledges, even more offensive one is "that the wives of our guardians are to be common, and their children common and no person is to know his own child, nor any child his (st. 457). Since the social foundation of Utopia is the family, or rather the extended family or household (135), it certainly does not share the human nance
.
.
parent"
Socrates'
aspect of
communism.
But
neither
does it
share
the economic
one.
The
actual
title of the book
referred
to as Utopia is On The Best State
by "common More's posthumous named the Governor, speaks of the implications of this translation, referring to those who "do suppose it so to be called for that, that everything should be to all men in common without discrepance of the
Commonwealth (47). The Latin term translated
is "res circle, in his Book
wealth"
publica."
Sir Thomas Elyot,
condition"
of an estate or
(I, 1). Hythloday
one of
more
than once alludes to
this meaning of shared wealth. And precisely here lies the distinction "republics," Utopia and the philosopher's city: The between the two communism of
tion (st. or
is
466),
the latter is
while
an ascetic communism of
Utopian
poverty
and
depriva
communism means shared or common wealth
well-being (239). If Utopia has anything to do with Plato's polity, it Giles' with its third or philosophical city as Peter poem had
not
hinted. The first Socratic city corresponds to the desiring part stages. In the beginning there arises a "city of
of the soul and
craftsmen,"
has two
a
small,
Interpretation
12
merry community based on division of labor for (st. 370). Then, as desires become
and
simple, moderate,
the purpose of satisfying basic necessities
luxurious,
more complex and
"true and healthy in his word, feverish. To the
the city of craftsmen, which Socrates calls a transformation and becomes,
city,"
the
derer,
ivory
gold and
are
undergoes
simple crafts are added
the arts of the embroi
devoted to "forms
and people
used,
introduced into the city (st. 373). This inflammation the city predatory and brings about the formation of are
institute
whose presence will
a
colors"
and
desire
of
warrior
makes
class,
the second city.
Now Utopia clearly corresponds to this first city, the "true and healthy Socrates' of craftsmen. There is a sign of this in the following. When interlocutor Glaucus first hears a description of their simple and healthy city"
banquets, he
pigs"
(st. 372), by which he does not mean that they wallow but that they hke simple and natural foods. Accordingly, the lowest official of Utopia, who sits over thirty families and whose chief function is the control of idleness, is one "which in their
that this is
exclaims
"city
a
of
language is called the Syphogrant, and by a newer name the (123). Both terms are Greek (for the Utopians are said to be descended from the Greeks); phylarch means "tribal but syphogrant old
Philarch"
ruler,"
means
elder."
The
"pig-sty
are called
"tranibors"
"plain [or clear] prepared dishes.
meaning I suppose,
the craftsmen of
also
limit
their crafts to
that
they
Socrates'
city
weavers, shoemakers, carpenters, smiths,
Utopians
who rule over
ten sties,
namely, "first tribal
rulers"
eaters,"
or
Furthermore,
higher officials,
next
"protophylarchs,"
or
farming,
are
eat
perspicuously
limited to farmers, (st. 370). The
and merchants which all alike
do,
and
to these
linen working, masonry and metal working, and merchandising (125). The Utopians, hke the Socratic craftsmen, have special crafts: wool and
common
banquets
of the
never
desires that is
warrior, city second
never
city is
(145). become luxurious. With them that
with converse and music
But the Utopians
arises.
called
for the
the occasion
The
part
by Socrates
of
the
desire,
on
especially
Socrates says,
element
a
is
soul
of
sophistication
the second, the
that dominates in this
"spiritedness"
certain readiness to righteous wrath and a
have seen, the warring
genesis
directiy
(st. 375), which is a disposition to honor. As we
consequent on
taste for magnificence
and
complexity
splendor
of
whence,
in cities (st. 373), although it is from this in turn that philosophy arises in Socrates' city, a good
arise all evils
spirited element
alongside evils.
Magnificence, however, is totally absent in Utopia. The sign of this is that there gold, the material of splendor and property, is debased into the metal of bonds and baubles (153). This is a consequence of "the community the which above
of their
life
only"
thing
and
living
without
any occupying
to continue More's criticism of
"all nobility, magnificence, worship,
true ornaments and wealth, utterly be
honours,
as
overthrown
the and
of money, by Utopia quoted
honour, and majesty, the is, of the common
common opinion
destroyed
.
.
(245). The Utopians
13
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia
honor. To be sure, they too make war, though only in friends' their borders or their rights, for they regard it with
prefer comfort to
defense
of
loathing
as
beastly (199),
and
they have
"chivalry";
by
mercenaries whenever possible.
but they have as
glory
no
glory
is
These
taste for gallantry,
gotten
calculation and of people
no special class of warriors and
their soldiers are the citizens of the land
no
in
(201),
by
a marked
soldiers
"count nothing
and
war"
cunning, if possible.
rewarded
citizen
always
supplemented
fight bravely,
so much against
preferring to
win
through
Among the Utopians only one display of honor the virtuous
class
dead
(225). 7.
The Utopians
as a
People Without Pride
The
next question is what More means to signify by thus truncating Republic in associating his Utopia with Plato's city of craftsmen. Plato's first city is a natural city that arises naturally and whose citizens are close to nature, if nature is taken as the given and stable
the
appearance within and without men. city.
As
a sign of
this, Utopians
Persian (181). For the description
(I, 131),
In this
are said
sense
Utopia too is
a natural
to have a language resembling
Persians in
Herodotus'
History incidentally, Hythloday brings to Utopia, shows them as nature who use no images, and who, unlike the Greeks and of the
which,
worshipers of
Christians, do not believe that the gods have the same nature as men, is, that they can be imaged or made incarnate in human form. All this holds of the Utopians, of whom some are, to be sure, radical humanists
that
pray to a man as the highest god, but of whom many are pantheists many worship the moon or one of the planets, while all agree on the worship of a sun god, who is the artificer of the universe and bears the who and
Persian
Mithras (217)
It is only
the imagination
[Nusquama,
name
a nowhere of
cannot contain
appropriate as
More
that the land that is
called
it in Latin
(xv)]
God the Creator, who according to Augustine has "no (nusquama locus) in the imaginative part of memory (X,
place"
where a
26). So
also
all
themselves
the crafts of Utopia
so
particularly
the
act as a
universal
force
of
are
close
craft,
farming.
nature,
as when
to
nature
and,
of
course,
Sometimes the Utopians King Utopus, the founder
Utopia, like a more felicitous Xerxes, cut the channel that made Utopia into an island (113), or when the chicks they artificially hatch adopt them as mothers (115), or when they transplant whole forests to have a closer of
their woollen garments, source of wood (179). And they appear natural for instance, are natural in color. So even their artifice is an intelligent and familiar adaptation of nature to their own use; Utopia represents a perfect
fusion
of artifice and nature.
Thus the nature. This
"unchristian"
Utopians
are not so much pagans as children of
be put another way. To say that the Utopians correspond to the inhabitants of Plato's first city only, is to say that they are lacking in certain principles of the soul, particularly in that which gives rise to and dominates the second or can
Interpretation
14
warrior
is,
spiritedness, that
faculty
in it magnificence, honor, and luxury Now the Christian translation of the
occasions
and
city
self-assertion.
is the
of spiritedness
vice
of
Pride, "the craving for undue of God (XIV, 13), was the origin
pride.
Augustine in his
City
exaltation,"
says of our evil
will, that
corruption of our
that causes a self-assertive craving for forbidden fruit because it is forbidden. Pride is thus the origin of perversion in the nature of man, and as More says in his Four Last Things ("Of Pride"), "the very head and root of all among which wrath and envy are the first and best known nature
sins,"
pride, but
as children of
Now
Hythloday
as
and pleasures
which
points
a sure
include
even
lechery."
"gluttony,
out, the Utopians have no such of which is in their music,
sign
perverse
indeed
no
"taste infected
by
mortals
disruption that
fear (Plato, Laws II).
the sickness of sin";
they
they do
not
natural.
This is the
and
know the inverted
therefore do
pleasure of
self-love;
They have
never prefer
treacle"
bitter to the sweet, would never "liefer eat tar than Things, "Infected Taste"); their desires are all satisfied
feelings
expresses
which
even their strongest affections without that consequent civil
the wise lawgivers of ordinary
and
sloth,
by
natural
they
the
(Four Last objects;
are never un
precisely because the Utopians were not created know that rebellion of the creature against its creator,
case
not
called the fall of man, which is the original case of perverse pleasure. Hence they, unlike our pagans, are incapable of salvation by conversion to Christianity, although they absorb easily for they are facile in absorbing those features of Christianity superficially everything profitable (109) congenial to them (219). So it is by reason of their Utopian nature that as before his coming and only Hythloday leaves them as ostensibly because there is no priest among his company. It is then merely "unchristian"
a
consequence
support their
crucial matter
moment,
of
their nature are
practice,
that their own
implicitly
in
the origin of sin. For
of
Epicureans,
and a
first dictum
teachings,
opposition to
they
of
are, as
which
simply
Christianity
on the
we
shall
see
the Epicureans is that
in
a
"nothing
nothing."
But Augustine, again in The City of God, explains fallen humanity "that it is a nature, this is because it is made by God; but that it falls away from Him, this is because it is made of (XIV, 13). The Utopians, then, not being descended from Adam, do not know the "serpent from hell," as Hythloday calls pride (243), comes out of of
nothing"
identifying
it
with
the tempter in the tree. "This
his narration, ".
is
deeply
hellhound,"
Hythloday breasts, that she so
in
concludes
cannot be Utopians alone "the chief causes of ambition and sedition with other vices be plucked up by the roots. By this is not meant that individuals do not, somewhat unaccountably, on occasion go wrong (185), but that private crime is rare and political crime absent, so that there is among them an occasional private crime (187) but no large-scale manifestation of sin they do not share the human condition. out."
plucked
.
.
so
Among
rooted
men's
the
.
They display
the
characteristic conditionless character of
.
imaginary
in the form of original sinlessness. In his youth More read a series of well-attended lectures
on
cities
Augustine's
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia
15
of God, so we may well suppose that he considered the relation his Utopia to the two cities of Augustine's work, which "have been formed by two loves: the earthly city by the love of self, even to the contempt of God; the heavenly by the love of God even to the contempt of (XIV, 28). He must have conceived of the Utopians as a tertium quid whose nature is nothing but absence of perversion, who have neither contempt of God nor, as we shall see, contempt of self. Conse quently they are made to inhabit an earthly paradise that displays the essential flat character of the painted city of the imagination: The is original human evil, missing dimension of the "exquisite which, as the bas relief of nonbeing, lies beyond the likeness-making imagination. For the pictorial imagination, which in civil poetry touches badness with pleasure and turns terror into magnificence, in political
City of
self"
platform"
poetry appropriately
8.
Utopia
as a
Community
But if Utopia is respect
overlooks evil. of
privative
Pleasure
with
respect
to pride, it is positive
with
to pleasure. Freedom from the vices of the will is the particular
condition
that leaves the Utopians to the enjoyment of their goods, and and center of their community. What is its
that enjoyment is the end nature?
their
All tional
To
answer
that question, we must examine their
education
and
"philosophy."
major Utopias
follow Plato's Republic in
provinces,"
transforming
being deliberately
Socrates'
essentially "educa imageless program
(st. 529) into vivid pictures of ideal institutions of instruction and inquiry. In the Republic itself, education forms both the political beginning and the philosophical end of the city. Campanella's City of the Sun is itself nothing but a large teaching model, a museum for the induction of the citizens into the secrets of the cosmos; Andreae's Christianopolis presents a vivid picture of a perfect Protestant school; and Bacon's New Atlantis is dominated by the College of the Six Days for the sake of its Works, dedicated to the "interpretation of mastery. But in the first Utopia this preoccupation takes a strange, of
learning
nature"
although
appropriate, form.
For only in the island of Utopia is which, moreover, has pleasure for its encouraged
by
the rule of Utopian
respect to work and
study,
similar
to
education reduced
life,
object a
to that
of
concern.
firm disposition of a monastic
a
pleasure,
This of
order,
view
is
time with as
found
in St. Benedict's Rule for Monasteries (for example, ch. 48, "On the Daily Manual Labor"). Under it, the life of leisure, the classical condition for liberal learning, is replaced by a life of scheduled work with time freed for the election of lecture courses, and almost all of Utopia is indeed up before dawn to indulge in this superior amusement (129). But such activity plays the central role neither in forming rulers Utopia is governed not by philosopher kings but by learned officials nor
mean
"education,"
Utopians say mainly instruction in their doctrines and letters but
in making
citizens
when
a
they do
not
rearing among
Interpretation
16 their
being
by
the
living
a
priests
expression of
expresses
cleverly
philosophy, is itself
this in his
"philosophy"
poem
Sages,"
the
worshipers of great meagerness
of
Nile,
whose
Gymnosophoi,
simplicity
thought and whose Philostratus'
have found described in 6 ff.). The liberal arts are, to be sure,
Peter Giles
it
without
making the Utopian
by
to the Egyptian sect of
refer
by
(159) supplemented by moral training Nor, finally, does it lead to some inquiry city. Utopia, which surpasses Plato's city in
(229).
is beyond the
end
whose
institutions
good
own
directed
of
life
was accompanied
More
antics
and
Giles
studied
in Utopia [the Utopians
hearing of a single one of our philosophers (159), made the discoveries in learning as the Europeans], though Hythloday never book
a
language useful
of
under
their own. Our trivium, which
dialectics, "the
art,
observed useful
for
Dorp, n
Hythloday
have
ability
no
(159),
the
ways
investigating
of
things"
emphasizes their
at all
for speculating
reflective
elsewhere, "is
and
grammar, rhetoric,
product
of
will
Life of Apollonius of Tyana (VI.
without
tions
for
word
the "Naked
logic, is
deals
with
reduced
by
have, same men
the arts of them to one
reasoning which reasoning has as More defines it in a letter to
lack
of concern with pure
any "second the intellect on
intention"
"which,"
as
logic.
They
or universal
More
says
nowhere"
(437). No-place has nothing that is nowhere,
no
intellectual beings. possess the full quadrivium, which concerns the world of nature, in it especially pursue astronomy (159), for they regard the world as spectacle made for man in fact the whole section on education appro
They
and a
priately
comes
teristically
within
regard
the section on sightseeing (145).
medicine
as
the
among
most
They
useful
charac
branches
of
philosophy.
Now all '
what characterizes
philosophy,
and
first
this education is clearly the absence of almost
of all an absence of physics understood as the
into causes; they confine themselves to engaging in desultory and inconclusive debates, inventing new theories to add to those of the ancients (161). Second, there is a notable absence of politics; inquiries are absent in the com concerning "the best state of the monwealth that is the consequence of such interests. Public political debate outside the senate of tranibors is a capital offense (125). This
inquiry
commonwealth"
is borrowed from the Laws, Plato's book on the second best but possible city, which, as one might expect, furnishes Utopia with more of its fundamental positive law than does the unrealizable Republic. More
prohibition
the
cites
relevant
passage,
significantly,
in
the
Dialogue
Concerning
Heresies: Plato,
the great philosopher, specially forbiddeth those
nor men meet
11
therefore, to
meddle much and
as
be
October 21, 1515. St. Thomas More: Selected Letters,
Haven
and
London: Yale
not admitted
thereunto,
embusy themselves in reasoning
University Press, 1967),
p.
15.
ed.
and
E. F. Rogers (New
17
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia
disputing upon the temporal laws of the city, which would not be but by folks meet therefore, and in place convenient [III, 16].
reasoned upon
And finally, as for metaphysics, that is, inquiries into being or god, they have none, but for their highest inquiry they conduct debates "in the part of which entreateth of manners and
philosophy not "the
good"
but the
replaced metaphysics
in
what
they
thing, be it
seem almost
by
one or
too
various
ethics, their
they determine And (which is more to be
delicate
an
opinion
they fetch
is:
of man consisteth.
inclined to the
either all or
opinion of
But in this
felicity to dainty and
the chiefest part of men's
at) their defense
of
this
so
from their grave, sharp, bitter
even
point
them which defend
rigorous
and
[161].
religion
Indeed they
never
have any
to religious principles often
and
chief question
marvelled
they consider body. Having thus
where
of soul
felicity
more, the
much given and
pleasure, wherein rest.
goods
virtue,"
repeated
(161),
that
contention
discussions
philosophical
thus
reason
(Dialogue
without
resorting More's
the exact converse of
employing
and
should
can
serve
religion
Concerning Heresies, I, 23) theology is the end of a liberal education (Letter to Oxford University, March 29, 1518). The religious principles that they employ are two: They believe in a wise providence that governs the world and ordains felicity for man and in and that
immortality
the
(161). In tices
of
them, but
please
soul
deny (221), for, again
Beyond
and
its
Utopians
In
see,
other
this
they have
scripture or revelation.
they
a pubhc
They
are
the
they
the
death
are
strictly forbidden to
requirements of a communal
dogma has
religious
a political
Laws (X).
ritual, but
hold their
after
choose what religious prac
as
views
as
be inspired into
nature worshipers, the best attainable
from
no
by
heaven"
(179). But this is not the case, for the Utopians have no revelation of their own, nor does Hythlodaywho plays among them the role of a Renaissance scholar, reviving for them the Greek strain of their partly Hellenic and man's reason
"unless
free to
words, their
Utopia borrows from
and punishment
reward
are
these two principles
as we shall
pursuit of pleasure.
object;
the
all other respects
godlier
partly Persian heritage by Greek tragedians (181)
Indeed, in Utopia
the
bringing them Plato, Aristotle, Homer, and the bring them a Bible or teach them Hebrew.
Hebrew
references
Utopias, like Solomon's House
of
Salama
the
the
of
Sun,
Christianopolis,
are
Now the
conspicuously
content of
what we would call
man
and
the New
characteristic
cabalistic
of
succeeding
the island Caphar
Atlantis,
background
of
the
City
of
absent.
their doctrines of pleasure
Epicurean,
such as
is,
as one might
is conveniently
set out
guess,
in Cicero's
De Finibus (I). It is the notoriously apolitical teaching of Epicurus modified to become the political philosophy of the most unlikely republic a stable community of pleasure, "a commonwealth as shall ever devised shall endure for continue and last not only wealthily, but also
ever"
.
.
.
(245). These
are
the modifications the Utopians make: The Epicureans
believe
Interpretation
18 that the gods, if there
before, it the
any, do
are
the Utopians assert divine
the
not guide
providence
natural circumstances of man would not
necessarily be
The Epicureans believe that the soul dissolves the Utopians require the immortality of the soul to is
not so
short
without
to
conducive
with
pleasure.
calculus of pleasures
mentioned
as
world
presumably because
body
the
that the
assure
term as to admit impermissible or
false pleasures. The Epicureans beheve in private property (449) the Utopians hold wealth in common for they regard all wealth as "materia voluptatis,"
the material of pleasure
(165),
though
their com
abate
they
the degree that privacy is necessary to pleasure; this is why they base their society on the family and why the only fixed punishments they have deal with the violation of its privacy (191). munism to
As far as the chief doctrine of Epicurus, that good, is concerned, they agree, but: they
think
and
honest, of
even
felicity
not
to
pleasure, but only in that
all
to
as
perfect
blessedness
only they that be
whereto
virtue,
in
rest
that hereto
and
pleasure
pleasure
is
our nature
the
of
is the highest
opinion
contrary
that is good
allured and
do
drawn
attribute
felicity. For they define virtue to be life ordered according to nature and that we be hereunto ordained by God. And that he doth follow the course of nature, which in
desiring
and
refusing things is
ruled
by
[163].
reason
Now they "of the contrary is virtue, are those
opinion"
the chief good
Utopians, who think that among us Stoics, and it is a
to the
called
saying among them that the chief good is "to live in agreement and with (De Finibus, III, 9). It follows that the Utopians find it possible to absorb the Stoic position, which means that they obviate chief
in
nature"
harmony
the question of the priority of virtue and pleasure as ends among which a choice must be made, the reflection on which choice was precisely what ennobled the pagan philosophers.
In this they simply the
follows.
followers
and
of virtue and of others
misery
the Utopians convert the
into the merry Then, if it be and
...
nature
.
.
maxim
a point of
Thus
provoke
implying by
virtue
man .
peculiarly virtue is
this that
"Now
the most earnest
of pleasure exhort you to relieve humanity."
Hence praising such deeds as Christian commandment (Mark 12:31) as
humanity for man joy, that is to say
every
virtue most
second
"Love thyself
prescribeth to us
.
say that the
haters
to restore them to
doth
nature
They
"humanity,"
realization of man's essential nature.
and painful
the lack
argue as
to human beings is
belonging
.
.
to do the
thy to
neighbor":
bring health
and comfort
to
man
.
.
.
to pleasure, why may it not be said that same
pleasure, as the
for himself?
end of all our
.
.
.
Therefore
operations
even
[163].
itself is nothing but an argument for and an instrument of however, in such a way as to become the basis for a
pleasure, understood,
theory
of private and social contracts:
But in that verily seek
she
nature
for thine
fore their
doth
thee to
own commodities,
opinion
is,
help another live merrily diligent circumspection, that thou do not
allow and provoke men one
commandeth
use
that thou
that not only
to
others'
procure
covenants
and
.
.
.,
so
incommodities. Where
bargains
made
among
private
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia to be well and
men ought
laws,
19
faithfully fulfilled, observed, and kept, but also common hath justly published, or else the people, neither tyranny, neither deceived by fraud and guile, hath by their common
which either a good prince
oppressed with
concerning the
consent constituted and ratified
the commodities of
partition of
life,
that is to say, the matter of pleasure (165).
In this way
Utopians institute
the
a
political
based,
community
not
the pursuit, but on the actual procuring, of pleasure. It is a merely community based on nature, their unhumanly natural nature, and there on
fore
since it knows community that "shall endure for no political problem. There exists a Latin epigram by More whose title is the name of the Utopian book turned into a question, that is, "What Commonwealth?" is the Best State of the In it More asks what is better, ever,"
stable
king
a
or a senate. a position
occupy
Is there
impose
Stop
anywhere either a
considering to
a need to give
himself
stops
whom you
it
at all
may
by
King Utopus,
the pleasure of
tranibors, but
the "prior
obviated
power, you
is,
prior question
in the island
kingship
question"
of
of the
and
gives
either
futility can
king.
are
whether there
duly
himself,
which pleasures are
true
or rather
institutes the
senate
of
the epigram, the question of power,
Utopians. Their first
question needs
false. To help their citizens make this discrimination is the serious object of their education. By false or only
the
[No. 182]. 12
In The Best State of the Commonwealth, More
is
be
decision,
your own
within your
The
give power.
would
and points out
yourself,
If this does lie
or a senate?
king
"would
which
senate,
while a
a people upon whom you
king
of a
bad,"
good and
latter, he
mostly the the inquiry:
of
decided in favor
Having
between
bad,
good or
is
a
to be
and which
one
discernible
"counterfeit"
of
course,
they
call
meant those that run counter to natural
every
delectation."
actually
False
body
the
and state of
motion
desire, for "pleasure
or mind wherein man
has
therefore perverse pleasures,
are
pleasures
pleasures are,
namely, those that yield no intrinsically pleasing state, but are pursued mostly for the sake of asserting oneself. First among these are the of men, beginning with pleasures that result from a "futile conspiracy"
the
mistaken
pleasure
pleasure
of
in
magnificence
dress,
and
going
on
to
the
taken in honor and in nobility derived from property. Thus the
be
prideful pleasure of conspicuous consumption would
the cardinal sin
Utopia (139).
of
Of the the
body
genuine
pleasures, the
that are attached
most
extensively described
to the natural
functions,
such
are those of
as
elimination, and, in general, health, which is not only considered a positive but the fundamental pleasure (173). Then come the aesthetic pleasures, such as the
12
perception
of
musical
consonance
The Latin Epigrams of Thomas
The University
of
Chicago
More,
Press, 1953),
ed.
p.
and
beautiful
L. Bradner
205.
and
forms
natural
C. A. Lynch (Chicago:
Interpretation
20
forms, for they
apparently have
The
pleasures of the
art; these too
no pictoral
by
are
them
body (177).
considered pleasures of the
Utopians
although the
soul,
are said
to value them
highly, are disposed of in three sentences. They consist of the use the intellect, of the sweetness arising from contemplation of the truth,
most of
life.
and of pleasant recollections of a virtuous soul about which which
is
at
the
there
Clearly
that activity of the
be worthwhile discourse, the pursuit of Plato's city and which Hythloday's reading
can
center of
being, of
the
Republic omits, is neither painless nor unspirited nor unsubversive enough for Utopia. To put it another way: Utopia knows no happiness. In sum, Utopian pleasures are reinterpretations of pleasure (voluptas) into pleasantness (jocunditas), and it is with respect to the gentle character that the Utopians can be
of their pleasures
to be
humanists, namely, in that sense cultivation by means of human studies urbanities
(135). It is in this
simplicity
by
music
of
dress
and and
his
kindly
said
the pursuit of concomitant
More paints,
the growing
own:
conversation
contempt
of
(as they sometimes are) humanism means self-
which
and
respect that
avocations and tastes close to attended
in
of
between young
ornament, the
delight,
with real
gardens, banquets and
enjoyment
of
old, the
spectacles of
nature, particularly the heavens, the pleasures of erudition, and most characteristically, the study of Greek. But these details are only the froth on the flow of the imaginative narration. 9.
The Uses
of
Utopia
Utopia, then, is a land of pleasure without pride. When Erasmus, in his biographical sketch of More, says of this book entitled On the Best State of the Commonwealth, that in it More "proposed to illustrate the source and spring of political
evil,"
he must mean just this that More in his Utopia has disclosed and eradicated the root of all evil in pride. Erasmus goes on to say that More first, at his leisure, wrote the second book (which contains Hythloday's narrative of Utopia) and "recognizing the need for hastily added the first (Letter to Hutten, 1519). Where was the need to prefix this latter book, which at first it"
sight seems to contain particular
political
merely the
evils
of
obverse of
Hythloday had found among the Macarians, peoples that he had cure in his last discovery, Utopia? cures
The
answer
term to
Utopia,
More's England together
is in this: It is
the
Polylerites,
visited
"Utopian"
in
an account of the
the
with
the
Achorians,
before he found the
specific
derogatory
and
the radical
sense of the
community from which human evil is radically removed, and it is culpably futile to do so if the plan is set out as a straight political proposal. But when Hythloday solemnly closes, saying that all the world would long ago have been brought under the laws of Utopia "were it not that one only beast, the princess and mother of
all
paint a pattern of a political
mischief, Pride doth
withstand
and
let
it,"
he is taking
a
fierce
in vitiating the book by underscoring precisely the futility of his narrative. Hence the first book was written to rehabilitate the second and contains directions for the proper use of Utopias. pleasure
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia
21
That More was intensely sensitive to the use to which political writings be put is shown by the fate of his History of King Richard III, a book written just before the Utopia and in the same year that Machia might
The Prince.
Richard III
his cohorts, especially the incarnation of tyranny presented with all the vigorous beauty of a still fresh lan guage for this history, written almost simultaneously in Latin and in the vernacular, is the first such undertaking composed in English. There is reason to think that it was intended for the instruction of the young English monarch on whose business More was when he wrote the Utopia and with whose praise it begins, Henry VIII. But as eagerly as More forwarded the publication of the Latin Utopia abroad, so carefully did he suppress the English History at home, leaving it unfinished and un published, presumably because he had begun to fear that Henry would use it, not as intended, for a horrible example, but as instruction in the perfection of wickedness, in the manner of The Prince. For in contrast to MachiaveUi, who, in a chapter inveighing against "imagined republics and (for very un-Morean reasons), threatens with ruin him
veUi
wrote
wickedly
and
well-spoken Buckingham,!3 are the perfect and vivid
principalities"
"who
is done for "to learn how not to be
done"
to be and advises (ch. XV), More thought that in counseling a king one must "ever tell him what he ought to do, but never what he is able to (Harpsfield, Life, "After his resignation"). Furthermore, More was at the time of the writing of Utopia (1516) in his own behalf intensely concerned with the problem of giving political advice. Averse as he was to court hfe, he was being urgently invited to join the king's councU an invitation he was, after working out the first book of the Utopia, bound to foUow. This first book is sometimes, appropriately, called a "dialogue on (xxxvii). For the occasion of Hythloday's relation of the evils Giles' of England is his decided refusal of Peter suggestion that he should
the
abandons what
prince
what ought
good"
do"
counsel"
king's court to instruct him with examples and help him with (55). Hythloday allows that he has learned in his travels of institutions that would cure the conditions he had so acutely observed in England, but he shows by serious and comical examples how his get
into
a
counsel
be taken seriously at court. health," name is Hebrew for "the physician of babble." and his last name is Greek for "knowing in Hythloday brings salvation, which is, first, in itself impossible, and which he, secondly, even refuses to advocate in the places that matter. He is a babbler on two solutions would never
Raphael Hythloday's first
counts.
More himself construction of
13
attacks
Hythloday, pointing
out
to him his mis
The History of King Richard III, The Complete Works of St. Thomas More, ed. R. S. Sylvester (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1963),
Vol. 2, pp.
now
Plato:
28 ff.
Interpretation
22 For
Plato judgeth that
whereas your
felicity,
either
if
philosophers
by
weal-publics shall
be kings,
or else
if kings
this means attain perfect themselves to the study
give
how far, I pray you, shall commonwealths then be from felicity, if will not vouchsafe to instruct kings with their good counsel? [87].
of philosophy, philosophers
Hythloday
that phUosophy can have no
objects
among kings. More
power
counters:
Indeed,
I,
quoth
this
(philosophia civilior), is the philosophy
The "Citizen councillor
to
for every
which
Sheriff
and
be,
hearts, if
her
own stage.
.
.
.
And this
[99].
Famous
the
of
City
London"(l), king's
of
England then
of
gives the
tacitly transmuting Plato's
philosophy,"
"more
evil opinions and
philosophy more civil
another
as ye would say,
future Lord Chancellor
and
citizen-like
into
most radical proposal
their
But there is
place.
knoweth,
you must use
content of this
If
philosophy (philosophia scholastica) hath not which
school
thinketh all things meet
practical wisdom:
be utterly
persuasions cannot
naughty
you cannot even as you would
remedy
and quite plucked out of
vices which use and custom
has confirmed, yet for this cause you must not leave and forsake the commonwealth. You must not forsake the ship in a tempest because you cannot rule and keep down the winds. No, nor you must not labor to drive into their heads new and strange information clear
which you
contrary
endeavor
know
But
minds.
well shall
as much as
yourself,
be nothing
you must with a
in
crafty
lieth,
you
regarded with
them that be of
wile and a subtle
train study and
to handle the matter wittily and hand
somely for the purpose, and that which you cannot turn to good, so it be not very bad. For it is not possible for all things to be well unless good,
which
I think
Many books
will not
be
yet
this
good
it that
years.
many
Erasmus'
on
order
all men were
counseling princes, such as Christian Prince and Machiavelli's Prince, were from these the Utopia differs in being a book
written
Education of a in More's age; for
of counsel
subjects
citizens, and its first advice to them is not to inject utopia into their counsels. It is an attack on radical politics among the advisors of rulers. and
It is
a condemnation
(59),
tuseness
and
of
of
conspiracy (241). But but in the land Utopia place of absent
First since even
Hythloday's impatience
his interpretation
of
is the profit,
what then
of the second
book,
with
human the
conservative
sinfulness
as
ob-
social
not in the book Utopia, ideal commonwealth, the
evils, itself? seems to me that Utopia negatively
it
(only negatively, this imagined country has no clearly identifiable polity it is not possible to say whether it is a monarchy) proposes a great political of
all
principle, true in fact
damentally converse
course,
is
are
expressions
not so much the case.
at variance with what
reconstruction of
what the Utopias,
Cabet,
and potent as a conviction:
communities
and
human
Utopia
of
that
human
appears
originally
nature
This understanding
nature through a
particularly
Bellamy,
of
and
of the
the
book is,
of
to exemplify, namely the
perfectly
planned
society
the last century, like those of
which were programs
fun
and that
seriously proposed for
and
Fourier, realiza-
23
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia
tion, did in fact intend. Utopia is study
into
of politics
the
study
of
then
a surreptitious conversion of
human
the
nature.
And secondly, in pointing to human perverseness as the spoiler of poli tics and naming it pride (in which opinion More concurs with the author of the book named after the serpent of pride and the "King of the Proud,"
the
Leviathan, II, 28)
of a prideless
delightful
painting
community, More
detail, in
by
and
what
it
shows
would mean
"exquisite
an
pattern"
platform and
positively, by means of ostensibly to live in Utopia, what the life of
from the original human condition looks like, a lesson he drives home in his deeply ironical closing words: "In the mean so must I needs time, as I cannot agree and consent to aU things he said confess and grant that many things be in the Utopian weal-public which in our cities I may rather wish for than hope (247). Utopia, he means, is no more to be wished for than hoped for. The student of Utopia will, then, become very sensitive to that in proposals for supposedly viable societies based on gratification of desire, which really implies at once an alteration of human nature and the imposition of an unexpected new discipline. Utopia is, thus, an exemplary exercise in carrying out in aU pleasure
abstraction
...
for"
vividness the
versely, in
life implied in
drawing
forth
dreams and,
certain perennial political
the abstractions
from
the
human
con
condition
that
those dreams imply. In short, it is an education in recognizing inadvertent Utopias, that is, pohtical proposals based on false views of human nature.
FinaUy, Utopia, again by the negative influence of its imaginative real ization, effects a kind of celebration of, and satisfaction in, the given human condition; it is an oblique praise of folly and fall contrasted with shallow joviality. In his last long work written in the Tower of London, and called A Dialogue of Comfort against Tribulation, More argues that tribulation is the condition of salvation (I, 6), a truth that, even when it is not taken in its precise Christian meaning, exercises a powerful influence on the politics of those who
beheve it. The
"modern"
aspect, turns
peculiarly
social eudemonism of
out
to be
an
vividly presented to be thoughtfully declined. And last, Utopia is the convivial occasion for
More
and
kind
of civic
for
ticulars of the mode of his life
and the crucial parts of
most
I'oeil,
festivity,
statesmen making communities, Bacon. More, who resembles Socrates both in many
a game
the communal game of as
a
Utopia, its
edifying trompe
such par
the manner of his
Harpsfield calls him "our noble, new, Chris him in nothing so much as in his serene playful ness. It was said of More that he "looks sadly when he means and he said of himself in his Apology that "a man may say full soth in (letter to Tunstal, November is a The "Island of of irony. One of More's the spirit in that dissembling spirit, 1516) written
death
tian
on account of which
Socrates"
resembles
merrily,"
Utopia"
game."
favorite writers, ancient
writer
whom
of
he
comic
and
"trifle"
Erasmus had translated in his youth, was the fantastical dialogues, Lucian. Hythloday
and
brings his dialogues to the Utopians, who take special delight in him for jests." Lucian wrote two accounts, the Icarome"his many conceits and nippus and
the True
Story,
of voyages to the
moon, whence the foibles
of
Interpretation
24
facetious"
people,
sober
chamber
focus. The Utopians, that "facile and in pleasure and shallow in thought, equipped with golden and followed about by loving chicks, are just such mat,
into
earth come
pots
sharpest
in fact the first thing
reflected moon people
Hythloday
mentions about
being isolated (111) (585). Abraxa, signifying "the highest afford such jocosity, for, although like Socrates, himself a a in dialogues, he is, unlike the latter, also their author
the island is that it is
and
moon-shaped
that before
heavens"
it had More
the occult name can
participant
Socratic and writing Socrates. This effects a difference in the form of interlocutor in and Morean irony; the latter, being writer one, can by sober speech from the inside of the dialogue control what merriment
he has set afoot from the outside by inditing it. Consequently, the very form of the Utopian dialogue tends to turn it into a grand game. More's book is, therefore, an invitation to a common exercise of wit and imagination, intended to draw together a secular band in a merry and a band distinct from, and yet not without reference melancholy inquiry to, the communion of saints representing the City of God on earth, a band of those who would like to be citizens of the best commonwealth. Just this is conveyed in the full title of the book as printed in the first edition: A Truly Golden Booklet, as Salutary as it is Mirthful, on the Best State Common-Wealth and the New Island of Utopia.
10.
Utopias
as a
of
the
Genre
If, then, it is true that the book Utopia, a dialogue concerning a narra tion, contains views from which the author distances himself, that the "Utopia" land is a place of the imagination in which the roots of evil in human nature have been excised, and that the enterprise yields "utopia"
a product of
the imagination that is
philosophy,"
what must
to the "Utopian
be
tradition"
said of
a
community
pictured
"apart from
the many works commonly
assigned
that are quite different in character? In respect
to the lineage of works of
human art, as distinct from the growths of nature, it is a defensible claim that the first of a kind should be acknowl edged as the truest of that kind. More's Utopia is literally the original of the
a tradition that by now is so remote that it is quite "Utopia is dead."14 Indeed, one might argue somewhat that Utopia had but two true successors, the community of
Utopian
justly
tradition,
said that
seriously
pleasure called Theleme Houyhnhnm Land.
Nevertheless,
the
the name is alive
perfect paradigm of
14
and
community
and
without
pride
the way its matter has changed is a
the course of modernity. To summarize:
The
J. Shklar, "The Political Theory of Utopia: From Melancholy to and Utopian Thought, op. cit. Pt. II (Utopia is Dead), p. 102.
Utopias
found in
Utopian
Nostalgia,"
"An Exquisite Platform": Utopia be ironical
mode ceased to
being
of
imaginary
peculiarly
discourses,
rational
is,
that
became
and
oppositional.^
is,
products, that
instead
and
poetry, became
being
of
images
of
a
community, they became tracts
well-ordered political
small, self-sufficient, advocating theoretical societies;
instead
Utopias,
political
theory; instead
social
25
being
of
in the
exercises
understanding of human nature, they became instruments of action, pro posed for universal reahzation no-place instituted in the world (though it "utopian" is only fair to point out that the term is usually applied only from the outside, in a derogatory spirit, to such blueprints for future ideal communities).
But since even this transformed Utopian enterprise, at its height in the last century, has worn thin, a revival of the Utopian tradition has recently been proposed. A yet newer kind of utopia is demanded as a part of a
discipline sometimes cerning the future: new
The lack anxiety.
be
of
...
any
clear
images
It is time that
the
of
style
of our
uses
the art of conjectures
life
of
experts represented the
many different
by
obtained
"futurology,"
called
we
are
building is
a cause
many different outcomes and
many
increasing
con
of
which can
possibilities.
This
be in pictures, according to the Utopian tradition. Plot, as it were, the sequence of [the ordinary man's] pleasurable and unpleasurable im representation should
imagine
pressions and now
is the first step into
bring
can
Such
new
would
they
about
.
this "good
Utopias
differ
by
good
day"
.
be. Picturing this "good day" have to seek the condition which
should
utopia; then you will
day."16
be
would
a world
are assigned and
"a
what
a modern
.
to
ironical
oppositional.
They
that begins the tradition to
which
neither
from the which
work
they do, by
nor
reason of
ostensibly desirable lives, belong. It is instructive to
being
pictures of
articulate the poles
of opposition.
The
new Utopian enterprise would
the basis
experts on
of a
theory
be
a project proposed
the
of social change
for
experts
by
original utopia was
the felicitous find of a learned statesman at leisure, submitted to his friends for their delight. Hence the former is a program for making Utopian pro grams
and
the latter
former is to be 15
n.d.),
a
serious
a project of
within which
referred
shatter,
to
by
either
cannot resist
hand,
the
us
it
as
occurs.
.
.
Only
reflective
imagination,
those orientations
they
citizens.
The
the deliberate
relevant signifies
that
experiment
the effects
life"
call
also
holds
in
which
it
which
be
time."
insanity. On the
of
observed
are
would call
will
into conduct, tend to I
other
without
the possible
forth in that
composite
(I, ii, 62).
Jouvenel, "Utopia for Practical
cit., pp. 226 ff.
transcending reality
over
definition is to be found in Robert Musil's Man
alterations of an element and appearance which we
pass
wholly, the order of things prevailing at the
or
pointing out that this definition
following
B. de
.
which, when
Utopian
partially
Qualities: "Utopia
op.
for
"creative"
So K. Manheim, Ideology and Utopia (New York: Harcourt Brace & World, p. 192: "A state of mind is Utopian when it is incongruous with the state of
reality
16
amusement
the
Purposes,"
Utopias
and
Utopian Thought,
Interpretation
26 innovation
of
a
variety
of
"life
imaginative memory bringing up these into a unique polity based is
styles"
the latter
was
a
work
of
the
pictures of a purified past and
on settled principles.
unifying Hence the former
for the future, of ways of directing the profusion of while the latter deliberately posited the impossible. day" newest Utopias wiU assume the "good to consist of
a matrix of plans
present
And the
possibUities,
finally,
the
munity
of pleasure with
condition, his Christian elsewhere than
As a from its the
pleasure, while More, in depicting a com permanence, holds his truth concerning the human
ephemeral pursuit of private
in the
recognized
beginnings,
effort makes
faith, in
pleasures of
reserve,
implying
that the good
life hes
Utopia.
genre, Utopian writing has, then, grown very remote and thence arises an urgent question: Which form of
for
a
better
state of
the commonwealth?
27 AND PIETY IN KING LEAR
GRATITUDE, NATURE,
Laurence Berns
And they go to trial on a charge on account of which but go to trial about least, that is, ingratitude. And him to
favor, but does
return a
and
country,
about
it, they
not return
that the ungrateful would also be
friends;
seems
is shamelessness, and it is this indeed wards every baseness. all
each other
they know
who
also punish severely.
most neglectful about
and what
hate
men
to follow
gods, upon
For they think
about
parents,
ingratitude
to be the
which seems
most,
to be able
greatest
about
most
of
leader to
Xenophon, Cyropaedeia [1.2.7]
In
is
the
fourth
act of
saved and guided
by
King
Lear the cruelly blinded Duke of Gloucester disguised as a mad beggar. The strangeness
a man
beggar guiding duke is compounded by the fact that Gloucester's un known guide is his son Edgar, who had assumed this wretched disguise to escape the sentence wrongfully laid upon him by his gullible father. of
only as his father's eyes, he becomes his provider, the his broken spirit, his teacher, and the saviour of his life. He saves him from Oswald's murderous attack and from a more formidable foe, despair. He concocts what for Gloucester is a divine miracle, to arouse within him the strength to hve; and he preaches the lessons that enable Gloucester to avaU himself of that strength. Edgar fulfiUs parental offices, Edgar
serves not
nurse of
more, for his father. The
and as
it were,
tling
fathered,
and educated
is
reversal of normal stations
Small debts Does
not
every
proportionate
be
of gratitude can
recompense can
be
made
to those
by
his
as a
own son.
babe, is,
This
unset
pitiful and thought-provoking. 1
paid without much who are
fall short, is
recompense
father, helpless
once masterful
sustained,
difficulty. But
what
the very sources of one's being?
not
every
to what is owed? Since one is
simply dis in their debt, the
recompense
always
can be invoked almost "Honor thy father and thy without any reservations.2 Although this debt of gratitude is normally impossible to discharge, Edgar either did discharge it or came as close mother"
command
is
This
article
olis,
May 1969.
a revised version of a
Laurence Berns is 1
Oedipus in
a
Tutor
at
beginning
of
this scene,
4.6,
presented at
St. John's College,
way
as
a
with
assumes
his father's
father to his father Matt.
4.5-11,
position
with
and with
through violence.
perfect
Cf. Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics 1161a 20
and
justice. Cp. the
Prospero's
The Tempest. 2
Annap
St. John's College, Annapolis.
a questionable
Shakespeare's Edgar behaves
lecture
1163b 12-29.
"miracles"
in
Interpretation
28
Edgar and his father seems any man could. The story of required for such a debt would be what show to designed to have been in full. paid to be debts, payments, The mercantile aspect of the language of gratitude unavoidable. Lear, raging in but is offensive, apparently vaguely owing
to
doing
so as
the storm, calls .
.
out:
Spit, fire!
.
spout, rain!
Nor rain, wind, thunder, fire, I tax I
you
not, you elements,
kingdom,
never gave you
You
call'd
subscription:
owe me no
are
my daughters:
with
.
.
unkindness; you children,
[3.2.14-18].
.
The hunted Edgar, consoling himself with the thought that "The lowest goes on to and most dejected thing of Fortune,/Stands still in
esperanc
say:
.
.
Welcome, then,
.
Thou The
unsubstantial air
wretch
that I embrace:
that thou hast blown unto the worst
Owes nothing to thy blasts [4.1.3-9].
Nothing good received, Although pay,
nothing
owed.s
we prosecute and punish
do
such offenses
not evoke
But
what
those who
if just
buy
"marble-hearted
a
than the
child
reckoned
fiend,
more
The
hideous
by
its
effect.
and
good?
do
not
seriousness
Kent
And ingratitude
child."
when thou
sea-monster."
roughly
borrow
the gravest condemnations. But "sharper
than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless
is
being itself is
or
speaks of
of
showest
the wrong
"how
thee in a
can
unnatural and
also
be
bemad
is the filial ingratitude that Lear suffers. When that sorrow has nearly done its work, Gloucester addresses Lear as "O ruin'd piece
ding
sorrow"
a
nature."
of
Gratitude is akin to grace and graciousness, as their etymologies indi Capacities or incapacities for gratitude seem to be direct reflections of character; the obligation when regarded as genuine is self It becomes suspect when external compulsion is in the background, when heart." it does not "come from the To pay one's biUs grudgingly is not gracious but does not violate the spirit of commerce. Can gratitude be paid grudgingly? Coming from within, it seems to be a natural movement in the sense of the Aristotelian distinction.5 In this way it is akin to love. cate.4
-incurred.
Gratitude
3
might
Cf. 2.4.179 ff.
be
and
Gloucester, "Ingrateful country:
he is
referred
thought of as
3.4.20,
.252,
fox"
being
and
between justice
and
love. Like
Regan's (!) morally indignant words to means that he is ungrateful to his
(3.7.28). She probably
to as
a
traitor twelve times. All line numbers are from the
Arden Ed., ed. Kenneth Muir, Harvard, 1959. 4 Cf. Aristotle Rhetoric 1385a 16-b 11, Cope ed., Vol. II, pp. 87-93. 5 Cf. Aristotle Physics 192b 7-23. Cf. 215a 1-5, 230a 19 ff., and 254b 12 ff.
Gratitude, Nature,
justice,
commutative and
which seeks arithmetic
equality in
involves an element to benefits or favors
gratitude
services,
be proportionate demands of commutative justice, these
should
29
Piety in King Lear
and
of
exchanges of goods
Gratitude
calculation.6
bestowed.7
obligations
are
But
unlike
the
unenforceable,
at
least
by any human court. Unlike commercial and contractual obligations, here there is no explicit promise to return an equal value for what has been received.8 What occurs depends entirely upon the grace of the bene factor. The beneficiary cannot be forced to pay this kind of debt, which is also a debt that he was in no way responsible for incurring. Whether he pays or not depends upon the kind of man he is. Is he to be held for the kind of man he is? Gratitude then, in so far as its is unenforceable, in so far as it must be rendered willingly, and in so far as it reflects the character of those engaged in it, is like love. Where benefits causing gratitude and where love depend essentially on
responsible payment
the personal merits
of the
itself
benefactor
or
beloved, distributive justice,
the
the proportionality of rewards to personal merit, comes into consideration.9 Despite their connections or parallelism,
which
concerns
love,
gratitude and
with
least
at
noble
love,
may be distinguished. Lear's failure
to appreciate this difference seems to have been an important part of what
led to his
downfaU.io
II Lear introduces
has been
what
his love test
caUed
with
the
following
words:
Tell me, my
(Since
now
Interest Which That
territory,
divest
our
nature
largest doth
us
cares of
of you shall we
we
Where
6
of
daughters,
we will
of
say doth love
bounty
may
with merit
rule,
us most?
extend
challenge11
Xenophon's Socrates defines ingratitude
Memorabilia 2.2.3. See
also
7
Cf. Aristotle NE 1163a 10-24. In
could
circumstances
in
some contexts
where
be
[1.1.48-53].
as
a
kind
certain
of
pure
injustice:
King Lear 1.1.183.
8
9
both state)
either
rejection
understood as
or
implying
acceptance
is possible,
acceptance
such a promise.
Cf. Aristotle NE 1160b 23-62a 9, 1163a 24-63b 27, 1167a 15-22, 1167b 16-68a subject abounds in difficulties. Cp., for example, 1161a 20-23 and 1162a
27. The
4-9 (where it is relation to their with
shown
kings,
1161b 18-30
parents
love
and
children
why, in
should
with
accordance
love
parents more
justice,
1167b 16-68a 27 (where it is more
than
love
children
children, like subjects in
than parents should love children), shown
why, generally speaking,
parents).
Cf.
Eudemian
1241a 35-b 11; and Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologica HI, Q. 100, A. 5, Cf. also Plato Republic 330c, 457c end-458b, 462a-e, 463c-465c, 472b 3-6. 10 Cp. Kent's love for Lear with Cordelia's. The love between Kent and Lear inseparable from 11
"service."
Cf. 1.4.4-7
and
Ethics ad
4.
seems
1.4.92-93.
The last line is difficult. Nature here
could
affection; merit correspondingly could refer to good
refer
to filial
deeds,
that
is,
or
to
paternal
obedience and
Interpretation
30
He
most, he says, to that daughter that loves him most,
give
will
the implication
is,
daughter
each
bounty
wiU receive a share of
and
propor
tionate to her love for her father. If Lear intended to test or to measure daughters'
the amounts of his
till
waited
daughter had
each
compared with
speech, before
loves
have have been
their speeches, he would
by
spoken and each speech could
the others before making his distribution. But after each hearing those remaining, he disposes of a share in accord
be and is once explicitly referred to by him (1.1.37-38). Moreover, the plan, which had been discussed with, or at least presented to, his advisors and council, seems to have been a sagacious one.i2 The love test then may first have been thought of by Lear as a mere formality, staged for the sake of a public ance with what appears to as a prearranged plan
ratification of a well-thought-out succession scheme.
The
question as
to
why this form was used stiU remains. It is through Cordelia's actions that the love test becomes decisive for Lear and for the play as a whole: For
Cordelia's love
being
and
sure of
her love were,
whelmingly important for Lear. Cordelia's tant respects, prefigures Lear's.
The Duke sue
of
Burgundy
for the hand
Cordelia
and
King
the
more than
experience
of
France
in
are
he knew, over 1 , in impor
scene
in Lear's
court to
Cordelia, Lear's favorite daughter. When Lear strips her inheritance, of her dowry, and of his paternal favor,
of all
of
difference between Burgundy's and France's loves becomes plain. Burgundy wUl take Cordelia only with the portion first proposed by Lear. Lear says: the
.
.
If
.
Sir,
there
she stands:
little-seeming
aught within that
Or
substance,
displeasure piec'd, And nothing more, may fitly like your Grace, She's there, and she is yours. all of
Burgundy nation
it,
our
with
"I know
replies,
and urges
France
answer."
Cordelia's offense himself to Burgundy:
.
.
.
My Lord
What say
conformity in
Lear.
context, 12
means
to
'filial
occupy the larger and
and
he
love
the settlement Lear
nature "
means
on
p.
or
simply love
affection'
and
merit,
of
in the
6).
Lear
so long as he is alive, are to balancing Goneril and Albany on the north and south. Cf. Harry V. Jaffa, "The Limits of Politics: in Shakespeare's Politics, Allan Bloom and Harry with
center,
the
an attempt to
here proclaims,
'paternal
(Arden Ed.,
her consort,
and
King Lear, Act One, Scene V. Jaffa, Basic Books, 1964, tant respects,
have been. She replies;
affection'
strategic
Cornwall
not
"
Muir,
1.1.3-7. Cordelia
Regan
the lady? Love's
ratification of
According
could
Burgundy,
of
you to
condem
to consider his former suit. France
not even
wonders what addresses
Lear intensifies his
no
One,"
pp.
118 ff. This
develop
points
present
first
essay
stated
is, in
a number of
by Harry Jaffa.
impor
Gratitude, Nature, When it is
th'
Burgundy Peace be I
31
Lear
with
have her?
you
to Lear again for her
applies
dowry, is
rejected,
and
says:
Burgundy! fortunes
respect and
be his
shall not
France
King
dowry.
a
his suit, Cordelia
Since that
Will
entire point.
She is herself
withdraws
in
mingled with regards that stand
Aloof from
After
Piety
and
wife
are
his love,
[1.1.247-49].
speaks again:
Fairest
Cordelia,
that
art most
Most choice, forsaken; and Thee and thy virtues here I
being poor; lov'd, despis'd!
rich,
most
seize upon:
Be it lawful, I take up what's cast away. Gods, gods! 'tis strange that from their cold'st
My love "Inflam'd
After
should
kindle to inflam'd
neglect
respect.
might weU serve to characterize noble love.13
respect"
being
stripped of
the accoutrements of power, wealth,
and
favor,
Cordelia does learn who loves her for herself, for herself and her virtues, as France puts it, and who loves her for what she possesses, whose love "is mingled with regards that stand/ Aloof from The entire favor," dismantling of "so many folds of including the favor of gods and th'
point."
suitors'
fortune, not only reveals the qualities of her loves, but, more her reveals what she is reveals lovability. importantly, herself, France, as Kent conjectures (3.1.28-29), may have some political reasons for wanting to marry Cordelia: these, however, need not be incompatible with those manifest reasons that
lead him to love her for her
that she could have deserved the
To believe
own sake.
condemnation she received
from Lear,
France says, "Must be a faith that reason without miracle/Should never plant in Positively put, reason without miracle confirms Cordelia's virtue and her lovabUity. France's love then could be described as a kind of rational faith based on what he has learned about her character. It is not easy for a king, a princess, or anyone with large and evident powers to bestow benefits and Uls, to learn what people truly think of them. Lear finally learns who loves him and what those about him think of him, but hke Cordelia, he must be stripped and must strip himself of me."
the trappings of majesty
13
In Cordelia's
"looking
back,"
speech
first.14
(1.1.248)
comparison and calculation.
In France's
esteem, but also involves an personal worth.
respect
respectare, to something else
The
sense of
"inflam'd"
14
all
the
associated
more poignant.
Cf. 4.1.19-21,
and n. to
Cf.
suggested
also
or
or
(1.1.255)
"looking,"
distance
again"
honoring
speech
with
"looking
is,
element of
"respect"
deference usually
means
probably
beside herself, to her fortune, that of
by
makes
the word means
calculation, or estimation, of
the admiration, estimation, and the unusual
2.4.24.
1. 20, Arden Ed., K. Muir,
ed.
conjunction
with
Interpretation
32
III Private
ing
and public
love test
of a
interfere
the properly private. To
and
for Lear: The very
with each other
declarations
command public
propos
the properly pubhc
evidences a certain confusion about
testimony in
or
the execution of one's office is certainly appropriate for a judge, magis trate, or king; but Lear seems to have tried, as it were, to absorb the
into
private
However with
law
right of
is beyond
what
public, to have
the
by
enforced
and
and
naturally,
his vulnerability from his
test,16
Lear deserved
crucial.
arise
only
control.15
the Lear of the love
Cordelia is
to
be demanded
can
what
with what can
all external command or
one conceives of
respect
confused
majesty
gratitude
daughters, perhaps especially from Cordelia. And gratitude, or thank fulness, should be proportionate to how much one has to be thankful for. But Lear demands professions of love. He fails to appreciate how demean it would be for Cordelia to allow her love to seem to be proportionate
ing
to the magnitude of the fortune he bestows on her. The preciousness of her love is tied necessarily to its proud independence from mercenary influences or threats. It cannot be bought, not with fortune, power, sensual
pleasure, protection, 15
See
and
89-92. [The
Kant, 16
Cf. Immanuel
the second paragraph, p.
end of
command it"
like to do p.
above.
virtue.
Cordelia's
"The End
Kant,
84, 1.5, be,
There is
(auch more
someone
Bibliothek, read:
just to do something but
not
"love"
in
Aus-
81-84.
pp.
should
ed.,
tun soile).] Should not the
gern
pp.
"for it is
also
that he to
referred
by
strictly, gratitude?
division among the
great
82, Beck
refusal
Things,"
All
of
ed.
contradiction to
should
9
less than
else
anything
Lewis W. Beck, Library of Liberal Arts, 1963, kleine Schriften. Taschenausgaben der Philosophischen
gewahlte
a
5
notes
On History,
or
We may distinguish four
commentators.
alternatives:
1) Lear is a weak, senile, old man in his dotage. Can this be reconciled with the deep and powerful Lear of the rest of the play, with the man whose favorites had been Kent and Cordelia, who wisely favored Albany over Cornwall, who killed the man (probably a captain, 5.3.27) hanging Cordelia? 2) Lear is a sagacious, though not a wise, king. He is not altogether incognizant of
his
elder
their love
daughters'
characters and
oaths.
He
ceremony to ratify
in
relation
to
could
and
from the fixed
let thy
folly in,
hypocrisy; he
regarded
never accuses
love test
allowed
"her
being
fault"
most small
at
them
first
as
of
particularly
to wrench
violating
primarily
a
vulnerable
his "frame
of
place."
It
was
he
this vulnerability,
thy dear judgement
and
the
to sanctify the succession; but
Cordelia, he
nature
have
out."
Why
rebukes
himself, "that
then did Lear in Act 2
seem
to think that he could rely on his elder daughters?
3) Shakespeare
simply took
over
consistency here. 4) There is no inconsistency: A great
suffering
reveal
heretofore
the old story
man can
untapped
be
great
and
a
did
not concern
himself
weak, foolish dotard
depths
of
passion
and
and
with
under
powers
of
insight. The natives.
argument
of
this essay is
most
compatible
with
the second of these alter
Gratitude, Nature, to participate in
and
in
Piety
King
Lear
33
Lear's ceremony, her disobedience (and Kent's also), is by Lear as rooted in pride.17 Lear, however, fails
correctly diagnosed
how that pride with its occasionally offensive honesty, necessarily along with the love for which he craves. In its critical pride such a love reflects the lover's estimate of the intrinsic merits of the beloved.^ If Lear had succeeded in humbling Cordelia, he might have destroyed what he loved most. Lear never accuses Cordelia, as he does his other daughters, of ingrat
to see goes
itude. Her
love, or certain evidence of her love, is what he wants. He loved her most, he says, as if this gave him the right to command her to love him most. But even if love, or noble love, could be deserved, it cannot be commanded. There does not seem to be any court competent to grant compensation for the "pangs of dispriz'd love."19 Lear, it seems, needs Cordelia's love because it would be evidence for himself (and for others) of his own exceUence. If he were a wise man or a philosopher, he would himseU" "know and perhaps not need such confirmation.20 But Lear is Regan is
not a phUosopher.
wrong
self"
(1.1.294,
where
he
1.4.238
cf.
could
not the
and
only rightly
simply disclaim
.260).
expect
"Propinquity kingship, after having
honors of Lear presumes
and
gratitude, in of
property
thinking
blood,"
that he
could
in expecting full
relinquished power
intrinsic authority
upon an
and perhaps no man
not,
best witness, but she is not entirely ever but slenderly known him In commanding, or expecting love
Lear, "He hath
when she says of
and
and responsibility, self-sufficiency that he does
possess.21
could,
IV
"In
none of
the
fifty
or
sixty
versions
before Shakespeare's play does the Lear
suffer
Gloucester
most
says
Better I So
should
And
woes
in this
were
by
sever'd
of
man
can
of
the
and
king,
from my griefs,
themselves.
"small"
58,
ch.
Gloucester
madness
wrong imaginations lose
It may be that her fault is only Don Quixote says, "There are those who
sins
mad."22
distract:
my thoughts be
17
as
the Lear story in existence
to himself:
The knowledge
p.
play.
of
king go Reflecting on the old
commit
Putnam trans.,
when compared with will
ingratitude, for,
tell you that one of the greatest
is pride, but I maintain that ingratitude is p. 889. See also Ulrici, in Variorum Ed.,
worse."
Viking,
ed.
Part 2, Furness,
456. 19
Cf. Aristotle NE 1159a 22-25, 1167a 11 21, 1170b 8-14, 1172a 10 14.
19
Cf. Don Quixote, Part 1, ch. 14. Aristotle NE 1177a 12-79a 32; and Jaffa,
20 21
Jaffa
butive
suggests
justice,"
op.
cit., pp. 133
ff.
that "In proclaiming love of himself as the principle of distri
Lear
divinity,"
op. cit., pp. 132 "pretending to the attributes of and 133. Cf. George Anastaplo, The Constitutionalist: Notes on the First Amend ment, Southern Methodist University Press, 1971, p. 791; and 2.4.252. 22 Kenneth Muir, Arden Ed., Introduction, p. xliii, n. 1. was
Interpretation
34
And
yet the contrast
between the two
shows rather
how
much more
Lear's suffering in the mind is:23 The loss of eyes the wayfinders for physical movement, the conditions for independent action is not so pathetic as losing the hght of reason, the inteUectual guide that
pathetic
things.24
lets
us grasp the general meanings of There is a connection* it has been observed, between pride and madness.25 Proud men do not like to justify and explain themselves. Their rectitude, they feel, should be taken for granted. They balk at the inferiority, or equahty, implicit in being required to explain themselves, for example, Lear before Albany, Kent before Cornwall, Gloucester and Regan, and Cordelia before the court (1.4.248 ff., 2.2.61 ff., and 1.1.87
ff.). The
proud see or
They They
order.
itself.
feel themselves to be
prize their place within are most sensitive to
desire to
a
the desire to
within a
order
insult
and
definite hierarchical
and, accordingly, the order most prone to the passion
Anger, unlike grief, contains within back. And, most importantly for our argument,
insult,
most consequent upon
itself
the
strike
anger.
back for most men, if not for aU men, exists even when is nothing to strike back against. Men derive relief from cursing the table or bench they have knocked against. When loved ones suffer some grave and irremediable illness or misfortune, men can speak, not of strike
there
misfortune, but
"affliction,"
of
thus,
as
it were, striking back in
speech
the causes of the suffering. AU the affections of what is poetically caUed the "heart"26 may tend to personify, and thus obscure, the differ against
ence
between the
to personification. men
desire
what
living and the dead, but anger seems peculiarly prone Something sinular often happens in love. It seems that
they love, or what they think they love, to love them in love is capable of being returned or not. Hope rises
whether such
return,
from desire. Hope
and
desire find fulfillment in fact
23
Cf. 3.4.6-25.
24
Cf. 4.1.27-28.
25
Cf. Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan,
or
in fantasy.
ch. 8, Everyman's Library Ed., p. 59, and 10.9-11; and G. W. F. Hegel, Enzyklopddie d.p.W., Ill, Die Philosophie des Geistes, Cf. inter alia, 408, Zusatz, /?/?), "die eigentliche
Elements of Law,
ch.
Narrheit."
Sophocles Ajax; 28
The
general
Euripides Herakles.
heart
word
it
passions,
and
seems
desires,
occurs
to refer to
thoughts
rather
and
is
often
in
King Lear (about fifty
times).
In
for coordinating men's appetites, wills, their loves and hates. Cp. Dante's
what
responsible
"animo"
in Purgatorio, Canto 17. The word heart enters into Thomas Aquinas' discussion in the Summa Theologica, usually when citations from the Bible or Church authorities need explication.
Sometimes he interprets it
as practical reason or conscience
(e.g.,
IH Q. 94, A.6. Cf. A.5 ad 1, A.2, and I, Q. 24, A.l) and frequently as will (e.g., IH, Q. 4, A.4; Q. 6, A.4 ad 1; Q. 19, A.8 ad 1, A. 10 ad 1 sed con; Q. 24, A.3). Nonmetaphorically he speaks of the heart as that organ that initiates all
bodily, A.1
ad
all
vital
movement, the "instrument of the
1; IH, Q.
Q. 44, A.l
439e-442d;
ad and
soul's
passions"
(e.g., I, Q. 20,
17, A.9 ad 2; Q. 37, A.4; Q. 38, A.5 ad 3; Q. 40, A.6; 1; Q 48, A.2-4). Cf. Plato Republic, the discussion of 0up,65 Timaeus 69d end-72c 1.
Gratitude, Nature, In
and
Piety in King
35
Lear
of its extreme forms this personification is what is called Lear insists that it must have been the unkindness of Poor Tom's nonexistent daughters that brought him to such lowness (3.4.48 ff.). He will take a joint-stool for his daughter and Poor Tom and the Fool for some
madness.
Justices, if
that is the only way he has to bring his daughters before the justice (3.6.20 ff.). Lear's pride, his self-respect, his sense of where he belongs in the hierarchical order of things, is, so to speak, the point of origin for his orientation in the world. As his self-respect is assailed, he finds it increasingly difficult to be objective, as Edgar says to Gloucester, to "Bear free and patient that is, thoughts free from the pre
bar
of
thoughts,"
sumption
directed
that everything that happens in the world has been personally to its effect upon himseU. His pride and his love of
with a view
justice lead him to refuse to accept the existence of the world where his worth is denied. He wiU try to see the world as it is only if the world makes place for his pride. And yet one of the measures of his worth is the inten sity with which he struggles to save his sanity. If his pride did not have some basis in truth, even his own love of truth and justice, his madness could not be as significant as it is. V In the early and calls
the play Lear swears
of
acts
the sun, the night,
Hecate, Apollo, He
nature goddess.
part of one grand natural and
and
seems
by
Jupiter; he
those
to see himself
divine order,
a
specific
also calls on and
divinities,
the heavens
his kingdom
just hierarchical order,
as
with
the gods, especially Jupiter, at the summit of the himself correspondingly at the summit of that sub ordinate order, his kingdom. When his daughters, his fool, and his shame, the correlate of his pride, destroy his self-respect,
the
heavenly powers, hierarchy and
cosmic
"abuse,"
"subdue,"
"bemad"
"ruin,"
his nature, what is bemadding is that at the same time they are destroying the basis of his orientation in the world, driving his soul into a storm of questions, doubts, and partial in bear.27 sights too heavy for his patience and judgment to The disorder in the moral and political world is associated in Act 3 "oppress,"
with
and
tumult in the
cosmic
order, the
rage
in Lear's
soul with
the raging
Cf. Robert B. Heilman, This Great Stage, Image and Structure in King Lear, University of Washington, 1963, pp. 72-74. Cf. also Laurence Berns, "Aristotle's 27
Poetics"
Moderns, Essays on the Tradition of Political Philosophy Strauss, ed. Joseph Cropsey, Basic Books, 1964, p. 82. In that
in Ancients
in Honor of Leo essay the division
and
should be marked "Epilogue"; part II begins on p. 72 should read 70, last line, first paragraph, should read "their"; p. 72, eighth line from bottom,
on p.
82
"men"
"man"
and part
III
on
p.
79;
p.
"Book"
"his"
and
should
read
"chapter"; p. 80, 11.7 p. 85, n. 16, 1.6,
and
"flow"
should
23
be inserted between "Poetics."
should read
should each
should read
have
"flaw";
"civilizing"
a comma after
"for the
most
86, 1.14, in n. 16, "what lies "politics"; p. 86, n. 23, 1.2
part";
benea'.h"
p.
and
"Politics"
Interpretation
36 of
The
the heavens.
meets
who
gentleman
rage"
"impetuous blasts
with eyeless
But for Lear lightnings are addressed as
faU
your
Kent
Lear's
and
speaks
white
fires,"
"thought-executing
are
seeing
horrible
catch
of
how the
hair in their fury. and the
elements
thinking beings. At first he bids them, "Let They owe him no subscription. However, that
pleasure."
soon changes:
I
But
yet
That
will with
servile
you
call
two
ministers,
pernicious
daughters join
Your high-engender'd battles 'gainst
So
His
old and white as
to turn toward the gods themselves.
seems
outrage
head
a
O, ho! 'tis foul.
this.
But his faith
is not yet entirely destroyed. He realizes that patience is what he needs. Perhaps his suffering is some divine affliction, later to be redeemed? He caUs out as if the storm were herald to a day of judgment when justice and
honesty
will prevaU and
he
be
wiU
revealed
as a man more sinned
against than sinning.
Let the
keep
Find
out
this dreadful pudder o'er our
their
That hast
enemies now.
within
Unwhipp'd
of
Tremble,
and
thou
art
That
under covert and convenient
incestuous;
your
More
he has
after
divinities.29
poor, the
than
agreed
sleep."
He directs his
naked
to
shake,
seeming
pent-up guilts, and
I
sinning88
cry
am a man
[3.2.49-59].
enter
But he does
a
not
words not
wretched and the
Poor
close
summoners grace.
sinn'd against
then 111
life;
pieces
concealing continents,
These dreadful
Later,
caitiff, to
practis'd on man's
Rive
bloody hand,
thou
simular of virtue
That Has
heads,
thou wretch,
thee undivulged crimes,
Justice; hide thee,
Thou perjur'd,
and
Gods,
great
That
nearby
hovel, he
says, "I'll pray
pray, if praying means addressing to the high, to the gods, but to the
low:
wretches, whereso'er
you
are,
That bide the pelting of this pitiless storm, How shall your houseless heads and unfed sides, Your loop'd and window'd raggedness, defend you
From
seasons such as
Too little
care of
these? O! I have ta'en
this. Take physic,
Expose thyself to feel That thou
And
28
Cf. Kent's
mayst shake
the
the Heavens
superflux
more
to
them,
just [3.4.27-36].
speech preceding and Mark, 13, esp. 13.12; see Variorum Ed., 339; cf. Sophocles Oedipus at Colonus, 11.266-67. Cf. 1.5.47-48, 2.4.192, and 2.4.273-80.
Furness, 29
show
Pomp; feel,
what wretches
p.
ed.
Gratitude, Nature,
in
Piety
and
Like thoughts are expressed later by Gloucester, to the man he believes to be Poor Tom: Here,
take this purse, thou
Have humbled to
the
whom
I
all strokes: that
heav'ns'
37
Lear
King
he
as
gives
a
purse
the heavens is
called
plagues
am wretched
Makes thee the happier: Heavens, deal so still! and lust-dieted man, That slaves your ordinance, that will not see Let the superfluous
Because he does
your power
should undo
excess,
And
have
[4.1.64-71].
Lear's into
feel, feel
not
So distribution each man
enough
quickly;
further: The very justice
statement goes
of
question.30
The decisive royal
in this
point
is
process
he has
Lear
reached when
his
strips off
Poor
Tom, the exemplar of human wretchedness in the Gratitude, its bonds, its cosmic and divine implications, have proved snares and delusions for Lear. Here, with Poor Tom as his model, undeceived by a groundless reliance on after
garments,
encountered
extreme.31
gratitude and the
the Is
flattery
truly fundamental no
hide,
the sheep
unaccommodated man art.
Off,
Tom
off you
is
no
"natural
more
lendings! Come;
because he has the
wool, the
no
the worm no
owes
and
pomp
than this? Consider him
man no more
beast
of
majesty, he thinks that he
Thou
well.
cat no perfume.
but
such
a
poor,
because he has
silk
.
commit
o'
not
th'
Lear takes Tom, But does Tom have
foul fiend. Obey thy parents;
with
man's
sworn
set
spouse;
Thou
.
art
bare, forked
silk, the
no
the
thing itself;
animal
no
silk, the sheep
thou
as
thy
man,
He has his life
nothing?
keep thy
not
no wool
the unaccommodated
he has his misery; and as gratitude is one of the piety, so fear and wretchedness can theologize and has his catechism: Take heed
the worm
ow'st .
[3.4.105-12].32
here
unbutton
no wool.
man."
can see
situation of man.
as
and
chief roots of natural
moralize as well.
word's
sweet
justice;
heart
on
Tom
swear
proud
not;
array
[3.4.80-83].
Each
of these six commandments corresponds to one of the Bible's Ten Commandments: the last most tenuously to the Bible's Tenth, Tom's fifth to the Bible's Seventh, his fourth to the Bible's Third, his third to the Bible's Ninth, and his second to the Bible's Fifth.33 Lear has proclaimed
30
"And
show
overcomes
the Heavens more
31
Berns,
The
op.
occurs
32
Cf. 2.3.7-9.
33
Tom's
by
in
King Lear;
cit., n. 27 above,
extreme must
mother"
is the last line Lear
speaks
him. See 3.4.48. In Aristotelian terms this is the
reversal, or peripety, rence
just"
include
replacement of "Obey"
pp.
75
and
madness
at which
Poetics 1452a 21 -52b 13. Cf.
also
the
Lau
82.
madness.
the Fifth Commandment's "Honor
corresponds
before
point
to a replacement of gratitude
thy father
by fear.
and
thy
Interpretation
38
If nothing from nothing, everything that does come to be must come from something, something which itself does not come to be, that is, is un changing. It is not altogether unreasonable for Poor Tom and anyone who twice in this play that
"nothing
can
be
made out of
nothing."34
comes
would
take him as the man himself to regard what most men call
God,
his misery, as a foul fiend. Tom's first commandment corresponds to the Bible's First Commandment: "Thou shalt have no other gods before me."35 The question about filial gratitude, about what children owe to their parents, to the sources of their being, is here extended
the ultimate
source of
to the limit:
What is owed,
due,
or
to the guiding principle, or principles,
life as a whole, to the sources, or source, of aU being? he When Lear strips himself of his royal garments, those tries to strip himself of every vestige of royalty. When Kent asks him, Grace?" "How fares your he does not even acknowledge that the term he?" His divestment of his royal could be meaningful and replies, "What's garments is the outer sign of his soul's divestment of its former protec
of
"lendings,"
those beliefs and convictions that heretofore had his activity in the world. He thinks that now he is in a position to come to know man, to know himself, to philosophize (1.4.238 and But the conditions required to make him want to philosophize are those that he declared earlier would make a truly human
tions
and
supports,
of
sustained and guided
.259).
life impossible. "O! reason not the questioning his need for attendants of his
need,"
to
replies
his
daughters'
own:
basest beggars
our
Are in the
Allow
poorest
not nature
thing more
Man's life is cheap If only to go warm
Why,
he
as
superfluous:
than
were
needs, art a
lady;
gorgeous,
nature needs not what
Which scarcely keeps thee
You Heavens,
nature
beast's. Thou
thou gorgeous wear'st,
warm.
But, for
true need,
give me that patience, patience
I
need!
36
[2.4.266-73].
Not only does Poor Tom become the representative of humanity for Lear, but because he of all men is least likely to have been blinded by gratitude or flattery, he becomes after Lear's divestment the philosopher "First," before accepting fire, food, and shelter, "let me talk for Lear. 34
See
1.4.134-39,
"Angstphanomen,"
1.1.90,
and
Lear's "eye
1.2.31-35. anguish"
of
Shakespeare's
(4.4.15),
seems to
presentation
have been
of
the
unnoticed
by Martin Heidegger, Sein und Zeit, Niemeyer, 1957, p. 190; cf. n. on 199. 35 Exodus 20.1-17, Deuteronomy 5.6-21, and King Lear, 3.4.80-83. The statement following the Second Commandment tells of God visiting the iniquity of fathers upon their children; Shakespeare, less mysteriously with a view to considerations of justice, visits the iniquity of children upon fathers. See 3.4.74-75. Cf. A. C. Bradley, Shakespearean Tragedy, 36
Macmillan, London, 1961,
Cf. 3.6.4-5. Edith Sitwell
influence millan,
of
1965,
suggests
that
these
Plato's Phaedo 64d-e 1; A Notebook pp.
75-76.
pp.
222 ff.
lines on
were
William
written
under
the
Shakespeare, Mac
Gratitude, Nature, philosopher,"
this
with
thunder?"
he
His first question is: "What is the he apparently had no doubts is, Jupiter.
the cause of thunder, that not
by
thee to
of
During
word nature
times in what
The
("Gods,"
Jove [2.4.229-30].
He
open.
has
4.6.128) only
and words
once.
with
nature
to be the generally
come
a god
never addresses
the time of his madness he speaks
all
Lear
seems now
to see deeper into the nature of things than he
position
The
high-judging
have become
now such questions
a personal name again.
the divinities
of
cause about
bid the thunder-bearer shoot,
Nor tell tales
But
says.
Shortly before divesting,
of
I do
39
Piety in King Lear
and
as
to be in
fifty
their root are used
accepted
text of
a
before.
ever was
King
Lear.
seven times, more than twice as often as it Shakespeare. Lear uses words with nature as often as any other character in the play.37 These
word unnatural occurs
in any
occurs
other
play
than twice as
root more
of
be classified under five, not always clearly distinguishable, headings. Nature sometimes means (1) the general order of the social, usages could
and cosmic whole within which the activity of any one person group can only be a part; (2) the constitution, or character, of an individual as a whole, that is, the unity arising from both endowment and habit; (3) the original endowment of an individual with the powers
political, or
directed,
though not necessarily compelled, toward definite ends, or pur
poses.
This is the meaning
means
(4)
the
by
most often
expressed
individual
original endowment of an
Lear. Nature
also
with powers supplied
used howsoever their possessor wills. This is the meaning expressed powerfully by Edmund. (5) Nature is twice personified as goddess: once by Lear conflating meanings 1 and 3, and once by Edmund con flating meanings 1 and 4. The play has often been understood as present
to be most
ing
the
world
as
of
arena where the principles
a great
for dominion
ethical nature contest
the commentators are just one more
has been far
speare
37
the
over
reflection of
more explicit about
Nineteen times. Gloucester is
and un
The disagreements the fact that Shake
raising the
next with nine
of ethical
whole.38
question of
nature,
times. (Unnaturalness occurs once.)
Cf. G. Wilson Knight, The Wheel of Fire, Meridian, p. 179; E. K. Chambers, Shakespeare: A Survey, Hill and Wang, pp. 240 ff. and esp. pp. 215-16; D. A. 38
Traversi, An Approach
Shakespeare, Sands,
to
revised
and
enlarged
John F. Danby, Shakespeare's Doctrine of Nature, A Study of Faber, 1949, pp. 15-19; and esp. Robert B. Heilman, op. cit., and
5,
and pp.
Heilman's
for any
careful
serious
the
relating Shakespeare's generally
115, 133-34, work
study of
and
is
a
philosophy
shared
by
fundamental
speak
critics
of
27 above,
n.
185;
Faber & chs.
4
179-81.
King Lear. By
amazingly intricate
ed., p.
King Lear,
book,
perhaps
the
fundamental book,
carefully and searchingly
patterns
of
for itself.
imagery in The
book's
pre-nineteenth-century
the
tracing
play,
out and
Heilman lets
deficiencies, deficiencies literature, stem from an
insufficient understanding of certain key notions of classical philosophy, especially the notion of natural right (see Leo Strauss, Natural Right and History, Chicago, 1953, chs.
3
and
4)
and
the
notion
of
"intuitive
reason,"
that
is,
nous
(see Jacob Klein,
Interpretation
40
raising the question about the relation between nature and morahty, than he has been about presenting any definite solution. There is more clarity, however, about who is wrong: The transgressions of
Edmund, Goneril, Regan,
destruction. Nature Lear
Gloucester in Act
and
scene 6: "What has developed
4,
transcendent issues Shakespeare the
CornwaU lead ultimately to their own And about the meeting of
and
simple viciousness.
repels
.
his eyes, with the Royal Lear's understanding
sensual man robbed of
mind put
out."39
within nature
is certainly
not adequate.
He
.
could .
point the
man, the hght
wilful of
better
than this encounter of
how morality is
his
of
effected
the relation be
conceives of
it is (3.4.14-16); he being overestimates the power of law; he is insufficiently attentive to the limits set by nature to what authority and law can command. He relies overmuch more organic than
tween morality and nature as
on
divine
of the
directives,
enforcement of nature's
and
consequentiy is
to chance and, on the basis of the conditions provided
chance, to human
intervention for
chance
leads to
experience
nature
and
divine
of
the possibUities for
an underestimation of
for
by
substitution
Lear's faith in by bis suffering.
prudence.
is shattered open him to?
and natural order
does his shattering
what
words, the
other
awareness of the need
the Tightness of the divine
But
In
prudence.
insufficient
evil and an
unaware
to which the accomplishment of nature's purposes is left
extent
VI In his
he
Lear becomes estranged, not only from the divinities before, but from nature as a whole, especiaUy from nature
madness
by
swore
as the source of of
generation.4^
generation, gratitude,
From the justice
and
storm scene
he bids the thunder,
power over
nature, to:
if it
as
outset
are
were a
Strike flat the thick rotundity world! Crack Nature's moulds, all germens spill at o'
That
Destroy
makes
the
ingrateful
world's
producing man,
Ancients
and the perception of
to
a
"non-rational"
"value,"
divinity
with
great
authority
and
once
that
is,
Destroy
nature's
appreciate
rightly
means
for
the sources
Moderns, Essays on the Tradition of Strauss, ed. Joseph Cropsey, Basic Books, and
identify
imaginative
cries:
bis faUure to
by
in Honor of Leo
1964). Thus Heilman tends to
the themes
th'
pregnancy, he
Introduction,"
"Aristotle, An Political Philosophy
mind
[3.2.7-9].
man!
who shows
in Lear's
intertwined. In his first
"reason"
with
calculation,
so
that insight
the good according to nature, are attributed
awareness.
See
n. 13, and pp. 30-31 above. 4.6.132-33, 39 H. Granville-Barker, Prefaces to Shakespeare,
pp.
161,
170,
and
King Lear,
.177,
n.
36 above,
p.
47. In later
less aptly in our view, 40 Cf. 4.6.115-16.
editions
"despot"
quoted
in Edith Sitwell,
op.
cit.,
Granville-Barker has apparently substituted,
for "wilful
man."
Gratitude, Nature, his
of
how undeserving he is "the lusty stealth of
being
speak of as
.
.
King
Lear
41
the gift of life. What Edmund can
of
nature"
hell
in
Piety
and
is, for Lear,
associated with:
darkness,
.
the sulphurous
pit burning, scalding, Stench, consumption; fie, fie, fie! pah, pah! ...
Give To
me
an ounce of
Mad Lear
good
civet,
apothecary,
imagination [4.6.129-33].
sweeten my
comes to
a view
of
nature
somewhat similar
to
Edmund's,
the primitive, undeveloped
nature as
beginnings of things. But his anguish and revulsion indicate how much more he originally expected from nature: He feels and suffers the absence of what he can no longer believe in. Like Jesus he speaks against the Old Testament sentence for adultery.41 He
goes to extremes
declares: "Let
if
as
and,
all
thrive."
copulation
possibility of Jesus was more
the adulteress from condemnation, his last words more"
no
(John, 8.1-11). Lear, however,
After delivering to her were "go and sin
condemns
women
confounding sex with Biblical, mostly New Testament, images In his condemnation of the world's justice, Lear cries: Thou Thou
For
Again
That
thou lash that
lusts to
hotly
are
looketh
without sin
thoughts
by
a
There thou The
great
A dog's
deliberate
might'st
image
obey'd
Through tatter'd
Robes
and
in
and
.233-35.
[4.6.162-65].
(Matt.
of
after
her hath
unto
you,
committed
and "He that is (John 8.7).
5.27-28)
cast a stone at
her"
requires
that
the punishers be pure
offenses
or not.
be
Should
If in the New
Testament,
exaggerations, Lear
rhetorical
as some would seems
to have
required qualifications.
beggar, Lear
says:
Authority
office.
clothes
small
gowns
And the strong lance
33
cozener
behold
of
furred
Lev. 20.10. He
lust
failing, decency
intentions
lost the capacity to make the In a farmer's dog chasing a
41
woman to
nor acted upon?
are
hangs the
and
thoughts
claim, these
back;
own
be equally punishable? Do men have as much control desires as they do over their actions? Are others directed against themselves when those thoughts are
and actions
divulged
thine
the New Testament: "But I say
on
sainthood
their thoughts
neither
usurer
heart"
universal
harmed
her. The
her already in his among you, let him first
punished whether the
over
Strip
whore?
with
adultery
hell.
her in that kind
reminded of
whosoever
Yet
use
which thou whipp'st
we
generally, of
beadle, hold thy bloody hand!
rascal
Why dost
lost,
redemption were sober:
of
"pardons"
hide
vices
all.
do appear;
Plate
sin
with
gold,
justice hurtless breaks;
an adulterer rather
than an adulteress. Cf. 2.4.129-
Interpretation
42 Arm it in rags,
a pygmy's
does
straw
pierce
None does offend, none, I say, none;
If
none
does offend,
and
consequently
.
.
it.
.
none can
at
rightly accuse,
least
none could ever
are not themselves spotless, rightly "Judge not, that ye be not judged."42 Edgar's commentary on this An speech is: "O! matter and impertinency mix'd; / Reason in attempt should be made to separate some of the reason from the madness.
perhaps
none who accuse:
madness."
The farmer's
does
dog
away the thief, but
often chase
unfortunately, distinguish between
and
vUlainous
the
innocent,
dog
cannot, to speak
not
undeserved, lowness.
of
Authority
law
more rigorous with the poor and
weak, protecting themselves, and partly partly because they are less for less simple reasons. Wealth, power, and authority usually go together. And just as the unsuccessful can exaggerate the part played by chance and accident in human affairs, so the successful can flatter themselves and
are
usually
capable of
by
exaggerating the
allow
to
extent
which
unfortunate, smothering charity in
"that
man
A
act asks
callous
the
pregnant
sufferings
art
to their can
to the miseries of the rigor.43
self-complacent .
of
to good
of
owed
others, they
Such is the
When Gloucester / Because he does not feel the disguised Edgar who he is, Edgar replies:
most poor man made
Who, by Am
fortune is
misfortunes of
will not see
in the fourth
The
their good
By
reasoning obversely about the themselves to become obtuse and
merits.
tame to Fortune's
known
and
feeling
.
blows;
sorrows,
pity.
Lear, Gloucester,
and
Edgar
would
seem
to be the
remedy for this, the occupational disease of greatness.44 Yet if suffering of such magnitude is required, the price of sufficiently educating authority in mercy or equity is hopelessly high. Few can do as much, perhaps, as the
Shakespeare, who by his iences, has made it possible for
educator
art, his some
presentations of
to
feel,
without
feigned
fully
exper
suffering,
they might need to feel in order to see. Lear's suffering, however, and the perspective he has come to adopt, have not prepared him for governing more responsibly, but rather for a what
"world."
His suffering has completely destroyed him Perhaps the most poignant expression of Lear's death as a political man is his reception of Kent in the last scene. Kent's affection for Lear is never severed from a political context. He always approaches Lear, even in defiance and in death, as servant to master, never simply as man to man.45 At the end, although other explanations are possible, Lear's
renunciation of the as a political man.
42
the
Romans 3.1-18; cp. 3.10-12 with Psalms 14; and Matt. 7.1-5. Lear is the Apostle Paul said was made against himself, loc. cit. 3.8.
43
Cf. Laurence Berns,
44
For
another
Cf.
n.
10
op. cit., n.
approach
Henry V, 4.1. 45
open to
charge
above.
to
the
27 above,
pp.
75-77.
problem
see
/
Henry IV, 1.2
and
3.2;
and
Gratitude, Nature, cold reception of
faded into of
kill!"
Kent indicates that Kent and what he stands for have insignificance for Lear. Yet his renunciation
almost complete
is
the world
when
43
Piety in King Lear
and
I have
The desire for
not complete.
vengeance remains:
"And
/ Then, kill, kill, kUl, kUl, kill,
these son-in-laws,
stol'n upon
(4.6.188-89). VII
When Lear
awakes after
his
sleep, "Our foster-nurse of
long
rage,"
(4.4.12), "the
doctor reports, ". garments, the images Lear
great
(4.7.78-79). Clad in
the
new
.
.
Nature"
is kill'd in
him"
uses are resurrection
entry into a new hfe, a life characterized by the interchange of blessing (from Lear) and forgiveness (from Cordelia) and mutual love.46 After the battle and their capture, Lear is given over
from
the grave
almost
and
entirely to
love,
Come, let's away We two
alone
will
When thou dost
And
ask
of
And pray, As if Talk
As if In
ebb
Upon
such
so
we'll
live,
old
tales,
and
who's
wins;
's the mystery
God's flow
cage:
spies: and we'll wear
by
in,
of
with
down, laugh
out, them
who's
things,
and sects
out,
of great ones
the moon.
sacrifices, my
Cordelia,
The Gods themselves throw incense. Have I He that
parts us shall
And fire
us
too,
out;
and we'll wear
spies:
prison, pacts
and
th'
I'll kneel
blessing,
me
news; and we'll talk
upon
a wall'd
That
Gods
and who
we were
i'
sing like birds
ask
sing, and tell
and
of court
And take
to prison;
thee forgiveness:
we were
Who loses
the love of Cordelia.
bring
a
caught
thee?
brand from heaven,
hence like foxes [5.3.8-23].
to be perfectly fuUilled. He has no lingering regrets. The being reconciled in love with Cordelia is beyond price: It cannot be measured by any of the measures Lear used in the first scene. No sacrifice, be it rule, extent of territory, honor, even freedom itself, seems
Lear
seems
worth of
Lear has gained. And with his love's joy that he holds before himself has come patience. His patience and his love go together with his renunciation of the world. His desire for revenge is as dead as his pride. When Cordeha too great, or
love
and
proudly
even comparable with what
the prospect of
says:
For thee, Myself Shall
oppressed
King, I
could else out-frown
we not see these
Cf.
also
4.6.33-80.
down;
false Fortune's frown.
daughters
Lear answers, "No, no, no, 43
am cast
no!
and
these sisters?
Come, let's away
And
prison."
to
at
the
Interpretation
44
his death, with the dead Cordeha before him, it is clear that no longer in the world where even these last hopes are dashed. He dies in a vision of reunion with Cordelia living once again. There has been extensive debate about whether these scenes are to be understood in a Christian sense or not.47 Was Lear's moment of joy at his death "based on an illusion"?48 Or, was it the triumphal culmination of his purgatorial, his redemptive suffering, a loving glimpse into that better moment of
Lear
live
can
hopes wiU be fulfiUed? have been describing is the development of attitudes and a that Shakespeare has presented in terms that are recognizably
world to come where aU righteous
What
we
perspective Christianas
This development in King Lear, however, is presented as a natural development. What was Shakespeare's perspective, as distinct from Lear's? The dramatic poet does not speak in his own name. His perspective can be inferred only from the play as I were a god, to teU of aU these as
"Hard
a whole.
things,"
it for me,
were
says Homer.50
The
as
if
poet stands
of his play, but a god limited to what nature to chance: For nature, or the poet's understanding
the world
a god over
leaves to possibihty
and
nature, provides the framework. "Is there any cause in hearts?" asks, "that makes these hard (3.6.78-79). Shakespeare
of
nature,"
Lear
seems
to have asked: "Is there any cause in nature that makes these Christian Nature, or the problem of nature, as articulated by classical
hearts?"
philosophy,
The
we
suggest,
major classical
provides the
framework for King
philosophers, Plato
and
elaborated an answer to what we suppose was
be due to historical
could
Shakespeare's
serious
course,
never
question.
question
This
is: Are the
framework they first articulated adequate to compre Must not the rise and triumph of Christianity be
principles and the
hend
The
accident.
Aristotle,
Lear.^i of
such an account?
Can the decision about the best way of life be compelling fundamental alternatives have been examined? It is incumbent
explained?
unless all
upon classical
philosophy to try to see whether the revealed religions and by them can be rendered inteUigible to natural reason.
the souls formed
Shakespeare
seems
King Lear. Yet, it could be
to have been exploring this possibihty, especiaUy in
argued, nature has its place
also within
47
the Christian
Lear,"
See K. Muir, Arden Ed., pp. Iv ff.; Barbara Everett, "The New King in King Lear, Casebook Series, ed. F. Kermode, 1969, pp. 184 ff.; G. W. Knight, op. cit., pp. 187 ff.; and Susan Snyder, "King Lear and the Prodigal Son," Shakespeare Quarterly, Autumn 1966. Shakespeare:
48 49
51
K. Muir, loc. cit., p. lix. Cf. Heilman, op. cit., p. 78; Iliad XII, 1.176. Aristotle NE
Kuzari,"
Bloom,
1134b
Persecution op.
cit., n.
and
n.
11,
p.
309;
and esp. n.
1,
p.
331.
18-35. Cf. Leo Strauss, "The Law of Reason in the of Writing, Free Press, 1952, pp. 95-98; Allan
the Art
12 above, Introduction;
and
Howard B. White, Copp'd Hills
Towards Heaven: Shakespeare's Classical Polity, Nijhoff, 1970.
Gratitude, Nature,
and
Piety
in
King
45
Lear
Could not Shakespeare have been showing rather how God's invisible law might, "from the creation of the have been written by nature in men's hearts? Might he not have been showing what would have to be endured by a "natural that is, a man with no knowledge
cosmos.
world,"
man,"
Jesus Christ
of
and
the
Bible, for
that
law to begin to become
visible
to him?52
If the issue love
as
were to
be
compared with
in terms
put
the
of
the primacy
of compassionate
insight, Shakespeare may have primacy opinion in Act 4 of King Lear. An unnamed of
to his own describes Cordelia's tears whUe she reads of her father's suf ferings as "pearls from diamonds "Tears of compassion are Tears of compassion are compared to pearls; eyes are diamonds rare and precious stones, but eyes, that is, insight, are more precious provided a clue
gentleman
dropped."
.
.
.":
stUl.53
"Hath
God,"
Apostle Paul, "made foolish the wisdom of faith possess a wisdom far deeper than anything accessible to natural reason. Is this what Shake speare suggests by echoing this language about wisdom and folly in his articulation of the problem of morality and justice in King Lear? The of this
not
world?"54
wrote the
"foolish"
For Paul
the
Fool teUs Kent: That
for gain,
sir which serves and seeks
And follows but for form, Will pack when it begins to rain, And leave thee in the But I
will
storm.
tarry; the Fool
And let the
wise man
The knave turns Fool that The Fool
no
knave,
will
stay,
fly: runs
away;
perdy [2.4.78-85].
In this play the word fool moves through a range of meanings. "foolish," The official Fool in motley is funny, and privileged because he seems, or is licensed to pretend, not to know the most ordinary con ventions.
In general, a fool is a man who does not know what every man is to know. Somewhat less generally, assuming that in everything man chooses to do, some benefit to himself is intended, a fool is a man
expected a
does things that harm himself, who lacks judgment about what benefits himself. This is the elementary meaning of the word in the play that is presupposed by the four meanings following. The honest fools, best exemplified by Gloucester and by Edgar of the who
52 53
54
Cf. Romans 1.20, 2.14-15; and / Cor. 2.14. Heilman, op. cit., pp. 155-56. Cf. King Lear, 5.3.189-90 and 1.1.56. / Cor. 2.20 and ibid. chs. 1-4. But cp. A Midsummer Nighfs Dream, / Cor. 2.9: ibid. 1.2.22-99
and cf. ibid., 4.1.218-21 with 1.2.8,15; 3.1.1-81; 4.2.30-end with Galatians 2:11 ff.:
26:
and
360-62.
also
with
ibid.
4.1.10-
/ Cor. 9.22: ibid.
5.1.195-96, 311,
Interpretation
46 are
early scenes,
heavenly
about
people unlike gulled
by
overtrusting and, as in Gloucester's case, overcredulous influences on human actions. They fail to understand
themselves, to
those
understand vice and malice.
clever and unscrupulous enough
to
They are easily betray their
exploit and
trust. fools."
So Albany is regarded by same could be said of the The by servant who mortally wounds CornwaU and is kiUed by Regan. Lear in acting on the expectation that his elder daughters would be bound by filial The moral fools tend gratitude and duty is another kind of "moral
The loyal and dutiful Goneril and Kent spoken
"moral
are
the Fool.
of
fool."
to act as if moral laws were as inviolable as natural laws, as if moral laws were natural laws. They are regarded as fools by the "worldly for not appreciating sufficiently the arbitrary and conventional factors in morality, the bestial elements in human nature, and for not appreciating
wise"
sufficiently how self-seeking usually masks itself in moral guises. For the worldly wise self-seeking is the only kind of seeking sanctioned by nature.
What the
fool
moral
senses or sees and
humanity
the extent to which the
larger moral, social, only be a part. Examples
of
any
and political orders of which
those capable of
respect."55
and
"noble
of what we might call the
Edgar, Cordelia, and Lear: noble love, by "inflam'd selves
the worldly wise are blind to is
one man's
everything that
could
By
be
life is
fool"
are
being
a
function
of the
that individual life can
France,
the
Fool,
touched and moved
by
their willingness to risk them
subject
to calculations of worldly
success, they exhibit their own conviction, and rouse admiration and hopes, in those capable of appreciating them, that mankind is capable of attaining states of being that are simply good in themselves. The
worldly wise are blind to this possibility. In the light of what the moral fool and the noble fool see, the knavery of the worldly wise reveals itself as the final folly. By their blindness to
beasts,
"wise"
knaves finally bring them down with those whose justice they violate. By their blindness to what directs men toward the divine, to what is good in itseU, they are deprived of nature's graces, the love and friendship of the noble. But do the love and insight that Lear and Gloucester attain fuUy what raises man above
the
the
selves
redeem what proportion
they have
between
"We glory in
knowing
suffered?
tribulations,"
wrote the
terrible
suffering?
Apostle Paul,
that tribulation worketh patience; and patience experience; and experience,
hope. And hope
maketh
not
ashamed; because the love of God is
hearts by the Holy Ghost
our
What is to be inferred from the dis
and their
their sins
which
is
given unto us.
shed
abroad
in
[Romans 5.3-5].
And from the Apostle James: Be
patient
waiteth
56
Cf.
therefore
for the
section
brethren,
precious
II
fruit
above.
unto of
the coming of the Lord. Behold the husbandman
the earth, and hath
long
patience
for it,
until
he
Gratitude, Nature, the earlier and the
receive
for the coming
latter
and
Be
rain.
ye
also
Cordelia, her love, "The holy water from (4.3.31), that near the end sustain Lear's patience. how Ay,
she read
sir;
And
stablish
patient;
your
hearts:
the Lord draweth nigh.
of
It is
cribes
47
Piety in King Lear
Kent's letters recounting Lear's
her
heavenly
The
eyes"
gentleman
des
ordeal:
took them, read them in my presence;
she
then an ample tear trill'd down Her delicate cheek; it seem'd she was a queen Over her passion; who, most rebel-like, now
and
Sought to be
"O! then it
a
As
Kent
her
express
and
Were like, That play'd What
her. asks.
rage; patience and
should
Sunshine
o'er
her?"
mov'd
Not to Who
king
rain
at
sorrow
goodliest.
once; her
strove
You have
smile
and
seen
tears
better way; those happy smilets her ripe lip seem'd not to know
a
on
guests
were
in her eyes;
which
parted
thence,
from diamonds dropp'd. In brief, Sorrow would be a rarity most belov'd,
If
pearls
all could so
Later Cordeha
become it [4.3.12-24].
prays:
All bless'd secrets, All
you unpublish'd virtues
Spring In the
In the
my tears! be
with
good man's
reconcUiation
himself, "Yes, "King Lear is Sunshine smiles and
the earth,
of
aidant
and
remediate
distress! [4.4.15-18].
scene, Lear asks, "Be
your
wet?"
He
tears
faith."
a
These scenes too are often taken Christian play about a Pagan world.
and
tears
.
rain,
however,
suggest natural
answers
as argument that .
growth, that Cordelia's
for curing Lear's abused heart. It Christianlike use of nature. But, unlike
were nature's means
does seem, however, to be
a most
Lear, Cordelia,
whose patience is so movingly described, is proud to the She never asks for forgiveness. She is prepared to "outfrown false frown." Fortune's Is she prepared to live out her life "in a walled prison"? She has not renounced political life: She calls Lear king and queenlike puts down her rebel passions. She is ready to confront her sisters: "Shall Yet what is perhaps most we not see these daughters and these
end.
sisters?"
significant, though obvious, for the
question of
Christianity
in
King
Lear
Lord."
is that there is no promise or expectation "for the coming of the The word patience is ambiguous. In the Christian sense it seems to mean bearing tribulations in the loving faith that their promised miraculous reversals wiU surely come to pass. In the classical, or stoic, sense of the
J. C. Maxwell,
quoted
in Muir,
op.
cit., p. lvi.
Interpretation
48 word
it
to mean
seems
miraculous
itself only deserves loyalty
The
innocent too for
respect
receives
with
often
for its
the guUty, in
It is
absence.
the
at
providence
the
with
just
the
and
the
engender
view, that
time
incompatible
not
down
bring
classical
same
reward or not.
other
any
mischances of the world that
particular
evidence
that does not anticipate
endurance
loyalty
that
whether
unforeseen
wish
endurance:
that bases change, that accepts evil in the world as a necessity, on rational hopes and the conviction that what is itself good
they
constitute
the love of truth to
the love of justice that is the father to that wish.
VIII Who is the paradigm of virtue in this addressing himseh to absent Lear: Thou hast Who
from the
nature
general
Which twain have brought her
Why
says,
curse
to.57
honesty, her proud refusal demeaning hypocrisy, precipitated the catas
Cordelia killed? Cordelia's
then was
to join her
gentleman
daughter,
one
redeems
The
play?
sisters
in their
trophe of this play. Her death raises the question about what the moral
limits
in
honesty
of proud
Cornelius in Cymbeline the
bad) in
order
imperfect
an
avert
might be.58
world
tragedy by,
as
they
put
Pisanio
and
it, being false (to
to be true (to the good) (1.5.43-44 and 4.3.42). In Sonnet
94 those "who rightly do inherit heaven's graces / And husband nature's riches from are also those "that have pow'r to hurt and wiU do expense"
/ That do
show."
do the thing they most do never apply to Cordelia. Edgar is the character in King Lear who most none,
thing he most does show. He successfully in the play. During the play from a
This last line
not
of aU
assumes
not
do the
different
guises
does
six
could
brother noble,
Whose
nature
That he
is
so
suspects
far from doing harms on whose foolish honesty
none;
the practices of a confirmed viUain ride easily,
he develops into
a model
of virtue armed and resourceful.
Edgar
Their
seems
opinions
to be a about
opposite extremes.
57
pp.
between his father
influences
for the "general
curse"?
Cf. Ulrici, Variorum Ed.,
459-60,
question of
1970,
pp.
on
the
and
over
his bastard brother.
human
The father is overcredulous, Edmund
Does this indicate that ingratitude
responsible 58
mean
heavenly
her death. Cf. H. and
17
Furness,
at
than prideful disobedience is chiefly
more n.
are
above.
456 57. See
also Gervinus, ibid., invading army for the Granville-Barker, Prefaces to Shakespeare, Botsford,
significance
23-24 (277-78)
See
affairs
undercredulous.
51
ed.
of
her
(305)
on
pp.
leadership Cordelia's
of
the
silence.
Gratitude, Nature, Both
clearly
heavenly theme
boys,
son's.59
influence
to his
speech
on
human
dying brother
rarely comes to much good. Edgar's last word of the play on the adultery well to Gloucester's "As flies to wanton
affairs
gives the
and constitutes an answer as th'
to
are we
The Gods
Gods; / They kill just,
are
plague
eyes
for their
sport."
us;
and vicious place where
Cost him his
us
and of our pleasant vices
Make instruments to The dark
49
Piety in King Lear
equally at fault intellectually, but the moral fault is In Shakespeare's world he who scorns all idea of
are perhaps more the
and
thee he got
[5.3.170-73].
"Th'
Edmund replies, hast spoken right, 'tis true. / The wheel is come full here." Edgar spoke of the gods, but Edmund speaks of circle; I am fortune's wheel. Lear preaches to Gloucester, drawing lessons from man's beginnings: Thou
be patient:
must
we came
crying hither:
Thou know'st the first time that We
wawl and cry.
When
.
we
his
the air
we smell
.
cry that
fools60 great stage of
preaches to
Men
This
born,
we are
To this
Edgar
.
suicidal
we are come
[4.6.180-85].
father
on
the
same
theme:
must endure
Their going
hence,
Ripeness is
all
sermon
is
their coming hither:
even as
[5.2.9-11].
more
adequate
because it is
more
comprehensive.
It
well.61 only the beginnings but the middle and the end as Man's chief concern, the image suggests, should be not with what happens
considers not
beginnings, but
the fruit falls and dies, nor especially the coming to fullest maturity in the world.
when with
rather
LX
King story.
Lear is based
Critics have
on
long
two stories, the Lear story and the Gloucester concerned by the apparent lack of complete
been
them.62 The unity unity between level of reflection, reflection on the
stories,
of
which
both
stories
are
of
King
Lear
comes
one philosophic
necessary
and
to
sight
on
the
theme underlying both
complementary
parts:
Cf. Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, B 857 58. world's a stage in Shakespeare for him who, like Lear, Jaques, and Macbeth (5.5.25) Antonio, is coming to feel himself to be an "exile in 59
60
All the
'this'
is
world."
a special case.
indebted for this
61
I
62
Cf. Bradley,
and
am
"The
Unity
observation
op. cit., pp. of
King
118
Lear"
to Hilail Gildin of Queens
ff.; Heilman,
in
op.
cit., ed.
op.
College, N.Y. 28, pp. 298-99;
cit., p. 32 and n.
Kermode,
n.
47 above,
pp.
169 ff.
Interpretation
50 namely, that nature, and
law,
law
and political
legal
of
and
the
by ity.
laws,
base love
Being
love and
and
gratitude
gratitude
the
and
the same
fails to
its
that the
see
beyond the
are
control of
coin:
power of
passion,
conceived outside
need
The Gloucester
observed.63
how
Lear's
of
stories
daughters
elder
certain natural passions and
procreation,
need
Ordinary love
authority.64
and
and
rightly
not
are
manifestly the
conventions,
speak of
limits
other side of
most
powers,
love
adultery theme,
illustrate the
of convention
The Lear story Ulustrates the natural limits authority and the tensions that arise between nature
those
when
limits
authority.
and pohtical
law
story,
command
of noble
growths
ground and
the cooperation of law and convention for
man
fulfillment. Lear in trying to natural
constituting the
whUe
in
requires
be
to
and
controlled not
passion,
to
to be controlled
by law and author (1.1.19), Edmund was
law"
the "order of
"unnaturaUy,"
banished from the family circle. He is, not altogether devoid of family feeling. As the bodies of Goneril and Regan are brought in, the dying Edmund exclaims, "Yet Edmund was belov'd: / The one herseh." the other poison'd for my sake, / And after slew Goneril and Regan as well as Lear seem to have died for "love."
How
would nature and
harmoniously? Nature powers,
and
ordains,
ends would perfect
convention,
provides
or manifests
of the conditions provided
the materials
accordance with those
and
ends
constituted as to require
bare, forked
is left to
disguises,
is left to
sound
man,
but
and
does
men
man,
not silence
whose
his
as
heart does
how his
sense of nature that means
Cf. Jaffa, The
outward
includes
op. cit., p.
to men: On the basis
Human
himself, heart
is so laws for its
nature
and
not
as the
his
mind and
and mind remain
trappings change. He is the
fulfillment,
only
poor,
the man of many
not enslave
heart,66 whose
matter
64
and
in this play,
he is in
in that
63
and
what purposes
of conventions
no
"nature"
cooperating
materials
themselves through custom,
not
where
human
chance, the responsibility for powers so as to function in
education.65
art, the formation
Lear saw, but
the educable
whose mind
chance and
represent the natural man
animal
related when
to natural reason,
by nature and developing the
habituation, training, law, fulfillment. Edgar does
law, be
the materials and fulfill the powers. But the accom
plishment of nature's purposes
forming
or
the materials, the
primitive
natural
beginnings,
"ripeness."67
131.
is, of course, guided by other natural powers, such as reason and judgment. France, the king, acknowledges the law's authority even over his noble control
love for Cordelia (1.1.253). 65
Cf. Plato Meno, esp. beginning; and Aristotle NE Book ii, ch. 1. Cf. Leo Strauss, in Jason Marvin Aronson, Three Funeral Addresses, Chicago, University College, December 6, 1961, p. 8.
68
of
67
Cf. Aristotle Physics Book ii.
University
Gratitude, Nature, The
may be
at work
the most
This is
in the play Cf.
n.
51
irony that led him, correctly, but for the wrong "the thing itself," that is, the natural man, by Lear also in his being called "phUosopher."6s Edgar, though
called
tragic,
nor the most
true hero of patience in
68
Piety in King Lear
same consummate
reasons, to be not
and
1,
not who
above.
King
contradicted never uses
by
pathetic,
character
in the play, is the
Lear.
the fact that Edgar is the only major character
the word nature or any
word
with nature
as
its
root.
52 SHREW ON THE INDUCTION OF THE TAMING OF THE
Hiram Caton Australian National University
Although The Shrew is it anything
not thought
theatre
long-standing
a
than good farce. I
more
favorite,
shaU
by suggesting that the play also has a serious, even a My purpose is to discuss the main acknowledged difficulty
philosophical
laughter side.
have
critics
risk adding to the of
the
play, the relation of the Induction to the body. The action begins with the drunken Sly being cast out of an inn. He is lord abducted by a lord who deludes him into the behef that he is a derangement and iUness. The taming play is a from long recovering But presented to him as part of the cure prescribed by bis physicians.
Sly
and
that the abetted
by
are
company
dropped
at
the
end of
Sly episode is left by the bad condition
of the folio, has led to patching and tinkering The division between Induction and body was
editors and producers.
introduced
Pope
by
Although it has
independence understand
no
parts
fit together,
did); taming
doubt
"play
play Induction to the
within
into
a
the
play
the
original about
given a novel and
play;
Sly
the
to correct the apparently defective
that
is that the play within is, play initiaUy Sly is transformed conventional the Moreover, taming idea is about
a
puzzling twist
when the express audience of the
Sly, is shown sleeping through the play. It is improbable striking feature, however odd it might seem, is not ultimately Our task, then, is to find the Induction to be integral to the sense of
the coherence of the work.
1
Pope
gave
no
servants
reason
The
sound.
merely foUows the convention of Shakespeare used successfuUy on
problem of coherence
the shrew.
The lord tells his
episode
denouement is invented
that the trick on
for his emendation,
Sly
which
an
the
taming
that such a
play,
shows
editors.1
body
which
But the
sometimes omit
than its dramatic quality, which is
rather
the
several occasions.
replaces
subsequent
play.2
meant
play,"
the
ah
and sometimes a
end of the
measures are no
from
by
basis in the foho, the division in effect asserts the Induction. Directors, at a loss to
movie version
coherence of the
ratified
the play from the
of
and placed at the
transition
has been
and
how the two
(as Burton's Such
Act I, scene 1, with the result This incongruous feature,
without a conclusion.
essential
to
interpretation that
taming
is merely for Theobald
play.
amusement.
accepted
without
comment. 2
For
a
summary of these
"The Dreaming 55-56.
of
The
practices
Shrew,"
in
recent
Shakespeare
American theatre,
see
Sears Jayne,
Quarterly, XVII (1966),
pp.
42-43,
On the Induction of The
Taming
of
53
the Shrew
Sly is told by the lord and his servants (who speak and act entirely accord ing to the lord's instructions) that he is a lord who has forgotten his (Ind. ii.13-16). identity owing to a delirium provoked by some "foul spirit"
This
leads to the presentation of the taming play as part of Since the explanation is an aspect of the hoax, it is not trust But is the explanation given to the servants trustworthy? Apart
explanation
the cure. worthy.
from the
deviousness of the lord, there are two specific reasons Since it. the lord's pastime is fox hunting, the name doubting hints at some underlying appropriateness in the relation between them. It is just visible in the circumstance that corresponding to the joke about his being possessed by a foul spirit is Sly's genuine weakness for alcohol. Perhaps in his playful way the lord is serious about Sly's not being himis intended to have some real effect. By consider seU; perhaps the the matter in this way, a marked parallel between the Induction and ing body comes into view. The lord is to Sly as Petruchio is to Kate, because both are tamers who undertake to reduce persons of violent dispositions evident
"Sly"
for
"cure"
to manageable docUity. What then
The
page
comedy is the
that
supposed to
his
is Sly's malady? feeds upon melancholy,
"frenzy"
remedy (Ind.
u.
131-32). In
view of
which
the
the theme of
ought in some way involve failure with is confirmed; the Induction opens with Sly being by the hostess. His humiliation is paraUeled in
play, the melancholy
taming
women.
says
This
anticipation
driven from an alehouse Lucentio's humUiation by Bianca. Since the taming play presents two ways of wooing, one of which ends in failure and the other in success, presumably it would teach Sly how to distinguish the right from the wrong way to woo. It would thus appear that the lord contrives to make Sly recognize
his faults
by
presenting them in Lucentio, the
cure
taking
effect
the moment he realizes this. But such an interpretation is rendered
at
doubtful
ity,
by
whereas
would
the
fact that Lucentio's wooing is inseparable from his gentil surely no gentleman. Besides since Sly falls asleep, it
Sly is
be inappropriate to imagine
a cure
for him that involves instruction
and therefore wakefulness.
Sly
resists with great vehemence
the
attempt
to foist the
new
identity
"lordship"
and him. He rails at the servants for addressing him as "honour." He refuses elegant food, drink, and attire as unsuited to him self. To refute the claim that he is a lord, he asserts that he is a menial of the lowest sort: "by birth a pedlar, by education a card-maker, by
upon
transmutation
a
bear-herd,
and now
by
tinker."
present profession a
apparently thinks of himself as a humble but honest or claim on the world, which he is content to "let
He
man without ambition
slide."
self-appraisal is any indication as to why he is both indifferent to the world, yet defiant, as he is toward aU those he encounters. His defiance, and indeed intransigence, makes its appear
Missing
from Sly's
abject and
ance
in the opening lines
of the play:
Sly: I'll feeze you, in faith. Hostess: A
pair of
stocks, you
rogue!
Interpretation
54 Sly: Y'are
a
the Slys are no rogues.
baggage,
Look in the chronicals,
Conqueror. Hostess: You Sly: No,
.
.
with
.
.
.
Richard
.
will not
not a
in
we came
pay for the
denier.
.
.
have burst?
glasses you
.
surly, and unjust in refusing to mend the damage he in short, a rogue without doubt.3 This tinker, who later rejects the least suggestion of his nobility, now introduces as confused evidence of his quality the association of his famUy with "Richard Con
is
Sly
has
belligerent,
caused
queror,"
that
is, William
out some pride
This is
the Conqueror
famed for
of whom were
hence,
and,
deeds
pious
and
Richard
not without some
perhaps most evident when
he "will
the
Lion Heart, both Sly is not with
of great magnitude.
he
belief in his the
answers
budge
own goodness.
hostess'
inch"
threat to caU
but
will answer by saying stupor he drunken A that his servant reports "by during even threatened to bring the hostess to court (Ind. ii.87). Sly talks like an innocent man. He also uses the formulas of piety, swearing twice by
the police
that
saints
and
once.
praying of
things
given
name,
In his brief
connected
Christopher,
number of
simplicity.
He is
another world.
titles
His
confused
altogether
whereas
none
of
six
the
any but pagan deities. Indeed, hint at the missing element of his Christian of fanatical Puritan persuasion? place upon this
and refinements answers
content to
there are
mention
Might he be a disparate details fall into
violent rejection of
speeches
Christianity,
seems to
self-identification:
A
with
the Induction
other characters of
Sly's
an
law."
the charge
mentions4
not
let the
world
genealogy
slide
argues
interpretation. His
to fanatical
humUity
and
because he beheves in
less his
esteem
than for crusading and reforming zeal. And it provides
a
for royalty connection
between Sly's beUigerence and his stout belief in his own innocence. Since Sly believes that the hostess is at fault, to him his anger is not bluster and menace but anger in service of justice, or indignation. When indigna tion goes unchecked, it easily transforms itself into fanatical zeal. The "foul that caused his distemper would thus appear to be the frenzy spirit"
the zealot. Let us consider whether these conjectures correspond to
of
the lord's diagnosis
and
treatment.
On first inspection it is easier to characterize the healthy state, lordship, to which the lord wishes to bring Sly than the diagnosis. Since the lord does not prevent Sly drinking, but on the contrary has his servants offer him sack, it is reasonable to assume that the alcoholism is a figure of his frenzy. There are indications that the lord diagnoses Sly's condition as beggary. This makes some sense. Beggars entreat, while lords command; the transformation from beggar to lord 3
The Elizabethan
audience would
who were common at
the time and
thus be a
probably have identified
who
Vagabonds"
would
"transmutation"
Sly
as
a
vagabond,
usually followed Sly's professions. Charles
in Shakespeare's England (Oxford: Oxford Whibley, "Rogues and University Press, 1917), II, pp. 484-510. 4 Ind. i.9; ii.l, 24, 98, 137.
On the Induction of The
Taming
of the
55
Shrew
The treatment would perforce arouse in Sly a desire for contempt for his base conditions. The exhibition of Petruchio's successful campaign against Kate is well suited to that purpose. Once more, however, we note a theme struck in the Induction and continued in the body, but which is not applicable to Sly because he sleeps. Furthermore, the treatment administered to Sly in the Induction has no obvious connection with transforming him into a lord. The treatment does not instruct but arouses a passion; and the passion is not love of glory, but erotic desire. The whole treatment of Sly is geared to this purpose. It begins when to an opposite. command
and
lord directs that Sly be quartered in his most voluptuous bedroom. The cure, including the taming play, is staged here. (This setting is complemented in the taming play by the conclusion, which sends brides and grooms off to the marriage bed.) The treatment entices Sly to indulge in various pleasures; he is especially exposed to some "wanton which prepare him for the more lifelike image of the page disguised as his lady. The efficacy of the treatment is apparent when, immediately upon being persuaded that he is a lord, Sly calls for his wife. Throughout the remainder of the episode his one desire is to make love to her. Interest in women is a volte face for Sly. His indifference to sex is so great that he calls the hostess and teUs her to warm herself on her "cold while he himself sleeps on a cold hearth. He is so unaccus the
pictures,"
"boy"
bed,"
tomed to women that he does not know the
does he
proper
form
of address to
disguise even though they sit together. The lord explains the way in which Sly's treatment proceeds: He is to "recaU" the "ancient that lie submerged in his alcohol-frenzied mind (Ind. ii.31). The wanton pictures all depict characters, namely, pagan gods and heroes. The lord's use of pagan divinities, to gether with Sly's frequent mention of Christian pieties, all point to "novelty" that has obscured Sly's original nature. If Christianity as the Sly's malady is rehgious fanaticism, we need but grasp how loosening wives,
nor
suspect
the page's
thoughts"
"ancient"
Sly's desire
Sly
would restore
vacUlates
peculiar
to
between
righteous
his health.
setf-abasement
("beggary")
and
the intransigence
indignation. (Notice that Sly's list
of
occupations
his instability.) His appeal to law and justice show that he under stands himself as subject to the law; exaggerated or fanatical submission to law tends toward servility. The conviction of his own righteousness will grow in Sly to the extent that he is conscious of his submission to law. argues
And to the degree that his submission is greater than that of other men, he will come to believe in his superior piety. Hence, Sly is both defiant and abject. Of all the virtues, justice is the most severe; it upholds Shylock's contract with Antonio and sends soldiers to face death in the field. Justice is ranged against the natural appetites insofar as it divides them into those that are lawful and those that are not, whereas desire as desire recognizes no such distinction. The natural ally of justice in its struggle
with
desire is
spiritedness
or
anger.
But if
spiritedness grows
Interpretation
56 beyond
what
is
needed
for the
support of
justice, if, like desire, it becomes
from reason, it will produce its own injustice the injustice of the righteous. Such is perhaps the root of the combination of piety and ferocity in Sly. The right treatment of that condition would attempt to emancipated
justice
restore
his
by tempering
spiritedness.
The taming
"recalling"
accordingly be accomplished by retreated before the surging floods of anger.
would
Love, in
Sly's virulence desire that has
of
the
short, softens the
heart. II
We
Sly
to confront the
are now prepared
after
during
aU nods
the
taming
frequently
play.
fact that
mentioned
Shakespeare
goes
out of
his
way to call this incident to our attention. It is apparent that his sleep is induced by boredom (I.i. 25 1-52). What is there in the opening scene that
be tedious to Sly? It
would
opens with
long
two
speeches on
Lucentio's
to study philosophy. If from the almost universal silence of critics about this striking passage it may be inferred that even they doze through
plan
it, how what
much more a man of
Shakespeare
ence with
again.
We
Sly's
Lucentio's man Tranio utters be the displeasure of the audi
stripe?5
perhaps thought would
Lucentio's musings, for the
is dropped
subject
is
nevertheless suggest that the speech
but the true
Lucentio
beginning says
the
of
taming
that he has
come
and
is
not
heard
idle, faulty
start,
play.
to Padua to study
philosophy / Will I apply that treats His choice of cities is specially to be
part
not an
of
of
"Virtue,
and
happiness / By
that
virtue
achiev'd."
his
by
opinion
compared to the which
Padua
deliberate, being
that the wisdom of his native Pisa is
depth
of
Paduan
wisdom
a
(I.i.21-24). The
then renowned was the so-called "Latin
was
governed
"shallow
splash"
wisdom
for
Averroism,"
which asserted, contrary to the dominant view in the Middle Ages, the independence of philosophy from theology. Lucentio apparently antic ipates a secular wisdom.
Certainly is
he has
underscored
deal to learn. The changeability of his opinions on Tranio's advice. It is typical of him his plans for study when he falls in love, at first sight, a good
by his dependence
that he abandons
Bianca. Yet Lucentio continues to be a student. His humiliating bet Petruchio teaches him that he has misjudged Bianca's character; that beneath her mild exterior there lies a nature as refractory as Kate's (V.ii. 182, 189). The play concludes with Lucentio resolving to attend Petruchio's taming school. The opening theme of the taming play is therefore dropped only in appearance. It is continued, so to speak, on another level, a level invisible to Sly. This bifocal character of the play is anticipated and prepared by the Induction. The lord applied a twofold with with
5
The
only
incongruity of Sly as the audience for Lucentio's speech has been by William Hazlitt (Complete Works, IV, pp. 342, 344) and E.
["Shakespeare's Purpose in Dropping neither offers an
interpretation
of
it.
Sly,"
MLN
XXXVI (1921),
p.
remarked
P. Kuhl
326], but
On the Induction of The remedy for Sly's
desire,
his
and
malady.
His
abjectness cured
Taming
of
57
the Shrew
ferocity is to be tamed by arousing his by transforming him into a lord. In order
different cures, the taming play must present an action taming play is called both a comedy and a history (Ind. ii.129, 140). As a comedy it is a salty piece appropriate to dispelling Sly's melancholy and virulence; it addresses the same passions that the lord treats in the Induction. Viewed as history, the taming play is about lordship. We suggest that Sly's nodding and his sham transforma tion into a lord indicate his inattention to this theme, since its effectiveness to effect these appropriate
presupposes
to each. Now the
teachable
a
"patient."
At the level
Sly as the addressee of the play. As history, Lucentio's courtship of Bianca,
of
history,
Lucentio
replaces
is the
whom
he
"Minerva,"
calls
He conducts his courtship in the disguise of a The disguise reveals Lucentio's understanding of the pursuit of wisdom. In changing places with his man Tranio, he becomes, by his own pursuit of wisdom.
pedant.
"slave"
description,
a
Tranio
his
and
(I.i.218),
quite
suppliant approach
in
keeping
his dependence
with
to Bianca. As befits his
literary
on
edu
cation, he woos with poetry and music rather than by deeds. Wisdom for Lucentio is something hke the life of the ideal courtier as portrayed by Castiglione, that is, a mixture of classical and Christian notions. From
Petruchio's perspective, Lucentio's modesty, compliance,
and
civility
must
"beggary."
appear as
Petruchio's understanding of wooing as taming is hkewise consistent his education, which was war (I.ii. 197-208). He pays court to Kate like a general fated to conquer an enemy. Yet his subtlety is missed if one with
his rough, boisterous, whimsical manner as the vulgarity of the which is to kill fortune seeker.6 His conduct is controlled by Kate in her own humour; he adopts Kate's character as the means of taming her.7 The genuine center of Petruchio's character, which is also his genuine ruthlessness, is an inflexible determination to succeed at what ever he undertakes. That enables him to appropriate a certain kind of rationality, the calculation of means. He does not woo Kate for her beauty but for her dowry.8 When Lucentio discovers that his beautiful Bianca mistakes
"policy,"
is no less refractory than Kate, he learns Petruchio's lesson that fine feelings ought to be replaced by calculation. Shakespeare seems Petruchio reminds one of a Machiavellian "captain."
to be experimenting with the Florentine's teaching, perhaps in order to determine the extent to which it might be useful as a corrective for certain
defects in
8
men
hke Lucentio.
This has been clearly
seen
By
that
das Leben
es
ist,
ohne
The
7 8
95)
who
Petruchio's suggests
long
commentary
that he thinks of
"Minerva."
Bianca
as
on
her
p.
why Katherina as
Fate,
that the play exhibits the
wrote
Taming
Niemeyer, 1904), See II.i.131-37, 170-80; IV.ii.178-201.
Shakespeare's Kunst (Halle:
zu
mean
by Schomberg,
Illusionen."
wie
I
which
that Petruchio "erfasst
of the Shrew: Eine Studie
99.
must
be
parallels
called
"Kate"
Lucentio's
(II.i.185-
regard
for
Interpretation
58
desirability
of a
structure.
play,
is
and
muted
kind
Machiavellianism
of controlled or muted
doctrine. The difference is Petruchio makes his appearance
Machiavelli's
own
hence in
by
the
service of ends
visible
as
determined
a
by
in the
rather than
play's
character
the lord. The
un-Machiavellian restraint with which
it is
dramatic
in the lord's
teaching
communicated.
Indeed, the settings of the Induction and play (Burtonheath, a few mUes Stratford, and Padua) seem to indicate that the dramatic relationship
from
an image of Shakespeare's own under Whereas Petruchio, despite his flamboyance, standing is at bottom unpoetic, the lord, as author of the taming play, knows how to combine poetry with calculation. Whereas Petruchio acts exclusively for his own advantage, and claims that in so doing he benefits his feUows (IV.ii.200-01), the lord's playfulness bespeaks a mind free from the contraints of needs, which enables him to minister, in very different ways, to
between the lord of
Sly
and
Petruchio is
MachiaveUi.9
Lucentio. Perhaps Shakespeare thought that poetic play is a of lordship than Machiavellian mastery, not because its results
and
higher form are more
9
that
The
certain, but because
verisimilitude of the
Shakespeare
of William
setting
portrayed the
Shakespeare, 2nd
they
ed.
are more
humane.
and personae of the
Induction strongly
lord in likeness to himself. See (New York: Macmillan, 1916),
Sidney Lee, pp.
236-37.
suggest
A Life
59 "AND IN ITS WAKE WE
The Pohtical Wisdom Catherine
and
of
FOLLOWED'
Mark Twain
Michael Zuckert
I Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in political book in which the Yankee
King Arthur's Court is the knight of progress
obviously
an and
democracy
challenges the superstitions and cruel injustices of feudal England. Since this encounter is, at least initiaUy, as obviously humorous as it is political, questions are apt to arise when critics begin to treat this novel seriously. Nevertheless, A Connecticut Yankee has become the focus of serious Twain criticism in recent years, because according to these critics, A Connecticut Yankee is the first major work in which Twain's humor gives way to his final despair and, thus, this novel reveals the final inadequacy of Twain's art and/or understanding.! A Connecticut Yankee, the critics assert, is an essentiaUy flawed work because the initial lighthearted humor of the first part gives way to the horror of the second.
We, on the contrary, wish to show that this shift from humor to horror is by no means an accidental product of Twain's confusion or despair but is central to Twain's meaning and that once the reader comes to
1
Cf. Henry Nash Smith, Mark Twain's Fable of Progress (New Brunswick, N. J.:
Rutgers University Press, 1964); James M. Cox, "A Connecticut Yankee in King Self-Preservation," Arthur's Court: The Machinery of reprinted in H. N. Smith, Mark Twain: A Collection of Critical Essays (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Hall, 1963), pp. 117-129; Robert A. Wiggins, Mark Twain Jackleg
(Seattle: University
Prentice-
Novelist
Press, 1964), pp. 77-82; Henry Seidel Canby, Turn West, Turn East (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1951), pp. 161-173; Gladys Carmen Bellamy, Mark Twain as Literary Artist (Norman, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 1950), pp. 311-316; Thomas Blues, Mark Twain and the Com munity (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1970). Ever since Van Wyck watershed study of the Ordeal of Mark Twain, critics have tended to view Washington
of
Brooks'
Twain in light
Yankee
of
represent,
"character"
character
fact that
gave
such
so
essentially,
everyone
and that
"defects,"
his
mere
was
a
We suggest,
distinctively American
that Brooks
reversed
to study Mark Twain merely as a
also
at
sought
character
was
the
reflection
a
literary
criticism
was
a
study
It is precisely this
Twain
seemed
proper relation when
of
Connecticut
Twain
in fact Samuel Clemens
phenomenon.
of
of
seemed so
inappropriate. he proceeded
the American cultural situation.
indicates that he had identified something distinctively least he knew how to appeal to Americans. We hope to show that he
Twain's tremendous
American;
theme."
school
that a purely
interpretations on
Twain"
impetus to the Brooks
however,
current
"variations
knew that "Mark
a cultural phenomenon
obviously
that
success
to improve them. That
but intentionally
sought
is, Twain
to form it.
not
merely
reflected the
American
Interpretation
60
why the humorous becomes horrible, he will have acquired insight into the character and problems of modern politics. the Despite the near universal condemnation of Twain's
understand
some
"confusion,"
clearly defined structure: a preface by the author, a Twain receives the manuscript from the Yankee,
has
novel
"frame"
a
and the in which Yankee's tale itself, which comprises the greatest part of the novel. That tale is, further, divided into five major parts: the Yankee's first visit at Camelot (chapters 1-10), his first journey with Sandy (chapters 11-20), his sojourn at the Holy Fountain (chapters 21-26), his second journey with Arthur (chapters 27-38), and his return to Camelot (chapters 39-44).2 As this general outline suggests, there are distinct parallels between the
of the Yankee's tale and the second. For example, the central incident in the Yankee's initial stay at Camelot is his "saving of the through which he comes to power and commences his Enlightenment civi lization, whereas the turning point in the Yankee's fortune during his final
first half
sun,"
Camelot
at
stay
lights
electric
comes
and with
with
the Church's interdict that
shuts
off
the
them the Yankee's civilization; where the Yankee
learns to don armor, King Arthur dons a commoner's pack; where the Yankee tells the freemen of the evils of monarchy, the woman in the small hut documents the misery of common life in Arthurdom; where the Yankee and Sandy visit Morgan, Hank Morgan and Arthur visit Marco; who are in fact pigs, by where the Yankee saves the "noble pox
ladies,"
purchasing them, the knights on bicycles rescue the king and Boss, who were but a moment before slaves condemned to die. And so on. The parallels are indeed numerous, because Twain wrote a tightly constructed In
novel.
each
parallel, moreover,
is
what
funny
in the first
version
is
Where the Yankee subdues knights, who mistake him for a dragon as a result of his puffing smoke from his pipe through his visor on his first journey, he blows to bits with a bomb the first knights he and Arthur encounter during his horrible in the
most often
journey
second
In
to
order
horrible, it metaphor:
and so
second.
A final
foreshadows the
understand
this
may be helpful to
the circus. When Sir
Kay
the novel.
conclusion of
repeated
consider
example:
shift
from the
first
accosts
him,
the
to the
comic
the Yankee's initial
and repeated
Yankee
con
circus, if not a lunatic asylum. But Kay the Yankee quickly discovers that it is he and not the knight who is, so to speak, the freak in Arthurdom. The Arthurians, he states, wondered cludes that
at
him
of a
Sir
as people
natural.
2
do
be from
at an elephant
freak is that he is both
funny because
and
must
Each after
of
of
in (or
funny
the exaggerated
And that is precisely the
a
a zoo.
Now the
particular character
least curious) and horrible; he is proportions, yet horrible because un at
character of
the
shift
these five parts, in turn, divides roughly in two:
the
eclipse
through
which
the
Yankee
comes
to
in the tone
at
of the
Camelot, before
power;
on
his first
journey, before and after he visits Morgan; at the Holy Fountain, before and after Arthur joins him; during the second journey, before and after Marco; and during his final visit, before and after his journey to France.
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We
61
The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain
book. The comedy of the first half often consists in exaggeration because it arises from an implicit contrast of pretension with nature; and because it deals primarily with pretensions, the humor deals primarily with illusions or unrealities. The Yankee does not really save the sun, he is not really a knight or a dragon, the ladies are not ladies but pigs, and so on. By means of the parallels between incidents in the first and in the second half of the tale, Twain shows the often harsh reality underlying the humor. Thus he reveals in the structure the character of his humor in general: The jokes are jokes and most often very funny, but at the same time these jokes point to a not-so-funny reality beneath the humor. In the second half of this novel we see the misery inflicted upon the common people
by
the
nobles'
in the first half. Yet,
pretensions, the same
at
which
time,
the Yankee so often ridicules
we
true nobUity and excellence of Arthur
are
and
forced to
Lancelot.
recognize the
Contrary
to
the
Yankee's initial assertions, the nobles possess a factual superiority on which to base their claim to rule. While Twain partially rehabilitates the legitimacy of aristocratic rule, he also reveals the Yankee's own very crude pretensions.
for
More fundamentally, he exposes the true Yankee's nobler dream institution
the realization of the
within
his
own
lifetime
in
the total war at the end.
requirements of a republic
Exaggeration is the
appropriate form of humor for the Yankee, we finally see, because the Yankee is characterized by his lack of restraint, that is, his immoderation. Is the Yankee's dream of a republican manliness then merely that a dream? Is the destruction of humanity by its own technological power an
begun? That is the conclusion represented by the deathbed appeals to his Arthurian wife Sandy to save his Yankee, him from those horrible dreams including not only the culmination of sixth-century revolution but his modern life as a whole. But are we justified in identifying Twain and his narrator? It is precisely this iden tification that has led the critics to conclude that A Connecticut Yankee finaUy represents a confused product of Twain's semiconscious despair, because the Yankee is somewhat confused and does not completely under stand the grounds and/or implications of his democratic theory and
inexorable
process once
who on
revolutionary project. Identification of Twain
ignoring reader
two
the introduction
in his
sections
voice; it
own
that
we now
and and
his Yankee in
"frame"3
is, therefore,
turn. Once
to
narrator which
is
possible
Twain
only
speaks
a careful examination of
one ceases
simply to
identify
by
to the
these
Twain
and his Yankee narrator, one is able to see the Yankee as the vehicle of Twain's strenuous, if deeply sympathetic, critique of America. In the Preface Twain appears as the author of all that is to follow. He begins with a statement that seems to shed light on the intention of
3
By
"frame"
we
mean
"A Word
Explanation"
of
Twain, A Connecticut Yankee in Mark York: Modern Library, 1917), pp. 1-9, 448. Twain,"
Mark
"Final Post Script by King Arthur's Court (New
and
Interpretation
62 the novel:
"The
are historical."4
touched upon in
America. Twain It is
but
not
and
those
also
touched upon
in this tale
Yankee's
the
of
nineteenth-century
however:
to clarify the ambiguity in the sequel,
seems
that these laws and
pretended
customs
ambiguity since the "laws and customs include those not only of Arthur's sixth-
a certain
tale"
this
England
century
laws
ungentle
There is
customs
in England in the
existed
sixth
century; no, it is only pretended that inasmuch as they existed in the English and other civilizations of far later times it is safe to consider that it is no libel upon the
century to
sixth
suppose
them to have been in practice in that
justified in inferring that whatever one of these laws that remote time, its place was competently filled by a quite
The implication those
customs
are
principle
Twain
is
past
other
words,
states
the
he
that
ungentle
also.
worse
one.5
bad laws
even
or
One is
lacking in
and
We may infer this from the a more distant in writing his tale
century.
sixth
than a more
worse
The
clear:
seems of
day,
or customs was
used
recent past.
seems to agree with
History is
progressive.
the Yankee of his
Twain, in
story.6
Twain continues, however: "The question as to whether there is such a question a3 divine right of kings is not settled in this book"7 most strange to be raised in light of the preceding affirmation of progress and with it of the nineteenth century. Moreover, though not settled in this book, Twain claims that "it ought to be settled"; that is, it remains a question of importance.8 Therefore, we cannot conclude Twain is committed to progress and shares the Yankee's view of political things. This is corroborated by the Yankee himself who asserts that the Roman Catholic Church "invented 'divine right of "; that is, the Yankee believes the question is easily settled in the negative.9 Not only does Twain raise the issue of divine right, he presents an argument for it which, he a
thing
things'
tentatively,
claims
it
makes
an
"unavoidable
deduction."
That
argument
key to understanding his curious procedure in the Preface. Twain supports the divine right of kings with an argument for divine prov provides
the
an argument with the following features: (a) An assertion that man knows the good, but (b) is unable to effectuate it. However, (c) what ought to be is, and (d) therefore God (the effectively ruling principle of the
idence,
whole) guarantees
4
Ibid.,
5
Ibid.
8
Ibid., Ibid.,
7
8
effectuates
p.
and 9
where
says
he
will
return
"go into training
to it in his
massive
and
the
the
question
and
the
settle
enlightened readers.
Edition; New York: Harper
Connecticut Yankee,
p.
65.
whole
in
another
Personal Recollections of Joan of
he has Joan tell the Dauphin that he is
be less inclined to dismiss the
his
"is"
of
330.
Arc [(29 vols.; Author's National
might
conjunction
n.p.
Since he does
I, 166]
this
n.p.
Ibid. Twain
book."
or
business
king
and
Brothers, 1912), by God, we
appointed
as a mere
joke between Twain
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain "ought."
divine
This
63
differs both from the traditional from the traditional conceptions differs from the traditional conceptions
argument
Twain's argument in that it affirms of
evidence
God
scrutable
imperfect
an
Castlemaine,
a
and
therefore
for
arguments
right of kingsi and
of providence. of providence
necessity falls to
of
for example, "the Pompadour, Lady heads of that kind."n It is not merely patently ineffective and inappropriate one.
world
and other executive
a strange argument then, but a At this point, Twain apparently of providence
in
holding
the
retreats to the more traditional conception
question
unsettled.12
open,
Twain indicates his intention here by claiming "to take the other on divine right in this book, that is, to make the assumption that the
tack"
from divine
argument uphold
for
right or
is
providence
the claims of the Arthurian
regime.
By
itself
of
not
to
sufficient
extension, the
same
holds
Thus he lays the foundation for the political comparison between Arthurdom and Yankeedom, a comparison that is only possible progress also.
if
on political grounds
least
at the
outset,
assumptions
of progress
and
providence
at
are,
put aside.
Twain's raising the issue of divine right is not a merely arbitrary way to signal his readers about his relation to his Yankee. Twain is led almost necessarily from the
affirmation
form
providence as the peculiar
of
to
progress
of the argument
the
to providence in search of the grounds for that progress
he
affirms.
Prog
the necessary conjunction, in this case over time, of the "ought," that is, the effective realization of the good.13 But the
ress, too,
entails
"is"
and
the
whence comes makes
of
consideration
indicates. Twain is led
Twain for
argument
commitment
Twain's their easy
not
necessity?
to
progress
that his Yankee
and
to progress, make a
his
audience
deep-going
faith in the beneficent ordering
an act of great
disposed toward, the him to undercut his
favorably thus leads
itself.
suggests
commitment
that problem is what
consideration of
IronicaUy, it
providence.
irony
The
only take up, but be
of
perhaps, in
assumption,
the whole,
even
an assumption
faith they are not only not quite aware of, but even opposed to, or disposed to ridicule after all, the argument for divine right is a joke. In the order of his considerations in the Preface, Twain simply raises to self-consciousness in a comic way what remains implicit in the opinions of the Yankee and his audience. In the final analysis, it is this duality of
10
Cf. John Neville Figgis, Divine Right of Kings (New York:
Brothers, 11
Connecticut
12
The fact that Twain leaves the
Yankee,
complete
teaching is
recognize
what
Twain's
and
should
n.p.
not
That
be
political character of
is,
question
contained
open means,
in this book. This
be obvious; this essay does
thought and must
eminently 13
Harper
1965).
supplemented
this
progress as a principle
by
work makes
legitimizing
not
analyses
it
of
course, that Twain's
is
merely
deal of
with
his
a good place
explicitly to
the
totality
other works.
to
of
The
begin, however.
a particular political regime.
Interpretation
64 of progress and
providence, and their underlying affinities, that lies beneath
the conflicting regimes. Twain's indication in the Preface that he is not an
Twain's of
the
presentation of
is
present
himself
presents
that constitutes
Arms
during
After the Yankee leaves
castle.
(probably
which
he
character, the person who acquires the manuscript the main part of the novel, rather than as the author of
the Yankee meet
and
in
of
as a
the novel itself. Twain here appears to
He
unabashed partisan
Explanation"
his "Word
by
strengthened
hotel in the
a
be
goes
to
medieval style
room, he sits "steeped in a dream
the
of
the
of
past.
tour through an old English
Twain
him,
lover
an unabashed
a guided
olden
to his room at Warwick the castle). In his
match
time.
.
.
From time to
.
time [he] dip[s] into old Sir Thomas Malory's enchanting book, and [feeds] at its rich feast of prodigies and adventures, breathe[s] in the fragrance of We meet, in fact, two Mark its obsolete names, and dreamfs] again."14
Twains: the Twain
ist
and
of
and
skeptic,
the Preface
who
is
the Twain of the
most
familiar to
"frame"
who
is
humor
us as a
a reader
and
a
dreamer. Just
Word
Explanation."
lover
of
after
his
he, too,
Twains,
we encounter two
as
the
adventure can
be
meets
American, he in Arthur's kingdom; he
Though
past.
meet two
also
we
The Yankee Twain
of
never
an
the
near relics of
past.
Yankees in "A also
appears
returns
remains
He tours the
to be a
to America
in England
where
old castles and
looks
the old armor. He appears to hunger for the opportunity to tell of what he has done, but at the same time he is reluctant and ashamed, or too at
terrified of reliving his experience in speech, to do so. He comes close to telling Twain in the castle when the cicerone points out the bullet hole in the armor:
did it
"
'Wit
ye
"15
myself.'
well, /
The
saw
order
of
it
done.'
his
Then,
speech
after a pause, added:
is telling; so his admission
*
the
'I
pause.
And so is the Yankee's disappearance after of the deed. The Yankee's desire to confess is great, however; so great that he troubles to find Twain's room and finally, after midnight, brings himself to call on Twain. Twain knows the power of whiskey to loosen men's tongues, and after four drinks the Yankee tells his tale. He begins, but is inter rupted by sleepiness. He is relaxed, his soul is relieved. He can complete his confession by letting Twain read the rest of the The sources story.16
his
of
It
anguish now seem
was awful
to have been dreams:
awfuller than you can
imagine.
again; death is nothing, let it come, but those
of
14
Connecticut Yankee,
15
Ibid.,
18
We
his so
hideous dreams
p.
should note
17
appears
Ibid.,
p.
cannot endure that
pp.
.
.
Don't let those
me go out of
dreams,
not with
my
mind
the torture
again.17
2-3.
2. that the Yankee has probably
He is
able
that he has
read
own experience.
it
I
.
not with
449.
to
it,
recite
the first
perhaps
spent much
part of
"worked on
his it,"
time mulling over
narrative
often.
from memory,
"And in Its Wake We Followed" The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain
65
The Yankee has been released, and with that release he commits him totally to that past he has left; even his origin in modern times seems part of his awful dreams.18 self
Although the story the Yankee tells hardly appears Twain Explanation" clearly suggests in "A Word of that the story, too, repre sents at least a twofold dream: What the Yankee sees as the result of a stiff "dreamlike,"
blow to
head, Twain
the
envisions as a result of
his reading
of Malory.19
Twain, it
seems, even dreams in manuscript form. In any case, the utter un reality of a twofold dream is clearly in line with the historical inaccuracy
Twain
warned his readers about in his Preface. Only by suggesting that the Yankee's tale is a dream can he make the juxtaposition of historical details from different periods plausible.
Certainly,
the effect of the Yankee's story goes
"mere
expected of a
dream."
As
well beyond that to be his experience, the Yankee From the hardheaded entre
a result of
undergoes a complete change of character.
"civilization"
who seeks to introduce into nineteenth-century Arthur's realm, he becomes the nostalgic wanderer we meet in the who is driven by his bad dream to seek comfort by surrounding himself with relics of his beloved past. Upon hearing (reading) the Yankee's tale, Twain, on the other hand, awakens from his romantic slumber to become the skeptical author of this volume, whom we meet in the Preface. The two transformations are related, because the Yankee's initial stance as an preneur
"frame"
18
This is
reflected
Twain: "Wit He of
speaks
a
ye
as
in his
even
Malory Arthurian. This
a
the Yankee
comment
once
"Sir Marhaus, the King's Son him a brogue, or at least a recognize
him
as soon as
literary device a man's of
Arthurian 19
He
made
authors."
speech
is
suggests even
an
an
acquires
Sandy
to
characteristic
he spoke,
speaking is
speaking.
you good
Ireland talks like
with great
of
way
of
of
manner
well"; la'.er he says, "Give
(Ibid.,
indication
of
pp.
special
(Ibid.,
said
pp.
to
2, 8.)
in the light
significance
her
about
all
point, he
sir."
technique:
narrative
the rest; you ought to give
by this means one would being named. It is a common 124-125.) The Yankee believes that ever
his identity. Thus the Yankee's
indication that he
that the Yankee's
one
expletive;
his
without
At
den, fair
now
identifies himself
midnight visit
is
a
dream;
adoption
the past.
with
and
he
reminds
later in the story of its dreamlike character by occasionally reproducing whole sections from Malory. The most important case is perhaps "Sandy's during which the Yankee dreams as well. Further, the story as a whole follows the tale us
tale,"
Twain
quotes
in his
"Word."
Cf. ibid.,
pp.
2-5, 10, 34, 47, 60, 115, 408, 417, 430, d'
Arthur's dream in Thomas Malory, Le Morte Arthur, I, xix. The overall structure of A Connecticut Yankee reminds one very much of
449. See
also
Man
and
depicts of
Twain
a series of
reading
romances
another
[Cf. Delancey Ferguson, Mark Twain: Legend (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1942), p. 26.] Don Quixote also
classic of which
and
who
both harsh
dreaming
through
it is Twain
was a
known
and
and
admirer.
humorous
conveys
a
adventures produced
caustic
critique
of
by
a combination
the chivalry of the
its ridicule. In Connecticut Yankee the characters reads
Twain's burlesque is the
the romances,
knight,
that
is,
not
the
are
his Yankee knight. The first
Yankee,
not
King Arthur's
reversed; object
court.
of
Interpretation
66 entrepreneur
his later
and
romantic
are
nostalgia
essentiaUy
related
away from present deprivations to a future of plenty when technology will have enabled men to overcome physical restrictions, whereas the romantic, doubting first phenomena.
As
the Yankee looks
entrepreneur
an
that technology can most important case,
overcome
death)
physical
all
and second
limitations
on
men
(in the
that all deprivations are physical
in essence, looks back from the Yankee's present to a stripped of all immediacy. Both
past stripped of aU
to escape the present, when what is
needed
look
in
and
its harshness because order
the
its
to
identify
the
character
modernistic prejudices
most
common
appropriate
the
of
source
present
and
a
fantasy
manifold of
dreams, for
our
as
dreams
constitute attempts at the present
its defects. Thus both
of
the romanticism that was
Twain's humor. It is
of
one cannot
challenge all the opinions of one's readers
story is a hidden by
a critical
become targets
alternative
that the book is
is
openly
it is
and
seriously
appropriate
make manifest
that the
the truths
our opinions.
The Yankee's tale induces Twain to attempt to play an active role in determining future history. In the very conception of the Yankee's tale, we see Twain at least threaten to alter the course of history, first in fiction by juxtaposing factual details from different periods in a comic and fantastic manner but second and ultimately in fact by reforming his Yankee audience's conception of history both the reality of the past and the direction of the future.20 He can do this, however, only in the context set by his Preface, because the precondition for man's taking an active role in determining history is that there is no necessary course of history, either of progress or providence. And Twain at least comically asserts this possibility at the very beginning of his novel. II. The Yankee The Yankee begins his tale I
am an
American. I
anyway, just and
was
practical; yes,
born
and reared
river in the
over the and
by introducing
himself:
in Hartford, in the state of Connecticut So I am a Yankee of the Yankees
country.
nearly barren
of
sentiment, I
suppose
or
poetry, in
other
words.21
The Yankee stands for modern America; he is a type. So little is he an individual that he fails to tell us his name until much later, and in fact he
book. Only once is his fuU name The fact that the Yankee is a type is responsible for
goes unnamed throughout most of the even
mentioned.22
much of the
humor
a reflection upon
The Yankee 20
Malory, too,
of
the story, as well as the source
proclaims
put
22
Connecticut Yankee, p. 383.
Ibid.,
himself
something
intent into his tale. 21
of
its importance
as
the American character.
p.
5.
of
his
an
American,
present
with
a
practical
rather
and
unsen-
different immediate
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain timental. His chief
he first
67
to us is his The only thing that he tells us occupations, and he does this in a context that suggests that he holds them in something like contempt. He draws our attention to the fact that he has risen from the positions of his father and uncle and thus implies that he is superior to his parents. His career is, in fact, the ideal American career: The Yankee is the American self-made man. He has transcended his lowly family origins to become the head superintendent of the arms factory. He embodies the highest ideals of America, the successive rise of each generation over the occupation
previous
The
appears
indicates that America is founded
doing
so
on
preservation of ancestral ways, of the old, the
revered, is explicitly
and the
as
wanted."23
in
and
one,
concern
only
"anything a body family concerns their
making about his
24
impiety.
and
would seem of a piece with
The Yankee's highest
rejected
his
by
traditional, his America. This
the Yankee and
rejection of the sentimental and
is his
concern
own
the poetic.
and economic
personal, social,
rise.
It is striking, in fact, how lacking in explicitly political subject matter book is for the first eight chapters. After an initial
this most pohtical
disbelief and his future course
period of
despondency,
about
of action:
I
made
up my
the
reason
boss the
away, I would presently boss that
and couldn't get and
why;
if,
the other
on
country inside
whole
the best
start on
to two things: if it was still the nineteenth century and I was
mind
among lunatics
the Yankee reaches a conclusion
hand, it
by
a matter of
asylum or
century, I
sixth
for I judged I
three months;
of
in the kingdom
educated
really the
was
know would
would
have the
thirteen hundred
years and
upwards.25
He
sees
greater
present
position
aa
merely job
previous
an
a
far
superintendent of
the
extension
head
as
"dream,"
time, I used to wake up, mornings, and smile at my the Colt's factory whistle; but that sort of thing played itself at
a
last I
was
After that, I
fully
and grow
own;
not
century?
a
I
that I was actually
living in
and out
the
listen for
gradually,
and
sixth century.
.
.
.
home in that century as I could have been in any for preference, I wouldn't have traded it for the twentieth. Look at
just
was
and as
other,
able to realize as much at
the opportunities here for
in
and
of,
factory.
arms
For
his
opportunity than, his
up
competitor;
should
be
a man of
knowledge, brains,
the country. The
with
a
.
.
.
whereas,
foreman in
a
grandest
what
factory,
pluck
field there
would
I
and enterprise ever was
to
amount
that is about all.
.
and
to
sail
all
my
in the twentieth
.
23
Ibid., p. 5. as follows: "In Eric Goldman, for example, characterizes "the day's worn-out, king-ridden Europe, men must stay where they are born. But in America credo"
24
a man
is
father's
accounted a
station
in
25
Connecticut
28
Ibid.,
pp.
failure
life."
Yankee,
60-61.
and
certainly
Rendezvous p.
16.
with
ought
to
be,
who
has
not risen above
Destiny (New York: Vintage, 1955),
p.
8.
his
Interpretation
68
His
have He does
the broad significant
not
aims
acquire.
to
not want
political
interests they later "boss"
the country, but to
rule
it;
and
the
Boss."
At this point the he finally takes in Arthur's realm is "The Yankee does not question the legitimacy of the present regime; nor does he concern himself with the public good that might accrue should he justice.27 When the Yankee gains gain power. He shows no concern for character of his venture as he the indicates he the power during eclipse, sees it: He is concerned with the rise in revenue he could produce and the title
in his own income that would The Yankee appears first as the preeminently private man; yet he appears to be singularly unable to participate in the satisfactions of a private life. In his initial speech, where he recounts those things he con siders most important about himself, he faUs to mention a fiancee, Puss Flannigan, he left back in the nineteenth century. Later he informs us that that initial this Miss Flannigan is fifteen years old. AU the evidence says of her and what the Yankee her lady's the name, age, omission, young result.28
rise
indicates the
satisfaction
might enjoy.
He tells
nor
for that
in the
pleasures of
the
soul
matter of
Nor does the
prudish.29
that a private man
explicitly that he lacks poetry: and his comments further confirmation of his lack of love for the beautiful.30
on art are a
Other
in
is,
Yankee find
us
for the primacy
grounds
possible
famUy,
flesh, fact, downright
that this was no romance of the
The Yankee
soul.
religion
are most conspicuous
the Yankee's pohticization has to do
of the private
by
life
philosophy,
their absence. One aspect of
with
his
bankruptcy
as
a private
man.
The
claims
But
pleasure.
Rather, 27
private
Yankee is
the
the Yankee
The first
will
to the just?"
ye
life have usually been cast in terms of the freedom the private gives for the pursuit of not
primarily interested in pleasure per se. Early in his tale he comments
to avoid pain.
seeks
words said
"Fair sir,
were:
for the
of pleasure and the
primacy
Yankee, by Sir Kay, on his arrival in Arthur's realm (Ibid., p. 6.) The Yankee does not understand the
Perhaps the play on joust-just here makes that misunderstanding more important than it immediately seems. 28 See also his remark prior to the eclipse: "Besides in a business way I knew it question.
would 29
be the making
The Yankee is
me."
of offended
(Ibid.,
by
43.)
p.
dinner
all
conversation
Cf. ibid., pp. 32, 69, 88, 100, 138, 183, 192-198. 30 "There was not a chromo. I had been used to that without my suspecting it
being.
...
It
made
me
heartless barrenness pretending
as
even
in my
except
darned
(Ibid.,
a
a
remember
you couldn't go
the
size
in it), 51-52.)
places
art
that
into
had
around
in
our
a room
chromos
got worked
over
this
that
of
and
state, there a
bedquilt,
nothing in it
wasn't which
was
Marco's.
proud
gaudy but
and
house in East Hartford, all un but you would find an insurance
anything in the was
at
for years, and I saw into the fabric of my
three-color God-Bless-Our-Home over the door.
grand room of
thing
pp.
least
for
homesick to look
and
it was,
chromo, or al
a passion
except
nature
either woven
or
.
.
.
of
But here, a picture
knitted (it had
the right color or the right shape.
.
.
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We
69
The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain life
Camelot:
"As for conveniences, properly speaking, there little conveniences, it is the little conveniences that make the real comfort of life."31 The comfort the Yankee seeks is not so much positive pleasure as it is freedom from inconveniences. Yet the man who seeks comfort must exert and so inconvenience him self; he must keep himself busy working for change in an environment in which comfort is lacking. Ending his catalog of missing conveniences, the Yankee concludes:
on
at
I
weren't any.
I
saw
mean
that I was just another Robinson Crusoe
with no
society but
bearable I
do
must
hand to work,
and
as
he did
and
keep
invent,
comfort
or
and
thus
comfort
doet
reform
But
cization.33
First,
political reform.
cast
on an uninhabited
away
island,
animals, and if I wanted to make
contrive, create,
things;
reorganize
set
life
brain
them busy.32
The Yankee's change
less tame
some more or
seeking itself
in itself
not
forever
comfort
cuts
in
accounts
very far in the direction
for the Yankee's
part
of
pohti
satisfactory end of by its seekers; its
constitute a
eludes attainment
forces the pursuer to deny himself the very thing he seeks. Second, comfort is not so much a positive pleasure as an absence of pain or incon venience; that is, its attractiveness in and of itself is weak. The Yankee's pohticization occurs in a chapter that begins with his reflections on the summit of power he has reached: pursuit
I was no shadow of a king; My power was colossal; and been, it was the genuine
I it
the substance; the
was
was not a mere
king himself
name, as
such
the
was
shadow.
things generally have
article.34
He finds his position totally unique in the annals of world history. He compares himself with others who have wielded such great powers and finds them aU inferior to him in some respect.35 Yet the Yankee is
31
Ibid.
32
Ibid.,
33
The Yankee here displays the
An
53.
p.
avoidance of pain as
the 34
Connecticut Yankee,
35
"There
Joseph's to the
king,
whereas
by
that
reason
the
as
Joseph's
of
it."
me
that
approached
splendid
general public must
I had done my
reason
Cf. John Locke,
61.
Joseph's only
case and
psychology.
order. p.
nothing back of
was
bourgeois
Human
the bourgeois
origin of
essence of
Understanding, II, 21-22, for the emergence of the primary motive force, and the whole of Locke's works for
Essay Concerning
approach
equal
financial ingenuities
have
entire public a
(Ibid.) The Yankee
could
it, it didn't
regarded
him
it, it
to
establish
might
For it
advantaged
with a good
kindness in sparing the sun,
strains
it
unless quite.
deal
be
stands
nobody but of
disfavor,
and was popular
the importance
and
satis-
His understanding of Joseph's activities, and the popularity that accrued to Joseph, is at the least distorted. Joseph did not, in fact, benefit prudent provision of store for the present nobody but the king, but through his
factoriness
famine
of
and
his
position.
future
ones
as
well, he benefited all. The explicit
testimony
of
the
Interpretation
70
his
not quite so satisfied with
The
exphcit
Yes, in that
piercing
power
I
.
those
.
fact,
people
all and
great
gifts
natural
looked
upon was
regard
the elephant in the menagerie.
do
a
hundred
But does that
wanted
they had
odd, but it
him
time there
us
believe.
was another power
the Church. I do
was
to.36
.
one
.
title
without
or
acquirements
many animals, bugs.
They
.
far
.
.
away beyond their
the
raggedest
and
long
a
hadn't,
were
The way I
.
and
was
the public
the fact that he
speak with pride of
and
No;
them?
of
men
You know how the keeper
was natural.
marvels which are
make
have
would
admits:
creatures of no more consideration than so
can
same
had inherited the idea that
whether
he
immediately:
together. That
us put
I couldn't, if I
the Yankee
Moreover, .
to the king. At the
was equal
to disguise that
pedigree,
own position as
reveries comes
trifle stronger than both of
was a
not wish
his
of
own powers.
tramps would
.
smile
.
.
at
Well, to the king, the nobles, and all the nation, down to the very Well, to the king, the nobles, and all the nation, down to the very admired, also feared; but it was as an animal is admired and feared. The animal is not reverenced, neither was I; I was not even respected. I had no pedigree, no inherited title; so in the king's and eyes I was mere dirt; the people regarded
the idea
.
the idea.
.
.
.
.
.
nobles'
me with wonder and
From
awe, but there was
no reverence mixed with
it.
.
.
"colossal,"
"enormous"
the and he told us was Yankee now admits that there is one power equal to his and another more than twice as great. Not only is his power circumscribed, but he also does not receive the respect and reverence he wants.
having
power
that
boss"
the country in order to make but now make money because "where it appears that he wanted to money; from" he comes differentiated that men; is, money was the source money of respect. This is not true in Arthurian England; and when the Yankee
Initially,
Yankee
the
"to
wanted
discovers this, he becomes dissatisfied inward
by
or activities
aims
look to his job (foreman) Bible (Genesis 48
Yankee's
proves
moreover, on
a
:
25, 50
(p. 61)
heights
of
at
the hands of
of
his
are
"upstart"
and
not
return
fraud
their
short
externally defined
Joseph's popularity also, whereas the conception of his greatness, his
close
time;
had
"saving"
of the sun.
no
relations
with
their
and all suffered rather
The Yankee's
shares a certain
"foreigner"
an
any
the Yankee must
Likewise,
the
De Montfort, Gaveston, Mortimer, Villiers, and especially apt for his purpose. All did in truth
through
political rivals.
fate. He
own
barons. In
power
was a
cites
their power only a
maintained
an
Yankee
(boss); he is
confirms
Lacking
position.
himself,
The Yankee bases his
deed he knows
unnamed others
to
20, 26)
his
with
to define
or position
questionable.
other adventurers the
rise
:
which
choice of examples
irreverence
and
imprudence
is
kings, but
a
foreshadowing Gaveston,
with one.
prudence, for he gave nicknames to the
he lost his life. [George
Macaulay Trevelyan,
all
untimely deaths
A Shortened
of England
leading History
(Hamondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1959), p. 158.] The Yankee calls and Sir Sagramor le Desirous, "Sir although never to either knight's face. (Connecticut Yankee, pp. 72, 384.) 36 Ibid., p. 62. 37 Ibid., pp. 63-64. Sir
Gareth,
"Garry,"
Sag,"
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain man whose
an
merely
depends very largely on what other men think in Arthurian England that the Yankee becomes In order to become a man, he must overthrow the
self-esteem
him. That
of
means
elephant.38
He is forced to
regime.
71
examine the nature and grounds of the present
regime, because something
him from
about that regime prevents
the respect and reverence he
he is forced to
desires. In questioning
finding
the present regime,
consider all regimes. By raising the specifically political questions, the Yankee makes possible the contrast and comparison of laws and customs. In this sense, the Yankee's pohticization represents a
beginning
new
is
for
One
the novel.
it the
might even caU
for it
beginning,
the question of regime that political thought begins.39
with
After his pohticization the Yankee hardly again speaks openly of his rule for his own sake. That does not mean that his ambitions disappear. Late in the book he announces his long-range plans: own
I had two
in my head
schemes
to overthrow the Catholic Church
not
as
an
to
was
and set
Established Church, but a go-as-you-please one; and the other project a decree issued by and by, commanding that upon Arthur's death suffrage should be introduced. Arthur was good for thirty years yet,
get
unlimited
he
vastest of all my projects. The one up the Protestant faith on its ruins
the
which were
was
being
.
about
own age
my
.
.
and
.
.
.
I believed that in that time I
the active part of the population of that should
be the first
of
its kind in the
bloodshed. The
governmental revolution without as well
may to
have
a
day ready and history of the world
confess, though I do feel
base
hankering
The Yankee's
ashamed when
to be its first
reluctance
result
could
for
eager
an
easily have event which
a rounded and complete
to be a republic.
I think
of
it: I
was
Well, I beginning
myself.40
president
here to admit personal ambition stands in frankness with which he expressed his
marked contrast to the unabashed
That most casual readers are not taken aback by this is testimony to the extent to which the Yankee's personal am bition has been submerged. Yet in seeming most open, the Yankee is, in fact, dishonest with both his readers and himself. If he and Arthur are the ambitions earlier.
contrast
same age, any change taking effect after Arthur's death would be unlikely to allow the Yankee to become president. Either the Yankee must give
up his ambition or the revolution for a gradual transition.
It and
38
would
his
be
a
mistake,
It
to the incident in
Fable"
was a
ticut
49
by his
p.
67.)
The Yankee is
Yankee,
pp.
one.
There is
no
beginning. The title, "The a new name in Arthur's
new
the Yankee acquires
lips
renamed
blacksmith father.
Connecticut
bloody
time
in The Complete Short Stories of Mark Twain
title "which fell casually from the
Yankee,
named
which
a
to conclude that the
(New York: Bantam, 1958), pp. 600-602. 39 The title of Chapter 8 points to a refers
be
Yankee's ambition incompatible. The Yankee does not thoroughly
however,
public program are
Cf. Mark Twain, "A
must
399-400.
of a
by
a
blacksmith, blacksmith
one
as
he
Boss,"
realm.
day."
(Connec
was
originally
Interpretation
72
merely to
want
to have a
rule or
receives such a position accept a
recognized position
from the
king following
in
kingdom; he
the
the eclipse, but he wUl
title only from the people. He wants to be loved, respected, rever the people the more, the better. If that love and reverence are
by
enced
him, they must come from beings whose respect he not value the honor of a "race of In he could value, order to satisfy his desire for love and honor, he has to raise the people to be his equals, and thus transform the regime.41 Thus the Yankee speaks upon occasion of the manliness of classical republicanism. Yet, if the to mean anything to
rabbits."
can
and
people
for
truly become
ical
the Yankee's equals, there
honor him.
them to
founder, but
education makes
(They
might
the democratic
be
grateful
and
will no
longer be
reason
to their teacher and polit character
revolutionary
their
of
this unlikely.) This irreconcilable contradiction in the
Yankee's goal, which makes the satisfaction of his desire impossible, produces his dishonesty and a severe problem in his political project.42 The Yankee comes to power by "saving the Through his historical sun."
and
kingdom
he
knowledge, he is able to predict an eclipse and then to life, but for half the pohtical power in the
scientific
bargain, uses
merely for his
not
during the relatively brief period his knowledge to play upon the
in
of darkness.43
superstitions
In
other
words,
the Arthurian
of
Twain implicitly questions, not only the but the accuracy of that knowledge. The knowledge, exact timing of the eclipse is crucial; but it is precisely the question of time that becomes most vexed at this point in the novel.44 If, as the people
Yankee's
41
order to gain power.
his
use of
Thus the Yankee
doctrine;
it is
not
shows
merely
a
all
why matter
of
demagoguery is essentially egalitarian in flattering the masses or breaking down
distinctions. 42
On the Yankee's
43
This may be
to "face
unwillingness
a metaphor
for the
facts,"
see
commencement
ibid., of
p.
171. Ages"
the "Dark
in the
sixth century. 44
The
There luck"
whole
knew
incident
least the
are at
about
the
when
total eclipses
great
definiteness
there were, in
the eclipse is
are visible
on
fact,
of
difficult to
and
confusing
following curiosities: (a) "only total eclipse of the
sun
in the
court
Yankee's
the
especially
(b) What is the point of the 21, 528, when it is known that in England in the sixth century, in 528, 540, and at certain places?
only
the time of the eclipse, June
three eclipses
that
execution
it is June
19, 528 (p.
for June 21
(p.
31).
to
next
morning,
execution on
to
a monk
of
the
eclipse
sentencing
Arthur
coming the
to the dates. But this does
of
the execution for June 21 and
not
dispel the
to
day
all,
including Arthur,
the Yankee discovers
that it is really June 21 after all and that Clarence had been in
as
sets
according
the basis of Clarence's
Arthur, is taken to his execution on what appears to be one day early. When the eclipse does, in fact, occur,
from
of
At that time
15).
The
Clarence June 20, the Yankee and Clarence talk of the after. But then by noon of that second day, the Yankee "lie"
by
century,"
sixth
594? (c) A curiosity more internal to the story concerns the timing within the novel. The Yankee is informed by Clarence on his day
in Arthur's
understand.
How is it that the Yankee "just
error
Arthur's setting the date then executing the Yankee on what turns out to problem
of
"And in Its Wake We Followed" The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain confusion
in the time
to suggest, the Yankee did not in fact predict
seems
accurately, he both
the eclipse
tially by chance; to the
claims
saved his life and came to power essen that means that the foundation of both the Yankee's
and
respect
and
reverence
the people and his right to rule
of of
the
and
gratitude
of
democracy
regimes
are
versus
to power
introduces and in with the Yankee.
to sympathize
he
love
the
even
shaky indeed. The dubious aspects Yankee's behavior tend to become lost, however, in the larger
question ascent
73
that the Yankee's
aristocracy
which
Twain's
The Yankee does not claim the right to rule in his claims the right to rule in the name of the people
principle of
naturally tend
readers
Rather
own name. on the
basis
the
of
he attacks the justice of rule by the king and nobility. But the Arthurian people believe that the rule of the titled nobUity is both natural and just. The Church, that power twice as great as Arthur and the Yankee combined, is responsible, accord ing to the Yankee, for this opinion: Before the day their heads up, greatness
of the
than
more
a man's
and position a person
But then the Church one
and propped
it up
to make them
came
way to .
.
pride, and spirit
got, he
got
to the front
skin a cat
or a
an evil
worship
The Yankee is which he
Church, I
and
of
by
she
men were
achievement,
was
and
knew
things"
good purpose
(to the commoner) humility, obe and she introduced heritable .
.
Christian
.
populations of
the
earth
to bow
them.45
explicitly anti-Christian; he only opposes in purely political terms:
not
by birth.
not
right of
wrenching them from their
self-sacrifice
and what of
wise, subtle,
invented "divine
she
held
and
men,
independence;
and
mainly
.
nation;
ranks and aristocracies and taught all the and
.
she preached
one;
dience to superiors, the beauty down to them
.
the Beatitudes
with
.
fortify
ground
Church's supremacy in the world,
had
and
that
and on
equality;
a united
understands
Church; it makes a mighty power, the mightiest conceivable, by gets into selfish hands, as it is always bound to do, it human liberty and paralysis to human thought.46
was afraid of a united
and
then
means
when
it
death to
by
be June 21 but is every and
respect
and
still
thought
by
Arthur to be
there is something wrong
with
one
day
earlier than scheduled.
the times involved in the eclipse
this adds to the dreamlike quality of the whole. One
explanation that
timing
the eclipse is
of
writer than consider:
Twain
Twain
"Twain
erred so
would
most
in writing this
central
to the
be unlikely to
probably knew
plot
section
here that
commit
about
the
such
the very
cannot whole
just
errors
popular
accept
question
even a much
In
incident,
less
of
the
the
careful
unintentionally.
Also
King Solomon's Mines
further publicity from an argument over whether an eclipse that [Louis Budd, the way Hank did was astronomically on Mark Twain: Social Philosopher (Bloomington, Ind.: University of Indiana, 1962),
(1885)
which
its heroes
p.
134.] Ibid., 43 Ibid., 45
got
time."
exploited
p.
65.
p.
77.
Interpretation
74
If the Yankee is to free the and
found
republic, he
a
must
consist
in the beginnings
the
Yankee founds his
civilization"
"beginnings
of
After establishing
a patent
office,
and communications systems
I
my hand
stood with
from their bondage to the nobility educate them. Thus for the Yankee the
people
light
that sudden way
The
.
.
.
the cock,
on
midnight world with
in
at
any
people
of
enlightenment.
industries,
schools,
secret.
to speak, ready to turn it on
so
But I
moment. not
could
have
was not
it;
stood
have had the Established Roman Catholic Church
flood the
thing in
and, moreover, I should
my back in
on
and
going to do the
a
minute.47
Again the Yankee brags of his power only to retract. He has laid the foundations but only that. He must temporize in order to let his civilization "sink before he comes out into the open. So he accedes to court pres sure and embarks upon a journey of knight-errantry in the company of in"
Demoiselle Alisande la Carteloise. The Yankee's first trip in search adventures provides the occasion for the most happy and open humor
Nevertheless,
the novel.
this
"fact-finding"
more serious
"frivolous"
His breakfast
trip king, because incidents
tour with the
to
him,
superiority
this demonstrated
of a republic
secret
was
inability
admits
the
need
his military academy.) Second account for the resistance
the Yankee is forced to "popular"
teaching.
less than men,
Up
the
upon
persuade
to the
present
to persuade has two conse
for
the nobles will not relinquish their power voluntarUy.
deepest
on
assumptions
his abUity to
challenges
obvious
the
of
some
"freemen"
the
For the first time the Yankee
quences.
terror;
the,
and
monarchy;
with
of
gives rise to the second much
first trip force the Yankee to question which his projected reform rests. the people of
of
more
and of
violence and
(The Yankee's
important,
the people to his
to this point, he had looked at the Arthurians as
"white
Indians,"
"worms,"
"rabbits,"
in a word, as lack thirteen hundred years because the They they of education the Yankee possesses, but they are not incapable of learning. Thus if he presents them with the modern understanding of things, they as
or
"stupid,"
stupid.
of
will,
are
course,
listen to run.
reason.
At the
immediately This
castle of
see
its
proves not to
Morgan le
Fay
advantages.
be the
case
the Yankee
They at
learns,
and wiU
men
are
least
over
the
short
moreover, that
an
obviously degenerate member of the nobility can be extremely attractive, can even evoke his compassion. Morgan is beautiful and chatters gaily along. She evokes the Yankee's admiration, especially after she flatters him. As a result he attempts to explain her resistance to his and thus far to excuse her depravity: "sense"
Training
training is everything; training is
nature, it is name
folly; there is no such thing is merely heredity and training.48
47
Ibid.
48
Ibid.,
p.
150.
as
all
there is to a person. We
nature;
what we call
by
speak of
that misleading
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain
Thus the Yankee
moves
romantic, revolutionary
from the
politics
Rousseau. (The Yankee
75
states
politics of the Enlightenment to the originating in the writings of Jean Jacques his intention to hang Morgan anyway two
later.) Reason is not natural. On the contrary, men are complete ly maUeable, which means, however, that they are equal potentiaUy and
paragraphs
can, therefore, be made equal again. His task is much more difficult than he first imagined, since it requires eradicating "inherited and habits. Once achieved, his feat (and so his renown) will be so much greater, for he wiU have changed not merely men's opinions but the men opinions"
themselves.
As
his first journey, the Yankee decides that he must see himself, so he and Sandy join a group of pUgrims. In this manner we are introduced to the group of chapters concerning the Yankee's activities in the Valley of Holiness, which form the center of the novel. Here he gives his second great performance as a magician.49 The Yankee again uses his practical knowledge of the principles of nature to fix the weU (he had used a lightning rod to detonate the explosion of Merlin's domicUe); but he "dresses his performance by means of his knowledge of the art (technology) of war with flares and ex plosions to make the natural look supernatural.50 Again he com petes with and vanquishes Merlin. This renewed competition would seem to be a product of petty spite on the part of the Yankee did we not see his power almost immediately chaUenged by another, unnamed magician, whose word is preferred to that of the Yankee by the monks and others, despite the Yankee's so recent demonstration of power. Neither he nor his power can make a lasting impression on the Arthurians, so the Yankee has to prove himself again and again. Incidents in the Holy VaUey thus point back to the problem the Yankee posed in Chapter 8. In repairing the fountain, the Yankee demonstrates both superior force and superior knowledge, but he cannot maintain his preeminence; and as a result, he cannot maintain himseh in power. The impression the Yankee's power makes on the people is so fleeting because a result of
the country for
up"
they
cannot understand
source; that
an evU
is,
it. For the Arthurians,
the abbot warns the Yankee: "And
be holy, for
49
If
one
test of his of
rumors
Church
the
disregards the
power was
see
eclipse
over which
the
either a good or neutral."
Thus
thou do it with enchantments that
enduring
in her
cause
be done
the Yankee had no control, the first
up Merlin's tower in
upon
has
"morally
wiU not endure that work
blowing
casting doubt
power
there is no power that is
response
character
of
to Merlin's spreading
the Yankee's
magical
abilities. 50
race,
Cf. ibid.,
pp.
you want
properties
worth.
212-213: "When
you are
to get in every detail that
impressive to the
I know the
value
throw too much style
into
public
of
these
eye
.
.
and
count; you want to make all the
play
your effects
things, for I know human
miracle."
a
.
going to do a miracle for an ignorant will
for
all
nature.
they
You
are
can't
Interpretation
76 devil's
by
but he
magic."51
The Yankee
pronounce the name of and
work
war
and
the ineffable. To the
only with God's creations, destruction as well as to
Yankee,
all power
is
natural
thus morally neutral.
Arthur
king
the
of
worship
and nobihty as a product invented "divine right of
of
things"
Church,
the machinations of the order
the Yankee does not. The Yankee
reverence where
awakens
explains the people's
in
to
agrees
to use techniques of
proceeds
which
hereditary
to support the rule of a
aristocracy.
To the
Yankee,
Although the he does not understand it or its source: he has never truly revered anything himself.53 To him religious belief con sists of mere superstition. But he sees in Arthur's realm, for example in the "king's that this belief has very real effects. As a result of his Church merely Yankee desires
the
constitutes
a
"political
machine."52
"reverence,"
evil,"
experience
"superstitions"
the
with
Arthurians, he
the
of
in
comes
creasingly to believe that it is necessary in politics to deceive, to "dress It is the only way, the Yankee surmises, that the Arthurian people up."
him; but,
of
understand
it
will understand work when
they
not really understand his Thus the Yankee moves decisively
they do
course,
as magic.
"Enlightenment"
position with which he explicitly began. The move is, nevertheless, somewhat natural. Early in his narrative, the of his nature, which stands in tension Yankee refers to the "circus and urges a different kind of pohtics: with his calculating
away from the
side"
"sense"
The thing that would have best suited the circus side of my nature been to resign the Boss-ship and get up an insurrection and turn it into but I knew that the Jack Cade first educating his to get
the Wat Tyler
or
up to
materials
tries
who
grade
revolution
is
such
almost
would a
thing
a
have
revolution;
absolutely
without certain
left.54
is connected in his mind with the Arthurian regime; he supposes Sir Kay to be a fellow from the circus at their first encounter; and the longer the Yankee remains in King Arthur's court, the stronger this side of his nature becomes. We see him endure the cruelty and harshness of slavery months longer than What the Yankee
necessary for the 51 52
calls the
of
making
Ibid., p. 195. Cf. ibid., p. 149: "Concentration .
The Yankee's frame
invasion
of
side of
political
of power
1964), 64
p.
in
a political machine
is bad;
then
and an
machine; it was invented for that; it is nursed,
has been
technique desacralizes the
technized."
and
escape,
.
of mind
bring everything to light, and Technique denies mystery a been
nature"
a
by
well expressed
in
world
For technique nothing is sacred, there is worships nothing, respects nothing. It has
yet
his
"picturesque"
sake
Established Church is only a cradled, preserved for that. 53
"circus
rational use
no a
which
mystery,
single
in
man
role:
no
a recent study:
is
called
taboo.
to strip
upon .
off
.
.
"The
to live.
Technique
externals, to
to transform everything into means.
.
.
.
is merely that which has not [Jacques Ellul, The Technological Society (New York: Vintage, priori.
142.]
Connecticut Yankee,
p.
108.
The
mysterious
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain
because he
recaptured
"picturesque"
chose a
evading the
of
way
77
officer
character."55 than a simple one. "[I]t is the crying defect of my If reason is not natural and if men are therefore completely products of their training, the Yankee as that product of thirteen hundred years more
rather
is certainly
education entitled
to
superior
the Arthurians
all
to rule them. After his performance
and so definitely Holy Fountain, he
the
at
concludes:
When I to make
I
and
started a
was.
to the chapel, the
way for me,
wide
I
was aware of
The Yankee
himself;
and
as
comes to regard the
.
to the
expose
.
some
and
kind
Arthurians less
them very
view of
fell back reverently of
superior
King Arthur's
only my trimmed
world
public opinions and conceal
less as men like determines his later
and
largely
Court
and perfumed
and
carefully, cautiously, wisely my
A Connecticut Yankee
reminds one of
nothing
carefully barbered
private
so much as
ones.57
TocquevUle's
Democracy in America. The paraUels between the two works ous and deep; they range from the general themes of each democratic
parison of
and aristocratic pohtical orders
the books. In the one
aristocrat
an
mirrors the other even to
less
ironical,
to
such
progress
details
or
as
are numer
the
com
to the formats of
the democratic country par itself"; in the other
visits
exceUence, seeking there "the image of democracy the American democrat visits the feudal aristocracy or
being
them.
of
III.
.
uncovered
that.58
his inhuman
inhumane treatment
I
populace
if I had been
an
providence.
One
par exceUence.
opening invocation, more More particularly to our
immediate point,
the two books use an identical technique in revealing their respective, though differing, evaluation of aristocracy. According to a recent
study
French
of the
aristocracy is only gradually disclosed in the Democracy.
Tocqueville's judgment
of
In the introduction he
observes
the people,
55
Ibid.,
Yankee but great
deal
grown
that "the nobles, placed high as
376. This "circus
seems
of truth
up (op. cit.,
circus, the showy;
to
belong
and
side"
seems
Connecticut
57
Samuel
suggestion
137, 220). Tom, too, the Yankee's
Yankee,
Clemens,
p.
The
(New York: Washington
above
which
the
to be not merely a peculiarity of the
that the Yankee is Tom Sawyer
assimilates
"picturesque
the feudal
escape"
calls
in Huckleberry Finn where Tom devises cluding sequence to free the already free Jim. 58
were
to his world, as we see in Tom Sawyer. There is a
in James M. Cox's pp.
they
benevolent interest in their fate
take that calm and
could
p.
thinker:
an
to
past
mind
elaborate
and
the
the con
scheme
218.
Autobiography of Mark Twain, Charles Nieder, Square Press), pp. 386-387.
ed.
Interpretation
78 feels toward his flock
shepherd
.
This highly favorable judgment is
.
qualified
later: "When
by
aristocracy governs, those who conduct the affairs of state are exempted, station in society, from any want; content with their lot, power and
an
their very
renown
the only objects for
are
crowd,
they do
people
will
not always
the poor; but
themselves partakers
interests
feel those
cannot
people appear
improving
to
the mass of the
indeed,
miseries as
acutely
are
to their
submit
to the
callous
if they
as
condition.
have
aristocracies
to "work for themselves
and
lot,"
were
"natural
a
defect",
the
promote
"capital fault",
a
With this judgment
people."
for the
not
the nobles take no further
Democracies tend to
subjects'
their
the people, but
of
tending
of
they
of
not,
They
them.
of
"Provided that the interest in
how the well-being
perceive
to their own grandeur.
redound
sufferings of
strive; placed far above the obscure
they
which
clearly
Tocqueville actually reverses his initial assessment; now, aristocratic shepherds are simply indifferent toward their charges, and incapable of perceiving the true con dition the
the
of
"The
people:
they scarcely believe
thoroughly
Feudal institutions but
none at all
what
a
lively
miseries of
not
aristocratic
caste] do not resemble
think or feel in the same manner, and
to the
feel
others
awakened
for the
they do
they belong
that
understand
[an
men who compose
their fellow citizens;
mass of
nor
race.
same
judge
of
sympathy for the
They cannot, therefore, by themselves.
others
.
sufferings
of certain
.
.
men,
mankind."58
Tocqueville's presentation is germane to Twain's in a dual sense both as to the method of revealing his judgment on the aristocracy and as to the substance of his argument. Twain's reversal is, of course, the Tocqueville's. Whereas Tocqueville primarUy addresses aristocratic traditions, Twain speaks to "the image
of
contrary
nation with
itself."
democracy
a of
strong
deal
after a great
Each
deep
opposes the
of preparation
prejudices of
then
and even
his
audience
only
with reluctance and some
obliqueness.
The
most obvious
teaching
complete court
is
is
reason,
however, for
presented
neither a sympathetic nor perhaps a
Nor is he
58
without motives of
59
One
example
of
the
who was anxious
disagreeable not
difficulty
priests
of
extracting
and
pp.
The Problem of
Democracy (Stanford,
24-25.
selective
In Morgan's
understanding commentator. Arthurian Britain
reporting
dungeon,
and
turning up every
were
frauds
and
now and
how
it
colors
the Yankee came upon a
"Something
then. I mean, episodes that
self-seekers, but that many,
even
suffering.
it,
right-hearted, and devoted to Well, it was a thing which could
and
and never
sort
of
thing
many to
minutes at a time.
keep
.
.
.
the
priest
of this showed
the
majority, of those that were down on the ground among the common people, sincere
a
reporting.59
to report the overzealousness of the torturer.
sort was
all
Yankee's
fuUy
in his
own
University Press, 1967),
presentation of the regimes:
that
his
Marvin Zetterbaum, Tocqueville
Cal.: Stanford
the
the aristocracy consists in the fact that King Arthur's to us only through the Yankee's tale, and the Yankee
on
the alleviation of human troubles
great were and
be helped, so I seldom fretted about But I did not like it, for it was just the not
people reconciled to an
Established
Church"
(ibid.,
p.
148).
"And in Its Wake We
Followed"
79
The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain
itself has
direct spokesman,
no
nor
could
it, for
Arthurians
the
by a very low level of self-consciousness. The Enlightenment, that is, the injection of philosophy into
characterized
the
reflects
hfe in
contrast to
the more
untheoretical pohtical
the Arthurians. This difference accounts for difficulties of the book. By using the Yankee to achieve unity in the novel and
able
his
but it
readers.
political
"natural"
of
prejudices of
are
Yankee
The Yankee
the
major artistic
narrator, Twain was the same time to exploit the
at
as
one of
understanding
as
narrator
thus presented
great
difficulties for the proper completion of the comparison through a non- Yankee presentation of Arthur's court. To achieve this non- Yankee presentation, insofar as it is achieved, Twain had to rely heavUy on action and had to leave much to the reader. Yet gains
also created great
the asymmetry of the book is consistent with Twain's ultimate aims, to of
say nothing
his prudence, for
in
completeness
presentation
of
those aims
the
do
Arthurians
not
call
for the
is necessary
as
same
of
the
Yankee. On the one occasion when Arthur is moved to speak to the nature of his regime, he proves himself a theoretical ignoramus. "All places of belong," honor and profit do claims the king, "by natural right, to them blood."60 that be of noble Arthur, at least, accepts the condition set by Twain in the Preface of "taking the other that is, abstracting from the claims of the divine. But the absurdity of his response, if not of his whole position, is manifest from the context. The Yankee has provoked Arthur's defense by chaUenging a "rule requiring four generations of nobUity, or else the candidate is not eligible. "6X The rule recognizes something for which Arthur's claim does not provide. "Them that be of birth" noble are not naturaUy so. Noble lines fail somewhere. How then do those who are not of noble blood become noble? The examiner's next tack,"
question supplies the obvious answer:
By
what
founder
illustrious
achievement
of your great
for the honor
line lift himself to the
of
the
sacred
throne and
dignity
did the
state
British
of the
nobil
ity?*2
For
service
they have Likewise, excellence.
Arthur
the
Arthur's
Yankee,
contract.
king's
Never
style
apparently
innocently,
mind the
a
slave's
details
it
style
ac-
suppresses evidence of
effects of
and
Yankee
by force
will save me
Arthur's
moral
the slave master's efforts to make
therefore more salable, the
to
king whom by blood
the
original claim of natural right
For example, recounting the
more slavish and
reduce the
by
to throne and state, men are ennobled
served.
says:
go
"to
to! it
trouble to let
you
undertake
was
a
imagine
to
stately them"
(pp. 274-275). To
omit
the
"details"
one. 80
Ibid.,
p.
81
Ibid., Ibid.,
p.
82
p.
244. 243.
245.
will perhaps
"save the Yankee
trouble"
in
more ways
than
Interpretation
80
tually
in two directions
points
the
Arthur
power of
the practice of the regime on the other. The the
power of
But there
must also
king's
the
the
and
hand,
the one
and
the nobles rest on
to elevate men above their fellows. The question
king
the
of the origin of the
on
claims of
nobility is ultimately the question be a first king whose father was explicit
aristocracy's
origin.
not a king.63
to
claim
king's
of the
rule
rests
Since their
on
this ancestry must eventuaUy fail them, the king and aristocrats must keep their origins unknown. At best the origins can be
ancestry,
and since
traced back to a race of gods, divine an
appointment, direct
or
indirect, by
heroes,
or
God.64
the truth about the origins is destructive to
first kings generally their
rule
The first kings may be by nature, but they are
power
is,
our
aristocrats
for his
origin
we are reminded at
origins.
As his
in the
beginning
people
in
a
the
way
past and
to rule
cannot.
otherwise much
tradition, recurrently Arthur
aristocracy.67
so
is he
a
the
There is
loyalty
cannot
defective legitimate
that he has no Arthur's regime, the
novel
of
and maintain
Yankee
assumptions, fraud.65
is defective,
the end of the
to arouse
able
assumptions,
heredity. The
and perpetuate
Thus the Yankee,
heir. Despite the defective foundation nevertheless,
on
force
means of
the origins of the
account
Christian regime, to natural
a sense and so perhaps entitled
not legitimate.66
to
attention
by
a
based
rule
given naturalistic
in
superior
less interested than the calls
into
came
through religion, that
in
Given
king is,
and respect of
his
some wisdom and/or power
in tradition. Arthur and his knights recognize the importance and need for a legitimate use of force, where the Yankee does not. For Arthur and his knights, the Yankee's competitive examination for entry into the army replaces an
63
eminently
Twain does
not
practical
explicitly
test
refer
to
of their
Arthur's
skills, the
origins
tournament.68
The
in A Connecticut Yankee
implicitly to incorporate Malory's account through Merlin's tales and pre dictions; and in Malory, Arthur's legitimacy in several senses is questioned. 84 Given Twain's abstraction from the divine, the argument raised by, for example, Robert Filmer, Patriarch, ed. Peter Laslett (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1949), on the
except
basis 85
of
Genesis is
not available
Cf. Machiavelli's
Nietzsche, Use
and
Abuse of
here to Arthur.
Romulus and Numa, Discorsi 1:10-15; Friedrich History (New York: Liberal Arts, 1949), p. 21.
account
of
66
Thus for the Yankee, kings and nobles are no more than frauds and thieves; but precisely for that reason, they exert an attraction similar to that of a circus side show. (Frauds might be considered exceedingly clever businessmen.) The comic equivalent of
Yankee
this is to be seen in the Duke
admits
Americans
that
are
Yankee, pp. 65-66). 67 Ibid., pp. 62, 103, 237. 68 Here again, by abstracting from regime, Twain
makes
that
regime
and
particularly
the Dauphin of Huck Finn. The attracted
the divine or
even
by
pious element
harsher: God
was
(Connecticut
titles
in the Arthurian
supposed
to guarantee
justice triumphed in trials by battle. The Yankee's desire to substitute compe tence in military science, that is, a strictly rationalized criterion, for Arthur's that
concern
reflects
for individual not
only
an
merit
as
irrational
shown
in the tournaments
application
of
an
and
other
irrelevant technique
war on
games,
the
part
"And in Its Wake We
Followed"
81
The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain rules
the
of
by
tournament, for honor
competition
Christian faith
the
put
moreover,
in
and prestige
limitations
conventional
to the restrictions
addition
its knights. The difference in the
upon
upon placed
modes of
difference between Arthur and the Yankee politically. Where Arthur looks to the four-generation rule, a tradition, as a source of consent and legitimacy, the Yankee looks to nature, in particular the natural right and ability of each man to rule to
competition points
a more general
himself. The Yankee
undertakes his second journey to show Arthur the true his subjects, to extend Arthur's sentiments and sympathies, further the democratic revolution, perhaps to foster a "revo
situation of
thus to
and
above."
lution from the
of natural regime.
Arthur indeed is touched
lesson
chief
trip
of the
equahty, slavery
A
king
conventional character of
a slave
momentarUy.
On the
Yet
grounds
the Arthurian
of
better way to show the merely nobihty. The Yankee summarizes
what
and
slavery
least
at
greatness.
the worst abuse
constitutes
becomes
who
Arthur's
concerns
the results of the test: I had found it style,
reduce
will
and
he
the king's
contract.
I
sufficiently difficult job to
a
when
even
Never
a
the details
it
reduce
anxious
the king's style to
by force
and
a
peasant's
then, to undertake to go to! it was a stately
now
pupil;
will save me trouble to
let
imagine them.
you
that at the end of a week there was plenty of evidence that lash
had done their
club
weep over; but his
and
willing
to a slave's style
style
mind
remark
only
was
work
spirit?
well; the king's
why, it
wasn't even
body
was
a
to
sight
and
see
to
phased.89
At the smallpox hut the Yankee and Arthur confront the harsh reality the hfe of the commoners that the Yankee criticized in his breakfast conversation with the freemen. Yet the same incident proves Arthur's true nobility. Hank, who has had smallpox and thus has nothing to fear, urges Arthur, who has not, to leave. Arthur refuses: "[I]t were shame that a king should know fear, and shame that belted knight should withhold his of
hand
Yankee's Here
heroism
was
no
challenger,
the
at
in
death
cloth-of gold
reward
to
gaze
Yankee, but
meaning
be
such as need succor.
admiration reaches
challenging
of
there
where
methods
is
different
concept
not
the set and
also
and
war
of
its last
of
loftiest possibility, its field
unarmed,
the contest,
applaud;
introduces
and
yet
a whole
the
a
product
purpose
of
the
no
Ibid.,
p.
355.
Ibid.,
p.
282. In contrast, the Yankee pp.
utmost
all
the
admiring
king's
summit; this odds
world
bearing
or
not
use
against
in
was
other understanding of
stupidity
89
ibid.,
The
silks
as
backwardness
as
the and
serenely
the nature
rationalized
was
and
military
of
a
very
of war.
79
relating to sex. Cf.
and
with
fighting. That feudalism did
much
so
upon
go."70
wiU not
a peak:
and
open
Peace, I
seems
to feel
shame
32, 69, 88, 100, 138, 183, 197-198.
only
about
things
Interpretation
82 brave
in
so
it had
as
equal
fight
been in those
always
and clothed
Just
as
they
prove
incidents
on
cheaper contests
He
in protecting
steel.
the
journey
second
reveal
the Yankee's
inadequacy depicting the Yankee's
the
of
knight
where
was great
meets
now, sublimely
knight great.71
Arthur's true nobility, The
political understanding.
visit with Marco parallel those de Morgan. Again there is a meal followed by conversation. Where the Yankee (or Sandy for him) first impressed and then subdued Morgan with his name (his reputation) and subsequently that of Arthur, here he uses only money. Unlike a name, money is neither personal nor intimately related to individual behavior. Since it is alien able and the right to its possession is often unclear, it easily becomes a
three chapters
scribing his
encounter with
of envy and resentment. It does not give its possessor inherent superiority or authority over otherwise equal men. When the Yankee fails to convince the small company of the superiority of his economy with reason, he resorts to force and fraud in the form of a threat. The threat source
backfires. The Yankee becomes
themselves of when the
force, he
Yankee
attacks the
threats to its existence
the
the
and
as a result, come into hunts them down as danger them as slaves in exchange for
existing order, they,
a state of nature vis-a-vis that ous
to have authority on the basis of his
claim
a possession of
a matter of
power of the
can
few, but when the confrontation king must eventually cede to the many. Traveling incognito, the Yankee and king deprive both name and position in society. They are strangers, and
knowledge,
superior
society, and
which
sells
lives.72 sparing their
Twain
here that the Yankee and the Arthurian commoners are, in both their character and their concerns. The Yankee has difficulty persuading them of his position not so much because "training" of their as the fact that men do not always and immediately listen to reason; and one reason that they do not is that they are not only accustomed to but also take pride in their own way of doing things. The Yankee misunderstands the lesson of his encounter with Morgan, because he overestimates the power of reason, and as a result he does in
fact,
shows
very
not recognize
much alike
the
not understand
role of either
the role
of
law
law
force in
or
and/or
political society.
tradition because
his
of
He does
theoretical
position, which, as expressed in the Connecticut Constitution, for exam ple, appeals to nature against convention. But the appeal to nature that
Twain indicates in the Marco 71
Ibid.,
Basic
p.
note
and
the irrational
courage and
and
could
have brought the
an
appeal
Reading
to the force
of Hegel (New York:
245. In understanding and the Yankee's admiration of it, it is important
Tocqueville,
aspects of
king
op.
Arthur's
IL,
cit.
He
act.
p.
endangers
his
own
life
that of the
thus the stability of the regime completely unnecessarily. The Yankee sick men
down
without
"courage"
Cf. Aristotle, Ethics III, where and its place as, in a sense, "threshold 72
constitutes
284. Cf. A. Kojeve, Introduction to the
Books, 1969),
evaluating both Arthur's to
scenes
of
is
the
endangering
presented as
anyone.
the lowest of the
virtues"
elucidated.
John Locke, The Second Treatise of Civil Government, IV.
virtues
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain
83
the multitude standing behind the
consent. (In order to retain their Arthurian nobles have forbidden the commoners learn, to bear arms.) The Yankee's unwillingness to recognize the violence in human nature and the need, therefore, to restrain men with force at times is related, obviously, to his easy conclusion (particularly in the of
we
privUeges,
the
Morgan)
about the malleability of nature. But there are deeper for the Yankee's lack of any substantive understanding of what human nature might be. If one can speak of a substantively defined human nature, it becomes very difficult to believe in continual progress case of
grounds
or, for that matter, to
maintain
the absolute
degeneracy
of
the past
with
to the present. And if one question progress, one must question the legitimacy and viability of the Yankee's project, especially in light respect
his
of
understanding of the grounds and revolutionary im To be sure, the Yankee does receive support about the importance of heredity (heredity here under
faulty
own
plications of that project.
for his
conclusion
in
stood
Lamarckian
an almost
inherited
sense of
opinions and place
in
training during his second journey in the person of Arthur, who proves his nobility as a slave. There is, however, a decisive difference between recognizing the importance of education and concluding that society)
and
education is everything. After the knights rescue Arthur and the Yankee from the hangman's noose and the commoners go down on their knees before the ragged king they had hooted and jeered but a moment before, even the Yankee thinks to himself that "there is something peculiarly
the gait
grand about
ance
as
a
slave
bearing of a king, after finally forces the Yankee
Arthur's
all."73
and
thus
perform
to retract his
earher
and one man as good as
another,
endorsement of a commoner's statement:
He
said
barring
he believed that
and send
doctor,
He
clothes.
men were about all
said
stranger through
a
duke from
nor a
a
by
"Arthur's
people
he finds this poor
a
Connecticut
74
Ibid., Ibid.,
79
p.
157.
p.
237.
stand
kingdom do
couldn't
to
out
p.
strip the
nation
king from
tell the
a
naked quack
course
of
the
poor
the
superiority
inferiority
material
for
neither
of
a
of
Arthur is
the commoners. republic."75
by accident; they long by
But are
monarchy."76
382.
expands on
this theme
while
trying
to teach Arthur to bear
"Your soldierly stride, your lordly portthese will not do. too straight, your looks are too high, too confident. The cares of a a peasant.
not
the high level
hang
Yankee,
Ibid. The Yankee
himself like You
awareness
to be
were
necessary nor material, "because they have been debased so condition
73
75
of
you
clerk.74
awareness of
growing were
the crowd, he
hotel
The Yankee's growing paralleled
alike,
he believed that if
the
stoop the shoulders, they do
of
the eye-glance,
signs of
they do
them in slouching
not
droop
not put
body
they do not depress fear in the heart and
the chin,
doubt
and
and unsure step.
It is the
sordid cares
Interpretation
84
they are (and they are factually inferior), not by but because nature, they have been trained, by the circumstances of their lives if nothing else, to be so. Above aU else, the Yankee's reforms aim at instilling this missing manliness; in his factories the Yankee intends to turn "groping and grub bing automata into men."11 All the other education of a more technical sort is subordinated to this aim. There is the following difficulty, however. The Yankee himself and those he has trained in his Man-Factory have in The
commoners are as
fact been
raised
just
the Yankee wished. Neither he
as
The Yankee
they have
nor
Arthur
the
most
highly
because the Yankee-narrator lacks precisely that Like the commoners of Arthur's realm, the Yankee builds his life
virtue.
the
manliness of
for his
aristocracy.78
praises
courage
ground of comfort
The Yankee
and thus
seeking,
fundamentaUy
on
the
on
the fear of death.
Arthur because Arthur is free from that burden that
admires
of the fear of death. What more it may require, and how courage is related to other virtues, is not, or only imperfectly, presented in the novel, for the Yankee cannot help but be dazzled by the courage of the Arthurian nobles and thus sees little further. Arthurians' The Yankee is never able to understand the virtue, and most especially he is never able to understand the relation between their
rules
the Yankee's life. Manliness requires the overcoming
"manliness"
"heroism"
or
that
a regime
and
might
be
man
and
the rights of
raise the question of aristocratic virtue
As
equality,
why the
another
and
proper
and
approved
subject
points to the need to
is necessary to
produce
of
that do these things.
inhumanities that sap the
of
the basis of the rigid
than on
raising the question of the limits of nobility, the Yankee both sees the question
the trademarks of poverty, misery, common
foundation
on the
aristocracy
aristocratic regime
way
the nature of
with
lowly born
of the
rather
Arthurdom. The Yankee's faUure
class system of
politics.
their political regime. He wishes to institute
called a universal
You
must
oppression,
learn the trick:
insults,
you must
the other
and
manliness out of a man and make a
and
his
to
satisfaction
imitate
several
and
him a loyal
masters"
(ibid.,
pp.
274-275). 77
Ibid.,
p.
147. There is
a
delightful
this statement with respect to
damnation in
eternal 78
like
For a
he is
instance,
peasant, more
order
the
Hugo,
to spare his
Yankee,
like the
wife
Both in
commoners than
the fact that the Yankee makes
has just braved
not
only the
rack
but
and child.
Arthur, had
unlike
or a proper slave.
irony in
who
word
difficulty
no
and
carrying himself
deed the Yankee
the nobility. His difficulties
shows that
his armor,
with
for example, led him to distinguish himself from the knights in respect: "but as for me, give me comfort first, and style
important
an
afterward."
Even aboard,
more and
explicitly,
then,
at
dulled down to drowsiness drifted into of
course"
Marco's the Yankee
the talk not
p.
323).
upon
and went off
matters near and
(ibid.,
turning
to take
King
got
his
conquest, or iron-clad
a nap.
dear to the hearts
"The
states:
battle,
.
.
.
And the
of our sort
cargo
duel, he
rest of us soon
business
and
wages,
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain and
its
answer
and
ethical, that
certain
example, he easily feelings"
One
is,
he doesn't. The Yankee is certainly correlates
character,
relates the nobility's
but to hear
recognize
an
the very air
...
aristocrat
the
of
the
of
speak
that
classes
the slaveholder's spirit, the slaveholder's blunted feeling. the same cause in both cases: the possessor's
himself
as a
The Yankee does themselves as
Aristocrats
cruelty.
not see
superior
how that "old
beings"
require
or at
especiaUy, common
is
were shame
least
below him to
behind these the
are
custom
are
result
of
of regarding
initially,
them
their
most show
differentiate the drive
of
seeking and the fear of death. Training can, Twain shows, achieve a great
baseness
a
embodying
for belted knight to
must
regarding
virtue as well as
Arthur, in his
the negation of the strongest
custom of
nobles'
beneath
a class
inbred
and
produces the
to which they cannot stoop. Thus
revelation, said, "It
They
inbred
old and
are
and
79
being.
superior
For
"blunted
and
pohtical order.
tone of the actual slaveholder;
and
blind to
not
political regime.
insensitivity,
cruelty,
toward the commoners to the
need
85
self-
eloquent
fear.
What
.
.
exceptional
from the
the many, the overcoming
of comfort
extinguish
human
to produce the
That
nature.
for
contempt
deal; but training does
nobles'
courage
also
produces
not
human life necessary
mere
They
their cruelty.
treat
"swine"
because they do not perceive that the com moners are men like themselves. Aristocrats think they are superior by nature when they are, in fact, superior as a result of an essentiaUy con the commoners
as
Insofar
ventional class structure.
as
aristocrats'
the
manliness rests upon
this class structure, the Yankee's dream of creating a universal aristocracy is illusory. But insofar as this class distinction rests on convention rather
it is
than nature, class
through
tage
fundamentally
differentiation
comes
to
of the rigid class system
real virtue of
is,
Twain is
first
the natural
a contraction of
expectations; that that seeks to raise
unjust.
sight
source of compassion.
aU men.
But the
effect of upon
fearful
The Yankee
79
Ibid.,
p.
the
manner and
seeks
to
aristocracy:
mass of
they
caution
One
cruelty advan
"politics
of
hope"
the Yankee's recognition of the
his
political ambition
imposed
is precisely his am
restraint upon
by
his calculating
and
reason. replace what
234. Emphasis
account of the resemble
If low
the moderating,
somewhat
as
puts upon political
such an order wUl not generate a
the reverse. It frees him from the only remaining
bitions,
massively
lies in the limitations it
the Arthurian knights
Arthurian
no romantic.
and most
added.
"The
he
sees
to be arbitrary distinctions
The Yankee here
men who
their fellow citizens;
scarcely believe that
compose
they do
[an not
echoes
Tocqueville's final
aristocratic caste]
do
not
think or feel in the same
they belong to the same race. They cannot, nor judge of others by
therefore, thoroughly understand what others feel, (Alexis de Tocqueville, op. cit. II, pp. 172-173).
themselves"
Interpretation
86 the
men with
among
human
general principle of
compassion.
is
But in the
Morgan le Fay's, where evident, Twain indicates the difficulties with compassion as a principle of political society. To relieve suffering, the Yankee freed from the queen's dungeons at least one guilty man and many others whose guilt was quite possible. When Sandy reveals the Yankee's identity in order to save the old grand the theme of
scene at
mother of
the poor queen
...
the composer
that
was
scared
was so
without
she
was
most
the Yankee observes that: and
first consulting
have been, for
would
boy,
the slain page
compassion
humbled that
me.
/
she was
even
very sorry for her
was
so
really suffering;
I
to
afraid
indeed,
hang
anyone
willing to do anything
was
reasonable; and had no desire to carry things to wanton extremities. I there
fore
considered
into
our presence
saw
that
the
she was
matter
thoughtfully,
right,
and gave
her
by having
and ended
to play that Sweet Bye
and
Bye again,
permission
to
hang
the musicians ordered
which
the
they did. Then I
whole
band.89
Dedicated to the relief of suffering as suffering, compassion does not distinguish among the sources of that suffering. The Yankee's compassion depends as much upon his own identification with one group of men as against another as does the injustice he attributes to Arthur. For example, the Yankee leaves one prisoner locked in
Morgan's dungeons
a noble
At the beginning of his tale he attempts to explain away the ability of the Arthurian nobles to bear extreme pain stoically by calling them "White Indians."8! Finally, he can justify his slaughter of the entire Arthurian nobility only by denying them membership in the British nation. The Yankee's compassion is, moreover, very much related to his comfort seeking. He frees Hugo from the rack, not because Hugo is innocent man.
he is
but because the Yankee
not
stand
admits that
he,
the
Yankee,
to hear Hugo's groans and so even vicariously bear the
cannot pain
of
The Yankee's compassion, and by extension the compassion inspiring a great deal of modern politics, Twain indicates, is the product not of the strength but of the weakness of modern man.82 Ultimately the
torture.
Yankee's
attempt
ment to the
The
to replace justice
most
pain and so
most modern and scientific nobility.
humanity,
In
a
wages
his
the
war
can ever
Clarence
end of
waged
professedly the Yankee leads us to wonder
cruelty
pupil
at
be
the novel.
weapons, the Yankee kills the
that takes its bearings specifically whether
on a commit
his technology.
extreme
nothing imposed on the horrible war the Yankee feudal
depends
with compassion
of
overcoming instance of cruelty we see in the entire novel is the people by the Arthurian characters. Rather it is
possibility
against
exorcised
from
against
Using
the
of
the
whole
barbarism
and
in
whether even a political cause
cruelty
can avoid
political
being
cruel,
life. The Yankee
commit an even graver crime against
humanity
and
in the
80
Connecticut Yankee,
81
Ibid.,
82
Cf. Mark Twain, What is Man? in Complete Works of Mark Twain (New and Brothers, 1917), pp. 14-15.
p.
York: Harper
p.
140.
20.
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain in
spirit
killing
which
they
in terms
time
an efficient
manner.83
consequences
cowardice.
absolute
from
substantive
he
to men,
value
toward mass murder is a product,
equahty as the only pohtical principle, that distinctions. Where he once attributed
adoption of
stated, "I
now
stood with
attributes
my hand
on
none
finally
fifty flooding
and set
electric
precipice"
of one
first
button
a
as a prelude to
with water and then with
corpses.84
While he
whatsoever.
the cock, so to speak, ready to
turn it on and flood the midnight world with light at any
"touched
primarUy
particular arrangement while
in the fact that this killing can be done in such This technique enables the Yankee to avoid facing his deeds; it thus feeds his moral and physical attitude
his
an abstraction
initiaUy
of
contemplate mass
the subject
exult
"detached"
His of
moreover,
is,
they
They
they discuss
the technical efficiencies of their
of
at the same
the
final battle.
undertake the
with such matter-of-factness that
87
So
suns
he
moment,"
aflame on
the
top
his
the
now artificially lit world dream becomes nightmare.
IV. Mark Twain
Through the conclusion of the novel, Twain forces his readers to ques tion the very possibility of progress.85 Upon his return to the nineteenth century, the Yankee renounces his whole attempt, not merely the timing of
it. His forces
are
destroyed
not
by
their
feudal
enemies
but
by the rotting
their weapons had created; they were kiUed (as he, too, would have been) by their own wastes. The Yankee's enterprise does not carnage
faU
they
as a
83
mind
on the road
step
new order
their
and
is
The ending potential
to a better life. His project simply
Connecticut Yankee foreshadows
of
for destruction but
even more
found in the Nazi "final
as
not
only
nuclear weapons and
strikingly the technological frame
of
Cf. Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in
solution."
Jerusalem (New York: Vintage, 1964), 84 Connecticut Yankee, p. 443. 85
faUs; his
not a viable political condition.
and
Jacques Ellul,
op.
cit.
Miss Gladys Carmen Bellamy, op. cit., the one critic who has tried to view as an integral part of the novel, finds that "the outcome of the book
the ending
'progress'
shows that so-called
that, it must
shows
keep
that if
pace with
technical
the popular interpretation
may conceivably be civilization
breeds
the book. She sees,
further
his
own
against
is to be made,
but, beyond
superstition;
another
(p. 314). She
advancement"
sort
of
advancement
continues:
"Instead
of
American progress, the book fictional working out of the idea that a too-quick a celebration
of
Miss Bellamy is properly impressed with the ending of do not, that in writing a conclusion in which enterprise fail, Twain meant that ending to bear some
as most other critics whole
and recognize
mindless
no real chance
solely
viewed as a
to the Yankee
questions
as
disaster."
the Yankee and his relation
has
progress
real
and
his
scheme
that the book
the very possibility of superstition or
technology.
for
progress
"too-quick
reform.
speaks not
But
only
she refuses
of the
"rate
itself. The Yankee is but only
civilization"
by
the
to go one step progress"
of not
destroyed
wastes
created
but
by by
Interpretation
88
The
the Yankee's project at the end
coUapse of
by
no means
leaves
Arthur's intact. Twain incorporated, by directly quoting, the tale of the concluding battles from Malory. Arthurian England collapses as a result of its own defects without the direct interference of the Yankee. Arthur's easily be
rule can
of their
be in
a certain sense
is
Arthur's
super-, if
a
her
from
earth altogether.
Lancelot,
and
Arthur himself is Ulegitimate
from
and child
bereft
as the Yankee states, hke that of a others, the father is in heaven, if not Both aristocratic households that the Yankee
sister's
abode, the
legitimacy Beginning with
incest.
the
father,
we
view
affair
between Guinevere
Morgan
wife
the
rules
his only
and
of questionable
product of
the contrary,
on
and
In Camelot there is the
in his
is, by
which
if,
spouse; and
is,
nation
own children
visits are out of order:
In
the nobles rule on the
Church,"
"Mother
the
of
not un-natural
to his
relation
mother to absent
in the form
except
definition,
girl
family;
The Arthurian regime would seem, therefore, to But if Arthur's rule is paternal, the mother
"natural."
absent
and
to that of a
compared
"blood."
basis
King
Uriens.
"heir"
is the
separation of the slave of
a series
and
mothers
babes
of paternal care as a result of a combination of superstition and
built
the regime
upon
the
famUy
famUy
structure, the
law.
is disordered.
leave their families to go in search of adventure, and the regime stands on a them, Galahad, is chaste. This supernatural or unnatural foundation. Behind its reflection in the knight Knights
must
"natural"
purest
of
monk.86
stands the
Generative nature does not provide a sufficient foundation for King Arthur rules not as the father of the family but as
rule.
resentative of
the divine Father. Arthur's is the
political
the
rep
government about which
the Yankee reflects: Unlimited
the
is the ideal thing
power
heaven is the absolutely
one
absolutely
perfect
namely, the despot the perpetual.
hands of
But
when
perfect
earthly perfectest
it is in
hands. The despotism
safe
An earthly despotism
government.
if
individual
the human race, and his lease of life
of
as a perishable perfect man must
the
die,
conditions
and
Arthur's hence
is
regime
modeled on
and so
Nature does
same,
not
merely
a
bad form
the divine. Arthur's rule is perhaps the
individual"
"perfectest
the
were
leave his despotism in the
an
rule of the
of
be
government,
imperfect successor, an earthly despotism is government, it is the worst form that is possible. 87 of
would
just; but Arthur is
stiU a
man,
have good it does not guarantee that have at sons aU. Because kings do sons; they not necessarily have acceptable heirs, the succession comes into question, and war is the almost inevitable result. Things may occur according to divine dispensation, but the human
88
Cf. Matthew 10
to the seek 87
perishable.
general
:
34-40; Mark 3:31; Luke
tendency
to transcend human
Connecticut
not guarantee
of
aristocracies
political
Yankee,
p.
78.
or
14
:
that good men
26-27;
aristocrats
also cf. supra with regard
both
limitations in imitation
ancient and modern
of the
divine.
to
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We
89
The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain beings involved
therefore,
know the intention of their Father and cannot, Given a belief in providence, success becomes political right. That is, in human terms the foundation
cannot
act accordingly.
the only criterion
of
Arthurdom becomes tension between divine of
force;
mere
the injustice in the
and
(or the
origins
imperfect human nature) produces the regime. This corruption emerges
perfection and
a necessary corruption at the heart of first through a necessary confusion between the prerequisite of virtue and virtue itself. The Arthurians claim an excellence by nature that is, in fact, an excellence resulting from a certain kind of training; but that very
training depends paradoxically better
are
by
nature.
tends to
nature
rule.
belief that
erroneous
aristocrats are
aristocrats
simply better
by
their striving to live up to any of the extrinsic hence to undermine the justice of their claim to
destroy
standards of virtue
the
upon
Yet the belief that
and
When the superiority
of the nobles
is
no
longer evident, the Arthurian a guarantee for the
regime must
finally
conflation of
the natural aristocracy and the conventional aristocracy, of a rule of providence that in fact comes the perfected
the given closer
posit the rule of providence as
and
to the crude doctrine
of providence ridiculed
in Twain's Preface
than to the more sophisticated doctrines of theology. The Arthurian regime
ignores the defective character of nature depreciates the role of politics. When the Yankee compares the justice
distributing
mother
over, to
is
condition and
kind
a second
of
try
and as a result aU will
a
few
if
one
men can
If
to that of a
rule
The
regime.88
the
more
natural
distributes the
scarcity,
nation's wealth evenly be depressed economically, from others by force or fraud,
all will
to seize goods
sternly imposes
live
one
Arthur's
"natural"
defect in
conditions of
of
in time of famine, he points,
children
one of scarcity.
equally in
whereas
to
milk
thus, like the Yankee,
and
order and regulates economic
well and through
production,
their magnificence relieve the harsh
human condition. The cruelty and injustice of conditions of scarcity; a mother would, the from inequality arise partially Yankee suggests, distribute milk equally in times of plenty. The Yankee's
bleakness
the
of
general
democracy depends, As scarcity regime,
so
his training, his
judgeship starving rest"
the 89
We
as
would
children
(ibid.,
it,
be the
p.
to
backways"
alleviating
harshest
some of the
Arthurian
aspects of the
the necessary condition for the worst abuses
wrought
and
scarcity.89
of
conditions
frequent
unalterable
average
mother
injustices, but it sympathies.
for the
He
position
own children would
was
was
merely the fault as
unfitted
for
of milk-distributor
fare
a shade
a
to
better than
234).
official
toowas
upon
in famine-time; her in this
respect
start a patent
(ibid.,
the Yankee's first action after gaining power:
thing I did, in my
office and good patent or
for
natural
should note
"the very first of
accounts
technology provides
"The king's judgments
88
of
therefore,
p.
law is just 68).
administration
office, for I know that
and
a
it
was on
country
a crab, and couldn't travel
the first
day
without a patent
any way but
sideways
Interpretation
90
rule his tyrannical use of both his physical and pohtical The Yankee does not explicitly model his rule on that of God, but he does believe that he can overcome nature with his science and that There is, in fact, a tension at this science makes him a "superior the core of the Yankee's political project between the natural rights and technological equality of men he hopes to institute and his power to transform nature (and the ambition to which that power gives rise) similar to that between the divine and natural foundations of Arthur
Yankee's
of the
power.
being."
"supranatural"
dom. If
of men would no
for
standard
or
declares
finaUy
be completely transformed by technology, the natural longer seem to provide a source of a moral restraint upon the Yankee's action. (When the Yankee
nature can
equahty
the repubhc,
it is, in
the context,
merely
declaration
a
of
war.)
primary for the Yankee. He I
was a was
and arts of
for the Yankee's
ground
I
"magic"
(both his
Technology
champion, it
was
true, but
not
destroy knight-errantry
they
what
determined
by
or
be its
the regime the
have
inevitable;
come anyway.
by; by luck, it happened
Because the Yankee and
their
a good conscience. consists
I
was
entering
he has learned,
men
to
It
come
still
Guenevere, it have
would on
Conflict between Clarence tells the Yankee:
are equal.
and thus
wouldn't
have
come
so
come on your own account
early,
by
and
Queen's.91
the
believes in the fundamental equahty
of
men
reasonableness, he cannot use force against them with He knows, as the Arthurians do not, that his "superior
potential
ity"
thinks
Yankee beheves they
there hadn't been any Queen
would
sense and reason. victim.90
from birth; and these opinions are politically in power. The Arthurians as firmly believe that
the two regimes becomes
Well, if
a means
end:
are taught
men are unequal as
but it
very
the champion of the frivolous black arts.
Force is necessary because, the Yankee believe
become the
seems to
remains champion of reason to the
the champion of hard unsentimental common
the lists to either
war)
But technology is only
action.
in technical knowledge in
principle available to all men.
Thus,
the novel, when his public project seems nearest com pletion, he seems to draw back. For example, he never admits any inten toward the
tion
end of
unseating Arthur, even to himself, although that is required in his own ambition to become president of the repubhc. Although prepared for war, he wages it only when forced to defend his of
order
to fulfiU
"civilization"
about the when
all
from
the
interdict
of
the
Church. Despite his
statements
opinions,"
malleability of nature and "inherited but fifty-two boys desert him at the
he is
end.
Clarence
surprised
asks
boss: "Did
you think you
had
"I certainly did think
90
91
Ibid., Ibid.,
p.
386.
p.
398.
educated
it."
the
superstition
out
of
these
people?"
his
Followed"
"A nd in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain
"Well, then, stition
you
thought
so
unthink
may
and reared
in it.
too; the Interdict
it
.
.
.
[they]
were
We imagined
...
them up.
woke
.
born in
had
we
91
an atmosphere
educated
it
out
of
of super
them; they
.
To the very end, the Yankee overestimates! the human nature as well as his own abilities of persuasion.
"reasonableness"
of
Just as his public project seems nearest success, moreover, the Yankee discovers for the first time a private life that might satisfy him. He becomes a devoted husband and father and, as a result, virtually retires
temporarily from
public life into the confines of domesticity. Yet this be held responsible for the failure at least the particular form of faUure of the Yankee's pubUc project.93 The Yankee's new-found domesticity represents in part a response to his lessons about Arthurian retreat could
the discovery of a dimension of life he had heretofore Fundamentally, it reveals his bad conscience. Technology
as weU as
nobUity
totaUy
missed.
is only
a
and when
means,
the means destroys the very
it has to be abandoned. Unlike both the Yankee and the
end
it is to
serve
humanity hmits
human
of
nature.
Arthurians, Twain
Both the Yankee
and the
recognizes
the
Arthurians favor their
things, naturally, since they have no other, but neither set opinions, Twain reveals, is simply true or rational. Both parties compete for status, whether defined in terms of money or honor the terms are own view of of
by
set
with
The
the opinions.
the
and yet
conjunction of
faulty understanding limited in its possibUities. Most
this
drive for precedence life necessary
natural
of most men makes political
be private. Twain Yankee and in his
affirms
satisfaction
the goodness of
critique of the
for
most men must
life both through his
family
Arthurian regime,
which
destroys the
family by attempting to make it the foundation for political rule. Only in the famUy does the Yankee satisfy the desire for love and respect that initially propelled him into politics. Yet, as Twain shows in his critical presentation of the Arthurian regime, the family is not in itself sufficient. Because men are not perfect, they cannot simply love each other. The necessary underlay of force cannot be overcome by any regime, though both regimes presented here strive to do so. The danger is more serious with the modern regime, however, both because its political aspirations are more likely to lead it to desperate ventures and because its technological powers make those ventures destructive without prece
dent. Twain is thus less than
within
Ibid.,
93
The illness
pp.
of
climactic events
favor
with
an
adjudication
of
the regimes
420-422.
92
the
concerned
using his understanding of political life to improve the regime which he lives by reminding his readers of the limits human nature
with
of
domestic
Hello-Central
and
in the Yankee's
ones.
the
trip
to France for the child's health are
withdrawal of attention
His inattention
and absence pave
from
political affairs
the way
for his
in
undoing.
Interpretation
92 ought
tion
to set on their political
of
humor
and
contrasting the
The
horror
claim to
be
what
in the
they
are pretentious and
nobles what
they
Indeed,
from Twain's
the facts of human nature.
the Arthurian regime, because the nobles
case of
deserving
the oft-decried conjunc
the novel comes
with
regimes
superior
are not
The horrible
them.
upon
both
of
claims
comical arises
aspirations.
so characteristic of
the
of
arises
nature.
In this respect, they and Twain heap
the Yankee
because that injustice that the
are also makes
by
ridicule
they
peasants what
are.
makes
the
Conversely,
comedy insofar as he, too, is pretentious. His is precisely his leveling or denial of excellence, and thus, much of what appears to be burlesque reflecting on the knights in fact reflects upon the Yankee and reflects comicaUy precisely because the the Yankee is
a source of
pretentiousness
Yankee believes that he is
Similarly,
deflating
the horrible side of the
tale, has its
source
in his denial
other pomposities and
Yankee, in of
nature,
is thus
superior.
the ending of his leads him to believe
particular
which
that anything is possible.
Yet, Twain indicates,
by his Merlin, the
deadly
own
only
a great
deal is
possible.
power, but he is
The Yankee is
conquered.
He is
conquered
saved
only
by
him to sleep and sends him back to the nineteenth century. Merlin, through his art, does the same thing he overcomes that Twain does through his art in structuring this novel magician of
words,
who puts
the limits of both space and time. In words and only in words is there, perhaps, hope. If the words of Malory and other romancers can make Twain and his Yankee dream, the words of Twain can perhaps awaken
Yankees
real
by
showing them
where
their civilization leads and thus
giving them cause to reflect critically upon their enterprise, and by remind ing them of the nature and conditions of human excellence. Technology
has
provided modern men with more power and more
than
ever
contemplated
particularly
force
that
of others).
they
earlier;
can
now
freedom to
exercise
for precedence, virtually without problem: Those things
This is the
use
it
their passions,
restraint
(except the
faith, honor (word
that formerly restrained reputation), and scarce natural conditions longer operate effectively; and the modern substitute, law, does serve, because to a man such as the Yankee, the law is always ques
and/or
men no not
tionable. Compassion is too arbitrary
and
indistinct
a criterion
for
pohtics.
The only hope for self-control seems then to he in self-criticism, which Twain may have furthered by presenting this gross image of the American Yankee.
Twain's problem. How can a novelist his self-satisfaction? In his Preface, that he abstracts from the question of the divine Twain states explicitly governance of the world. There is, however, another force abstracted from the tale as presented by the Yankee: This is the force of poetry or fiction. At the very beginning the Yankee announces that he is a man "without There is little in the Yankee to which a poet sentiment, i.e., may appeal with much hope of success if we, like the Yankee, identify poetry with romantic poetry. But where romantic poetry has no appeal But here
we confront
the heart
reach such a man and shake
poetry."
him
of
out of
Followed"
"And in Its Wake We The Political Wisdom of Mark Twain
Yankee, humor does. His Dinadan forces him to meet the to the
extreme reaction to the old
93
joke
of
Sir
Sir Sagramor; and his first act of tyrannical power following his victory in the tournament is to hang Sir Dinadan for publishing the same joke. Humor appeals to the Yankee through its novelty; like his own ever new
devices to
maintain
its
challenge of
"practicality"
and
effect.
It
technology, it requires to his democratic
appeals also
not only because of its novelty, but because humor debunks. If humor is to debunk pretensions, is not one of the greatest pretensions
instincts,
of modern man
Twain
also
the very view that he can or does live without pretensions? the Yankee, and thereby perhaps moderates him.
ridicules
importance of humor as a debunker and soberer We suggest, however, that this is not a sufficiently deep understanding of Twain's humor. Humor, especially Twain's humor, depends on contrast, in particular contrast between the Twain's
sentiments on the
are well-known and often cited.
high
is
and the
meant
their
low. Rather than
being
to restore the restraints
nature
popularity,
both its heights
succeeded at
on
and
a
debunking humor, Twain's humor passion by reminding men of
human
its depths. Whether Twain, despite his
this is a question indeed.
AN INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES VOLUME 39/NUMBER 2 SUMMER 1972 A Publication of the Graduate Faculty, New School for Social Research GERMANY: 1919-1932 THE WEIMAR CULTURE George K. Romoser
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of
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of
Apocalypse in German Literature
on the
of
Validity
Geoffrey
Crisis
of
Barraclough
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