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The

Connell Guide
to
Shakespeares

Romeo
and
Juliet
by
Simon Palfrey
Contents
Introduction 4 Whats in a name? 69

A summary of the plot 8 How does Juliet speak her love? 75

What is the play about? 10 How does Shakespeare handle time in


Romeo and Juliet? 80
How does Romeo and Juliet differ from
Shakespeares comedies? 12 Why is Juliet so young? 91

Why is Romeo introduced to us How does Shakespeare show Juliets


indirectly? 24 erotic longing? 100

What do we make of Romeos first Is there a moral in this play? 106


appearance? 28 N OT ES

How is Juliet introduced? 31 The characters 7


How Shakespeare changed his source 17
Why is Mercutio so important? 37 Benvolio 26
The critics on Romeo 22
Six key quotes from the play 53
How does Mercutio prepare us for
The balcony scene 58
Juliet? 47 Ten facts about Romeo and Juliet 64
Cuts, censorings and performance versions 72
Why is Romeos first glimpse of Juliet so The Friar 86
important? 51 Four ways critics have seen the tragedy 98
How exceptional are the lovers? 108
What is it that makes the balcony scene A short chronology 116
so memorable? 55 Bibliography 120
Introduction: the worlds into: but the nature of their love is also born
greatest love story? profoundly from it.
In the first acts of the play, much of the energy
and vitality comes from Romeos friend, Mercutio.
Romeo and Juliet is routinely called the worlds He is the most vehemently anti-romantic figure
greatest love story, as though it is all about imaginable. He takes the citys over-heated
romance. The play features some of the most culture of violence, sex and one-upmanship,
lyrical passages in all of drama, and the lovers and accelerates it all into pathological, friend-
are young, beautiful, and ardent. But when we tiring jokes.
look at the play, rather than rest in its reputation, Now we might think it the purpose of Romeo,
the lyricism and the romance are not really and the play, to fly beyond Mercutios sexual
what drive things along. It is true that Romeo, revulsion, his verbal fantasies, and to find
especially early on in the play, acts like a young something whole and true like love. And certainly
man determined to take his place in an immortal this is partly what happens. But it doesnt happen
tale of love. Everything he says is romantic but in the way we might think it should by Romeo
rather like an anniversary card is romantic. His meeting Juliet, and everything else sliding away
words propel nothing, or nothing but sarcastic into irrelevance. For what happens is that Romeo
admonitions from his friends to forget about love meets Juliet, and everything is transformed by her:
and to treat women as they should be treated, with but it is also transferred into her. Not only Romeos
careless physical appetite. The world we have ardour, but the demonic energies of the city and
entered is rapacious more than romantic. Mercutio, are crystallised and somehow
Everyone knows something of this, from the alchemised in Juliet. She turns the lead to gold
film versions of the story if nothing else. Romeo bright, hot, the standard of all exchange. But she
and Juliet must fight for their love inside a culture is also too precious to be safely seen, and fatal to
of stupid hatreds. But it is not a simple case of love anyone who truly does see her.
versus war, or the city against the couple. If it were, Once Romeo properly meets her in the
it would nicely reinforce clichs about true love, balcony scene Juliet takes over the play almost
fighting against the odds. I want to suggest that the completely (a possession cued by the passing of
play Shakespeare actually wrote is more troubling Mercutio in Act Three, Scene One). Hers is
than this. Its lovers oppose the world they are born the energy and desire that pushes things to

4 5
completion. And this appetite is absolutely a thing thing is whatever moves, or moves in, its heroine.
of violence. Juliet takes her place as a For Juliet represents the devastating coming-true,
characteristic Shakespearean hero, one who feels a for better and worse, of everything in this world.
passion or sees a possibility and drives through to She is its scourge, in the sense that she will whip
its satisfaction, whatever the cost. Her passion and punish and haunt it; she is also its triumph, in
for all her youth, for all its truth is at the very the sense of its best and truest thing. The deaths it
cusp of murderousness. all leads to are in no way avoidable, and in no way
There is one moment in the play which accidental. They are her inheritance, the thing she
exemplifies this passionate pitilessness. It is when was born to. Of course she takes Romeo with her.
Juliet has agreed to take the sleeping potion. She But it is at heart her play.
goes to her nurse, and her mother, and her father,
and solemnly swears that she now agrees with THE CHARACTERS
their wishes for her, that she will confess her sins
JULIET
(of disobedience) and marry Paris as they have bid
CAPULET, her father
her. She gets her parents thanks and blessing, and
leaves to her bedchamber. She does so knowing LADY CAPULET, Capulets wife
they will never see her again. TYBALT, her nephew
The heart thrills and freezes at the thought. ESCALUS, prince of Verona
Could there be an act colder in its heat, more COUNT PARIS
open-eyed in its annihilation of everything that MERCUTIO
until this day has most mattered? MONTAGUE
The Prince, at the end of the play, blames the LADY MONTAGUE
families for the deaths of the young lovers (See ROMEO
what a scourge is laid upon your hate). But this BENVOLIO, Montagues nephew
strikes me as false, almost as a kind of bad faith. Of THE NURSE
course the things that the families do force the FRIAR LAURENCE
lovers hands. But as much as such plot-devices are PETER, SAMPSON, serving men of the Capulets
at work, they are used to trigger events Romeos Gregory, Friar John, an Apothecary, Abraham, Balthasar, a
exile, Juliets sleeping potion, and so on rather Chorus
than define their substance. The truly substantial

6 7
A summary of the plot a rage, Romeo kills Tybalt.
The Prince exiles Romeo on pain of death.
Act One Romeo secretly spends the night in Juliets
A brawl breaks out in Veronas streets. Once again chamber. The next morning the lovers part.
it is the men of the feuding noble families of Capulet Capulet, believing Juliets grief to be caused by
and Montague. Prince Escalus intervenes, declaring Tybalts death, insists that she marry Paris
that further fighting will be punishable by death. immediately. The Nurse recommends bigamy, and
Paris, a kinsman of the Prince, talks to Lord Juliet feels betrayed. Now she is on her own.
Capulet about marrying Juliet, Capulets 13-year-
old daughter. Her father invites him to a ball. Juliet Act Four
is unconvinced. In despair, Juliet consults Friar Laurence. He bids
Romeo, son to Montague, missed the brawl. His her to pretend to consent to the match with Paris,
family and friends wonder where he is. He tells of but on the night before the wedding to drink a
his unrequited love for Rosaline, and is persuaded potion that will make her comatose for two and
to attend the Capulet ball, disguised by a mask, in forty hours. His plan is for Romeo to rescue her
the hope of meeting Rosaline. Instead he meets from the family crypt and carry her to Mantua.
and falls in love with Juliet. The next morning the Nurse discovers her
apparently dead. Her family wail and mourn. She is
Act Two entombed according to plan. But Friar Laurences
After the feast, Romeo overhears Juliet on her message to Romeo doesnt arrive in time.
balcony confessing her love for him. They agree to
marry in spite of their families hatred. With the help Act Five
of Friar Laurence, they are secretly married the Romeo is told that Juliet is dead. He buys poison
next day. No one else knows except Juliets Nurse. and returns to the Capulet crypt. There he meets
Paris, who has also come to mourn Juliet. Romeo
Act Three kills Paris. Still believing Juliet to be dead, he
Tybalt, Juliets cousin, challenges Romeo to a kisses her and drinks the poison. Juliet awakes
duel. Romeo refuses to fight. Romeos friend and, finding Romeo dead, stabs herself with his
Mercutio fights instead, and is fatally wounded dagger. Faced with this sorry sight, the fathers
when Romeo attempts to break up the duel. In agree to end their violent feud.

8 9
What is the play about? sense that life is abundant, or should be; that we
are born to strive, and that our identity, our being,
If Romeo and Juliet is a play about passion, it is is a purposive force, searching always for some
implicitly one of rebellion. This is the key to its opportunity or other to strike us into flaming
extraordinary magnetism. Not a rebellion of completion; that what might or should or may be
people against the state, or not in any simple way. really could be. William Hazlitt calls Shakespeare
Rather, it is a play about the rebellion of the heart, the poet of what would be, of what if and this is
our basic vitality, a thing equally of spirit and body, what Juliet and Romeo live. They turn cannot into
against all forms of false, complacent, begrudging, would. They make the impossible possible.
insensible constriction. It is a play that taps into Romeo and Juliet, then, is a play about the
the desire, cherished by all of us, for a life less inadequacy of what is habitually given and
afraid, less timid and obedient, less, in a very basic accepted as our daily lot; about the consequent
way, predicted. need, if life and language are to be authentic, for
Shakespeares play knows what an awful thing it rebellion or internal exile. The Shakespeare critic
is to know everything that must follow from the Kiernan Ryan puts it like this:
fact of our birth here, now, among these people and
those institutions. How deadening to think that we Romeo and Juliet lays siege to the legitimacy of a
have, in truth, no choice in what follows at all world which deprives men and women of boundless
that even our thoughts and emotions are likewise love as surely as it deprives the poor of their share
already scripted, waiting for us to rehearse and in the worlds wealth, seeing the lovers as born
perform them. Thought is free? Not here it isnt before their time, citizens of an anticipated age...
not in Shakespeares Verona! We even know who marooned in a hostile, alien reality, which has
we are to hate, and who we can share our hatreds already contaminated their hearts and minds, and
with. Who would not rebel against such a world? eventually crushes them completely.
Who would not rebel to loves side! *
Romeo and Juliet strikes upon that little flint in The play is equally about the inevitability of
us all, what the philosophers sometimes call our failure, because the institutions of their world, as
conatus. We might call it the souls appetite the currently constituted, are immovable. It is about
the humiliation of mere survival, and the
*As Marx said, The tradition of the dead generations weighs like a
nightmare on the minds of the living. transformative promise given to us, the witnesses,

10 11
who through feeling so passionately for the they do not win: the game turns into a sacrifice, and
condemned lovers forswear any timid, paltry, the favoured lovers become victims of time and law.
obedient kind of survival. In its place, we
imaginatively allow only the kind of survival that is But is this to say that Romeo and Juliet is
willing to endure death as the price of truth and essentially about escapist desire, only with the
passion to witness it and live somehow in it. catch that, as Snyder has it, comic adaptability
confronts tragic integrity, meaning that only the

How does Romeo and Juliet


elders survive into the future whereas, in comedy,
it is the young and marriageable?
differ from Shakespeares Most of Shakespeares comedies turn on similar
questions of obedience to the law of the elders. The
comedies? heroine is confronted by patriarchal obstinacy a
law, a will of one kind or another, an obtuse failure
The premise of the Oscar-winning Shakespeare in on the part of the parent truly to see what is before
Love was that Romeo and Juliet began its life as a them: typical examples are Portia hemmed in by
comedy. The same idea has regularly occurred to the will of her dead fathers caskets in The
critics of the play, who identify a basically comic Merchant of Venice, or the escape into the forest
world until the moment when Mercutio is slain away from forbidding patriarchy in A Midsummer
and everything is suddenly doomed. Before that, Nights Dream and As You Like It. The womans
the argument goes, the action comes straight from resistance or exile is ours. This resistance speaks
comi-romantic clich: the hero and heroine, for everything that is intelligent, sensitive to
paragons of youth and hope and health, falling in feeling, in touch with necessary futures. Of course
love in defiance of foolishly censoring authority. the heroines of comedy are not perfect. They can
This view is well articulated by Susan Snyders The be foolish or ungenerous or too quick to judge. In a
Comic Matrix of Shakespeares Tragedies (1979): number of plays Shakespeare introduces heroines
who seem already suspicious of male appetite, and
Comedy is organised like a game... Romeo and neurotically or violently defended against it. We
Juliet, young and in love and defiant of obstacles, see this with Katherina in The Taming of the
are attuned to the basic movement of the comic Shrew, Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing,
game toward marriage and social regeneration. But Isabella in Measure for Measure. But in these cases

12 13
just as much as the others, the stories revolve of the comedies but more profoundly than the
around freedom of choice and overcoming false above descriptive summaries allow. For the crucial
repression, whether internal or external. Where point is that in the comedies we always know the
there is a resolution, it hinges upon the heroine ending before we begin. We know it the whole
discovering, however surprisingly or accidentally, way through; the ending is immanent in every
her free choice in love. The infamously difficult moment. Now, there may be interesting questions
ending of Measure for Measure when the Duke about exactly what the ending of a comedy is:
mugs the silent Isabella with a sudden marriage betrothal or marriage, yes, but on what or whose
proposal is unsettling partly because we cannot terms, and with what kind of promise, is often
know what degree of choice Isabella has in the open to doubt. Do we return to the beginning, with
matter, but also because we have had no choice in everything in due patriarchal order, as though the
it either. The story has not established the Duke exciting experiments of the plot never were? Or
and Isabella as potential lovers; there is no build- do we perhaps nod along with the tidy ending,
up of desire or expectation which the ending can whilst identifying the real promise in the new
finally satisfy. For all comedys sometimes carnival possibilities that the heroines discovered before
exuberance, its satisfactions depend upon tight logic, this formal return to the fold?
publicly verified unions, and the agreed granting of Either way, the ending in a comedy
permission by both characters and audience. togetherness and survival, a survival premised
So how do these examples differ from Romeo upon a workable, fertile union between young men
and Juliet? Is it simply that conventional comedies and women is present and at work in every
allow a reconciliation of desire and authority, and moment of the play, implicitly directing our
Romeo and Juliet does not? That the comedies responses as we cheer on or laugh with or fear for
show authorities learning from their mistakes and the parties. This means that desire, in
unlike Romeo and Juliet the lovers surviving to Shakespearean comedy, is always directed toward
enjoy the benefit? Or that, again unlike Romeo and the social world, something shareable and
Juliet, the betrothal that celebrates desire is public surviving. This does not preclude stark carnality,
rather than secret, and therefore capable of growth? any more than it does deceit. But such things are
These things are true, but they do not explain counters in a plot, characterising this character or
anything. The answer does lie, I think, in how that moment. The main thing is that life goes on
Romeo and Juliets ending differs from the endings for all of us, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in

14 15
health. The closing betrothal is really a way of
At a glance: how Shakespeare
saying just this. changed his source
As Samuel Johnson said back in the 18th
century, Shakespeares natural bent was probably ARTHUR BROOKES
for comedy. But he knew, always, that comedy is T R A G I CA L L H I S T O RY E SHAKESPEARES
evasive. He knew that there is something just a OF ROMEUS AND ROMEO AND JULIET
little, if not depressing, then de-adrenalising about JULIET
the conventional comic ending. It is satisfying, no
Mercutio...hardly figures
doubt, to see the warring lovers united, or mistakes All we are told about him is that
Mercutio one of Shakespeares
rectified. But that is also the limitation. It seems to he has cold hands
most extraordinary creations
satisfy; we have received what we came for. Comic
closure is a stopper upon the bottle of thought Romeo walks by Juliets house for This is concentrated into one
and, perhaps, of desire. The typical comedy shows a week or two in vain before he soliloquy, with Juliet already
the genie of restlessness roaming around, getting speaks to her. present.
away with what is usually accounted trouble but
After their exchange of marriage Between exchanging marriage
the end of the play has the genie back inside the vows, Romeo and Juliet go straight vows and sleeping together is a
bottle. Shakespeares comedies, however, are to Juliets room and sleep together. street fight, in which Mercutio
famous for not being entirely resolved; there is He hates the idea of leaving and Tybalt are murdered; sex is
always somebody that cannot or will not enter the his wife behind shadowed by death.
magic, conflict-dissolving circle. I have mentioned
Isabella in Measure for Measure, but even the Their love affair is two months
long... Brooke writes at length Their love affair only really lasts
happier endings have their refusers: Malvolio in
about their time together: the for a night
Twelfth Night, Don John in Much Ado About virgin fort hath warlike Romeo
Nothing, Shylock, of course, in The Merchant of got
Venice. Even A Midsummer Nights Dream ends
with one of the lovers, Demetrius, still deceived by The Friar gives exceedingly long
lectures, some of them 160 lines The Friar is not quite so long-
the love-potion into loving a besotted woman he
or more. winded
has always loathed.
All of this points to something conditional
The Nurse calls Juliet a wyly Juliet is never called such
about the satisfaction that these comedies deliver. wench moved by lust things by anyone, and we are
not asked to judge her for it
16 17
Shakespeare never lets the possessors (of grace,
love etc.) simply get away with it. He knows that the
resolution is partly a lie. He knows that marriage
can neither contain nor harness the energies that
have propelled the action of the play. Marriage
settles the desire, as a lagoon or reservoir might
gather the overflowing turbulence of sea. But it is
also only marriage, and will not bear too much
scrutiny. If Shakespeare had wanted to explore
marriage he would have entered a different genre
entirely, the cuckold comedy beloved of many
of his contemporaries. But the daily business of
marriage was always something the great man
preferred to keep at a distance.
The satisfactions of comedy-desire are
essentially prudential. They speak of prudent
negotiation, artful turning away, a willingness not
to insist upon too much. If we look for a future
these endings dissolve before our eyes. For what in
fact are we celebrating at the end of a comedy? Not
the serendipity of meeting, or a workable union, or
the promise of a decent life, or future children, or
the good stock and generous community from
which the couples arise, or even hope the things
we might, on a generous construction, identify as
the theme of a wedding. Instead, in a comedy we
reach a kind of island, or dry land, where hunger is
for the moment simply agreed to be assuaged. But
hunger, of course, will return.
Opposite: Olivia Hussey as Juliet in Franco Zeffirellis 1968 film

18
Romeo and Juliet is different from this. There is a final punctuation mark or clearing of the stage.
nothing prudential about it. It is never an almost- Death is the experience and location of the two
comedy. The story is always mortgaged to death. lovers: it is the space of their love, as much as
The prologue tells us this, with its famous its destiny. This is something that operatic
introduction to the star-crossed lovers; so does translations of the story know very well. In
the famous title; so does the simple fact that it is a Berliozs version the lovers words and passion are
Tragedy. But above all it is the fierce separateness turned into orchestral music rather than arias or
of Juliet, and Romeo in her wake, from the adult dialogue: their essence is to be beyond
social world that sends the play into orbits far individuality. Similarly, Wagners version of the
beyond the permissions of comedy. Any critical story, Tristan und Isolde, reaches its climax with
attempt to socialise the lovers is false. The American Isoldes Liebestod, her love-in-death song, which
scholar Coppelia Kahn sees the play being about can only happen once her beloved is dead. The
a pair of adolescents trying to grow up. Growing up consummation is absolute: the lovers die.
requires that they separate themselves from their In a fundamental sense that is what Romeo and
parents by forming with a member of the opposite Juliet are always doing. The pun to die
sex an intimate bond which supersedes filial meaning to have sex or experience orgasm was
bonds. This sounds very understanding, but one of the most hackneyed of all in Shakespeares
surely it is too much a normalising rationalisation, time. But Romeo and Juliet makes the pun come
offered as though to cheer up fearful parents (all true. That is the difference between this tragedy
kids act like this, dont worry). and any comedy. In comedy, a joke serves the
Jonathan Goldberg comments that at the end of situation, like a little accident. Likewise, in comedy
[Kahns] ideal trajectory lies the transformation of the marriage signifies forgetfulness, a sort of
the couple into its parents; what they rebel against is amnesiac continuation. In Romeo and Juliet
also what they become. These blandly descriptive everything is different: the marriage happens
sentences reek of prescriptiveness. Lets be clear: halfway through, and the lovers are forever trying
all kids do not act like Juliet and Romeo; and these to catch-up with its promise; they never joke about
lovers will never turn into anyones parents. And it sex, because its stakes are far too huge and close;
is just this that makes them so thrilling. nothing gets left behind; nothing is forgotten.
For, as we shall see, death is present in almost
every moment of this play. It is not simply an end,

20 21
T HE CRITICS ON R OMEO But he doesnt: it is Juliet speaking, very
deliberately,
He is himselfandonlyfor centuries theshe
in his Juliet; fact
is has caused
his only
Romeo has always had a worse press than Juliet, distress: the
reality, hismost scandalous
hearts true home obscenity
and idol. The usurps
rest of
usually because he is seen as a belated, derivative the place of that
the world is tovirgin
him apurity, as A. De Lamartine
passing dream.
figure, drawing his light and fire from some other protested in 1865. De Lamartines sense of
source (Petrarch, Mercutio, Juliet). His motions, personal affrontauthor
William Hazlitt, is understandable,
of The Characters much
of more so
therefore, are reactive, always in danger of being than attemptsPlays
Shakespeares to pretend
(1817) athat the speechaccount
comprehensive isnt of
either premature or belated. Here are three 19th- outrageous or to euphemise it by patronising
Shakespeare, play by play, which sold out within six weeks.
century views of him that put the Romeo problem appeals to adolescent energy or youthful
starkly but clearly: impatience
The woman(as though to say
who gives upsheherdoesnt knowto
whole being
whatLoveshe rises
means) aboveor the
even ecstasy,
weakness with
of her sexitsto the
I consider Romeo designed to represent the suggestion of out-of-body
dignity and heroism of aexperience.
purely human And it is the
ideality;
character of an unlucky man perpetually so surelymanbetter
to whom thatLove
the audience
becomes feel theaim
the one offenceof life,
unfortunate as to fail in every aspiration, and, while thanswallowing
for the offending passages
up all else, resignsto be cut,with
himself as they
riven
How does Shakespeare
exerting himself to the utmost in their behalf, to still sails
oftenandarewithout
in productions
helm to thetoday.
storm. Fallen away

show Juliets erotic


involve all whom he holds dearest in misery and
ruin.
We
and the
might
from
theunhandsome
compare thelaw
the fundamental
madness of Ophelias
mad
appearance
speech
of his
songs
being,
of allin
byheJuliet
Hamlet,
that is
presents

longing? withdiscordant
their unwonted bawdy and hints of repressed
and contradictory...
...when looking on the timeless tomb of Romeo, longings. But Juliets speech is different it isnt
From
and the momentthe
contemplating sheshort
commits tocareer
and sad her passion, fractured
F. Kreyszig, and1859 nostalgic,
(Variorum but rip-roaringly hungry,
459)
there is a primal
through which hedemonism in Juliet,
ran, we cannot helpreckless,
recollecting racing into commission of the longed-for act. The
violent, and strangely
his mourning carnivalesque.
words over Her big
his dying friend, and Kreyszigs
sexual puns rise critique
thick andsounds
fast,old-fashioned,
as though frombut it
soliloquy
suggest inas Act Three, Scene
an inscription over Two is the key of
the monument does point
suddenly to something
awoken that half-cripples
flesh, a flesh that speaks through Romeo
speech here, when
the luckless she is impatiently awaiting the
gentleman, as a would-be transcendent hero.
her, that has taken her tongue hostage. But she For it speaks
night to come and her marriage to be volumes
intends about
every the social pressure on men to be
word:
consummated.
I THOUGHT Many readers
ALL FOR may
THEhave
BEST. wished men,the
From to please
moment their
shefellow
commitsmenfolkto herbefore
passion, all
that Shakespeare had used some old-fashioned there is a primal demonism in Juliet, reckless,their
others, to take their cues from them, govern
device of
William soul-struggle,
Maginn, such
the colourful as the good
contributor of theand bad passions
violent, and asstrangely
they govern society, to not
carnivalesque. HerletbigdownThe
angel in herPapers
Shakespeare ear, causing Juliet
to Charles to ventriloquise
Dickens Bentleys all soliloquy in Act Three, Scene Two is the key his
the boys. Of course Romeo tries to advertise
the things she could never have dreamed of saying.
Miscellany freedom
speech from
here, whenthe gang.
she isBut he is always
impatiently called back.
awaiting

22 23
Why is Romeo introduced the scene truly has changed.
to us indirectly? Madam, an hour before the worshippd sun
Peerd forth the golden window of the east
The first scene displays the infantile boastfulness A troubled mind drive me to walk abroad
of Veronas men. Every move is programmed, as Where underneath the grove of sycamore
though pre-scripted, and then laboriously brought That westward rooteth from this city side
forth. The violence too is belated, and fatally So early walking did I see your son.
detached from true will or purpose. The brawl Towards him I made, but he was ware of me,
seems to be no more than an extension of And stole into the covert of the wood.
compulsory male boredom, or libidinal I, measuring his affections by my own,
competitiveness. This is true of all of them: the Which then most sought where most might not
slow-witted servants who first enter; the two be found,
patriarchs, buzzing with frustrated male rage Being one too many by my weary self,
like two maddened wasps, held back and drily Pursud my humour, not pursuing his,
mocked by their wives; even the earnest Benvolio, And gladly shunnd who gladly fled from me. [1.1]
as he tells anyone who cares to listen of his own
lonely melancholy. Shakespeare gives us here a new scene inside
It is clear that the public world of Verona is the physically present one a new place (the
selfish and violent, ruled by vanity and private woods to the west of Verona), an earlier time
grudges. We might think that this is a world (before dawn, threatened by the sun in the east),
requiring the outlet of soliloquy, with its clarity and a very particular Romeo. It is important that
and immediacy. We know that Romeo has not we are introduced to this Romeo before any other.
taken part in the affray. It would therefore have There is as yet nothing to contradict this image,
been the easiest thing to introduce Romeo alone, nothing to disabuse us of the impressions it gives
speaking his sincerities as a blessed corrective or of the trust that it elicits. In this it is like the
to all the nonsense. But Shakespeare does not early allusion to young Hamlet, before he
do this. Instead, our first sight of Romeo comes actually appears, ripe with promise to bring
through the report of his cousin Benvolio.
Suddenly we are in an entirely different world N.B. All quotations are taken from Arden Shakespeares 1980 edition

24 25
clarity to the ghostly night. feel protective towards him. It as if, at this point, he
But Romeo is not absent only from us. He also is no more than a myth, he has a potential that is
escapes from Benvolio. Romeo appears to us, then, not quite chartered by available agendas or social
in the form almost of a furtive hind, fleeing from grids. If Romeo had acknowledged Benvolio in the
pursuers into the perilous safety of the wood. He is woods, it would be as though to say we are alike.
glimpsed but not heard; he explains nothing. What The effect would be to blunt any edge of newness
we see, then, is Romeo turning away, or Romeo and danger, assure all and sundry that there is
askance, like a mask, or a face half-hidden. The nothing to fear in Romeos un-at-homeness, for he
hints of the hunt make him close to us, protected will return. This, of course, is exactly what his first
by us. The sense that he is being hunted makes us conversation with Benvolio does, with all of its
shared bonhomie and second-hand conceits. But
in this first glimpse of Romeo, his refusal of
form of showing off, not to
be trusted, another vein of exposure or recognition establishes an integrity
male competitiveness: hence that male camaraderie, with its habitual
his need to reassert his wish coarsening of emotional singularity, cannot touch.
to be alone in the face of Montague soon augments Benvolios report
Romeos rejection. But
B EN VOL I O Shakespeare surely knows with similar fancies, casting the hero as a restless
that we dont particularly spirit of nature:
According to the well- care about Benvolio, neither
known type of the heros here nor later. He only exists Many a morning hath he there been seen,
loyal confidante, Benvolio to shade, accompany, or
should be merely the bearer question Romeo (or With tears augmenting the fresh mornings dew,
of news about Romeo. But elsewhere Mercutio). Adding to clouds more clouds with his deep
he attempts to be the Shakespeares interest is in sighs;
subject of his news as well. representing a layered social But all so soon as the all-cheering sun
So, prone to an unexplained world, in which even private
troubled mind, and then motives are borrowed and Should in the farthest east begin to draw
revising his story halfway imitative. Benvolios The shady curtains from Auroras bed,
through, he is exposed as self-excuses are another Away from light steals home my heavy son
hopelessly self-interested, example of unearned And private in his chamber pens himself,
even in his claim to be one emotion, passion with no
too many even by my weary source but infectious, Shuts up his windows, locks fair daylight out
selfe. Even melancholy is a affected manners.w And makes himself an artificial night. [1.1]

26 27
play itself, Shakespeare does not shy away from
In introducing Romeo, Shakespeares aim is not Romeo at all. He lets him converse at length and
naturalistic description or even character- reveal himself as utterly symptomatic of the
consistency. Images are speaking through Romeos corrupted social world. Everyone wills, everyone
cousin and father, rather than being spoken by wants, but inauthentically: their terms are
them. Shakespeare is laying the groundwork for borrowed, or unearned. Here we might think of
myth. The pictures work a little like dumbshows, Rene Girards theory of mimetic desire:
distilling ideals and predicting what shall happen.
They articulate a promise that we wait for Romeo To say that our desires are imitative or mimetic
fully to inhabit. is to root them neither in their objects [the one
desired] nor ourselves [the one desiring] but in a
What do we make of third party, the model or mediator, whose desire we
imitate in the hope of resembling him or her.
Romeos first appearance?
Accordingly, Romeos speech is hackneyed,
It is crucial to how the play works that Romeo imitative, and evading of true humanity. His
should only come true, as it were, upon meeting love-paradoxes are no less boastful, no less slow
Juliet. And so it is that when first we actually meet and static, than the banalities of the servants
him he is not fully present. He fails completely to before the fracas: O heavy lightness, serious
live up to the image we have of the glimpsed figure vanity, Feather of lead, bright smoke, cold fire,
in the wood; instead of the outsider at odds with sick health. Shakespeare is laying it on pretty
his world we see someone behaving and talking thick here, advertising how much his hero is in
like the conventional spurned lover. hock to romantic poetic clich, and specifically the
Productions sometimes deal with Romeos 1590s vogue for love sonnets established by Queen
disappointing first scene by radically cutting it Elizabeths cousin, Sir Philip Sidney, with his
hinting at his disaffection but leaving Benvolio sonnet sequence Astrophel and Stella. To the
and indeed the audience still waiting for an extent that Romeos words mean anything more
explanation. He is lovelorn and enigmatic and than the fact of such imitation, they ironically
suitably heroic. This is the solution, for instance, of describe him: his fire is cold, his health sick, his
both the Zeffirelli and Luhrmann films. But in the vanity very serious, a true misshapen chaos of

28 29
wellseeming forms. That Shakespeare has got How is Juliet introduced?
Romeos vanity in his sights is made very clear by
his comical self-forgetfulness immediately after he Scene Two has Juliet introduced, just as Romeo
has first confessed his love (for Rosaline as yet was introduced in Scene One. Again, she is not
unnamed) and pondered philosophically upon its given to us directly. We hear her by report. She is
tyranny: being bargained for Paris has a suit to marry her,
and her father is, initially at least, reluctant to hand
Alas that love whose view is muffled still her over. She is only 13, and all his other children
Should without eyes see pathways to his will. have died. Paris asks him, But now my Lord, what
Where shall we dine? [1.1] say you to my suit? cutting to the chase and
Capulet replies:
He sounds like one of Bassanios rich mates in
The Merchant of Venice, tasting the trials of love But saying oer what I have said before
like he might a nice little aperitif. All pleasures [telling us to listen]
here are evacuated, integrities mortgaged to the My child is yet a stranger in the world,
compulsory ideology; all passion is etiolated, like a She hath not seen the change of fourteen years [1.2]
sick and colourless hothouse plant. We seem to be
given a world that derives from elsewhere, full of Paris protests that Younger than she, are happy
hollow men echoing clichs, sourced in a common mothers made, to which Capulet responds, And
pond that everyone has already fished. We are left too soone mard are those so early made. He
waiting for the real thing, for real fire rather than rhymes, but the perfection of the rhyme (made/
the sick health of Romeo, Sampson, Tybalt, and made) is not calming. The word made seems too
the already-ineffectual patriarchs (prince and easy to say, too glib in Pariss mouth: made, after
parents). We are waiting, of course, for Juliet. all, is no neutral word. In repeating it Capulet
insists on the words possibilities: it might mean
deflowered; it might pun on the loss of maid-
enhood, and so the violent paradox of a mother
and a maid; more centrally, made means
finished, completed, done. With this Capulet
returns to the point so delicately suggested by My

30 31
Child is yet a stranger in the world: Earth hath
swallowed all my hopes but she,/Shes the hopeful
Lady of my earth, before abruptly shifting, with
But woo her gentle Paris... into a long sequence
of couplets consenting to the match, if Juliet
approves, and announcing the ball that may
facilitate it. The 22 line, 11 couplet sequence
escapes entirely from inwardness and pain and
even memory. We return to the social world, to
externals and expediency that is, to the world we
saw in the opening duels and banter. Juliet, in this
world, is nothing more than an object for the eye,
one among many (hear all, all see:/And like her Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio in Baz Luhrmanns 1996 Romeo+Juliet

most, whose merit most shall be). She is not


essentially present at all. new arrival? Where is she going?
But there is more than one story going on here, But if this un-named she is somehow un-at-
and the public narrative drive is not necessarily the home in this world, she is also the powerfully
one we most cherish. Capulet has already given us necessary agent of any hope or redemption: Earth
an image of Juliet that like our glimpse of Romeo hath swallowed all my hopes but she,/Shes the
in the wood is powerfully separate from the hopeful Lady of my earth, says her father. She
mundane, male-directed imperatives all around. seems to take up the promise of those who are
In this image, Juliet is delicate, vulnerable, buried, but then she is equally of the buried
unfinished: my Child is yet a stranger in the element. Capulets earth is only tenuously above
world. She is like someone from a Coleridge or ground: it is premised on premature death,
Wordsworth ballad, the Child or Stranger, bringing specifically on childrens death. It is this that she is
knowledge from elsewhere but unfit for here and the Lady of, as though a visitant from elsewhere,
now. The sense is that she has been initiated into a Queen of the endless night. Taken in this way, as
mysteries; she is of some other substance or a stranger in the world, Juliet is a refugee from
material to other mortals; she is constitutionally these other realms. She is only visiting, she will not
homeless. Where is she from, we might ask, this stay among us long. For of course this introduction

32 33
is ominous. She will soon appear, but only to And she was weand I never shall forget it
disappear. Juliet is as fated to die by this introduction Of all the days of the year upon that day
as Romeo is by his. He goes to his coffin chamber; But as I said,
she is immediately consigned to earth. When it did taste the wormwood on the nipple
That she is not yet named is crucial to what Of my dug and felt it bitter, pretty fool,
Shakespeare is doing. Neither Capulet, Paris, nor To see it tetchy and fall out with the dug
of course Romeo, speak the name Juliet. The And since that time it is eleven years.
Juliet we await, then, both is and is not Capulets For then she could stand alond, nay, by
daughter and Pariss love-target. Romeos present throod,
beloved was likewise not named (it is only later She could have run and waddled all about;
that we hear of Rosaline). At this preparatory stage For even the day before she broke her brow,
in the play, Rosaline and Juliet are at once the And then my husband God be with his soul,
same person as ideals without names or faces A was a merry man took up the child,
and not the same person (as defined social Yea, quoth he, dost fall upon thy face?
individuals). Ideal images of love or integrity Thou wilt fall backward when thou hast more
are everywhere in the air, but also in danger of wit,
being traded away, whether by cheap second- Wilt thou not, Jule? And by my holidame,
hand conceits or the flesh market of male The pretty wretch left crying and said Ay.
entertainment. No one has yet arrived truly To see now how this jest shall come about. [1. 3]
to claim the ideal and bring it home. Still we
await Juliet. One effect of the Nurses garrulous nativity
But even when we actually see her, Juliet is still tales is, almost physically, to surround and
partially obscured by others. Juliets first scene is overwhelm Juliet. The Nurse lays claim to her
dominated by the Nurses long speeches about her nursing and, as though because of this, to her
as a baby: future. This allows Juliet no space beyond the
confines in which Nurse and Mother (more or less
But as I said, explicitly, depending on the production) fight for
On Lammas Eve at night shall she be fourteen. possession of the foundling. The inevitable effect
That shall she; marry, I remember it well. is to make us side with Juliet. Even if we relish the
Tis since the earthquake now eleven years, Nurses tale, we recognise its oppressiveness how

34 35
many times has Juliet been subjected to her own are really about. Everything predicts her
story! And here is her Mother, telling her to think independence from the home cradle the recoil
on marriage, as she herself had to, at 13 years of from the bitter drug; the precocious standing
age...* alone; the infantile running and waddling; her
In the midst of all this Juliet has but two brief parents absence in Mantua; the fall foreshadowing
lines, one begging for peace, the other resisting future experience; the earthquake that heralded
thoughts of marriage. Rather like our introduction her weaning; the jest that shall infallibly come
to Hamlet, silent in black amid the loquacious true. Her back-story, given here, suggests that she
finery of the Elsinore court, Juliet compels our has always been attended by forces beyond the
attention, our hungry sympathy, by the simple fact domestic; that she has long been moved by a
that Shakespeare doesnt give her words to speak. destiny that her carers observed but could never
Her elders presume to speak for her and we all understand. The real theme of the Nurses tale,
know that elders can never do this adequately. Of then, is not Juliets nursing, or her dependence, or
course we are fond of the little baby described by even her over-cosseted charm. It is the inevitability
the Nurse, weaned and waddling about. But this is of her leaving.
not what the Nurses speech, or Juliets first scene,
Why is Mercutio so
*Everett writes of the Nurses account of the earthquake:
Because the Nurse is stupid she stands outside of what she sees,
endowing [the events] with a curious objectivity... the events...
important?
detach themselves from her and animate themselves into a natural
history of human infancy. Confused and unjudged, earthquake and But still we havent truly found Juliet. And we
weaning interpenetrate in the past, sudden event with slow
process: the earthquake becomes necessary, a mere process of cannot do so until we meet someone dangerous
maturing, and the weaning of a child takes on magnitude and and new, someone who, I want to suggest, is more
terribilita, it shakes nature...The Nurses speech presents an image crucial even than Romeo in supplying the heroine
of Juliets past that happens to contain, or that contains with a
purpose, a premonitory comment on her future...Her speech with her energies. This is Mercutio the Princes
establishes a natural milieu in which earthquake and weaning, a kinsman, Romeos friend, and the greatest scene-
fall and a being taken up so balance that the ill effects of either are
of no importance; and in so far as what she says relates to the rest stealer in Shakespeare.
of the play, it helps to suggest that the same might be true of love According to Dryden, Shakespeare had to kill
and death. And there seems to be a peculiar echo of her procedure
in all the rhetorical doublings and repetitions of the play... if the off Mercutio because, if he had not, Mercutio
first was mere game, so may the second be. would have killed him. His wit is spellbinding, his

36 37
motives unspeakable, his mind and tongue so may be overcome, and roused by any deep feeling
quick that any fellow-feeling for others, or settling that is called forth to the most determined actions.
in an emotion or a relationship, are made to seem It is the pivotal act for the plot, leading in swift
almost retarded. In a sense, he was the most succession to Tybalts death, Romeos exile, and
potentially destructive character Shakespeare ever the impossibility of the lovers peaceful marriage.
created. Mercutio had to die, or not only this The doom is now publicly upon them. Mercutios
romantic tragedy, but Shakespeares own career as death thus heralds the plays decisive turn to
a sympathetic dramatist, might have been killed by tragedy. Put this way it can sound as though
a wit so cold and brilliant. Mercutio is merely a formal counter in the plot.
Mercutio enters the play as the young Any friend of Romeo would do; anything to set
Montague men head for the Capulet feast. But off the terrible chain reaction. Or, if this is to
from the start he is at a curious angle from the rest underplay Mercutios singular charms, then he is
of the action. He was not involved in the brawl and significant mainly in terms of the plays dominant
has no perspective on the city or its tensions. He is mood. For as long as he is around, the mood is
of neither family. He hasnt the slightest political light, and the social world of Verona holds sway.
interest. He is utterly detached from love. We Once he has gone, the lights go out, and the world
never see him alone. He never meets Juliet, never takes on the form, increasingly dark and macabre,
learns of Romeos love for her, and indeed never of the lovers desires. So we leave the streets of
speaks of her existence. He talks a lot, but always Verona, and enter the heady world of violent fancy,
in puns and usually in a way that flies far beyond night-time congress, morbid dreams, deathlike
the understanding and perhaps patience of his sleep, and living tombs.
hearers. Why is he here? But Mercutio is a far more pregnant figure he
For many readers and spectators, it seems, is far more pregnant with the play-world than
Mercutio is here simply to amuse and then to be this summary allows. This is so for two main
killed. It is a critical commonplace that Romeo and reasons. First, it is Mercutio who sets up this
Juliet turns upon his semi-accidental stabbing worlds literally dangerous understanding of
halfway through: in Coleridges words, on the language and sex, its uniquely intimate feeling for
Death of Mercutio the catastrophe depended, and heady minds and secret turbulence and explosive
it was produced by it; it served to show how privacy. Second, it is Mercutio who gives vent and
indifference and aversion to activity in Romeo breath to the passions passions that for all his

38 39
compulsive chatter with his friends cannot possibly degrading (Prick love for pricking and you beat
be socialised that it is Juliets purpose love down; this driveling love is like a great
to embody, channel, and canonise. natural that runs lolling up and down to hide
It is immediately clear that Mercutio poses a his bauble in a hole (2.4)), redeemed only if
powerful obstacle to the central story. Both the tales about it can be traded for laughter with his
Montague and Capulet parents are weak and stupid friends: O Romeo, that she were, O that she were/
and easily overcome next to him. He dominates An open-arse and thou a poperin pear (2.2, in
Romeos young male world. He is higher in class, which the repeated O signifies sexual groaning and
independent of family, geographically mobile, the O of the vagina). His is the negative sublime,
conversationally fearless. In some ways he leads turning awe and obsession into ridicule. It is not
Romeo and his friends; in others, he feeds off them; Rosaline who is Juliets true rival it is Mercutio.
more profoundly, he wants to pre-empt their going From the start Mercutio can be understood to
off and doing what young boys will do with young exist in a kind of rival play, a virtual thing that
girls: If love be blind, love cannot hit the mark. grows out of his witticisms. The best example of
(2.1) But he is also almost supernaturally this is his famous speech about the Queen of the
electrified. His wit is perhaps the most pathological Fairies, Mab. It is a classically Shakespearean
that Shakespeare ever scripted. He cannot help it construction, with conceits and fables tumbling
or, it sometimes seems, even control it: one out of another. In this speech Mercutio
supplies a rival version of love, creation, and the
Sure wit, follow me this jest, now till thou hast comic-tragic; a rival aesthetic to both Romeos
worn out thy pump, that when the single sole of it is borrowed lyricism and Juliets lucidity and
worn, the jest may remain after the wearing solely directness; and a rival idea of how the world can
singular. [2.4] be made and remade simply in the eyes of a lover.
It is essentially a tale of genesis, tracing the spirit
As he aptly says of himself: if our wits run the of desire and inception:
Wild-Goose chase, I am done. (2.4) His wit truly
is demonic, in the sense of a passion that possesses She is the fairies midwife, and she comes
him. Equally, his wit is obsessive, returning again In shape no bigger than an agate stone
and again to sex as its subject, and sex of a very On the forefinger of an alderman,
particular kind: aggressive, lonely, violating, Drawn with a team of little atomi

40 41
Over mens noses as they lie asleep. the speech prepares us subliminally for the plays
Her chariot is an empty hazelnut true child, Juliet.
Made by the joiner squirrel or old grub, But the speech, for all its childlike imaginative
Time out o mind the fairies coachmakers; brilliance, is also one of escalating violence. What
Her waggon-spokes made of long spinners legs, begins as an image of diminutive charm soon turns
The cover of the wings of grasshoppers, into an anatomised or brutalised body. Magnification
Her traces of the smallest spider web, becomes evisceration, promising nothing but a
Her collars of the moonshines watery beams, skeleton; or else he envisions nature as a rapidly
Her whip of crickets bone, the lash of film, enveloping web, as cells divide and sub-divide
Her waggoner a small grey-coated gnat, and conquer by various kinds of evacuation, or
Not half so big as a round little worm atrophy, or dismembering: wagon spokes made
Prickd from the lazy finger of a maid; of long spinners legs, a cover from the wings of
And in this state she gallops night by night grasshoppers, a whip from the bones of crickets. It
Through lovers brains, and then they dream of is little wonder that this torturous dream-vision
love; [1.4} soon mutates into an obscurely paranoid nightmare:

The vision is most obviously childlike: in its Sometime she driveth oer a soldiers neck
anthropomorphising of vegetable and insect life, And then dreams he of cutting foreign throats,
and in its magnifying quickening of a natural world Of breachers, ambuscados, Spanish blades,
usually thought too small to describe or too static Of healths five fathom deep; and then anon
to command interest. In this it is like an early Drums in his ear, at which he starts and wakes,
Disney cartoon, zooming into an ants nest or a And being thus frighted swears a prayer or two
crickets body and finding a microcosm of comic And sleeps again. [1.4]
possibilities. There is a fantastic power here, an
improvisatory creativity just beyond the grasp of Of course Mercutio is still busy enacting his
customary adult sensation. We might then show; it is a nice joke that the soldier should
understand Mercutio as being somehow infantile, swear a prayer. But there is a real feeling of peril
sustaining a tight connection to childhood fancy here, as though Mercutio has inadvertently lifted
and to a childs casual violence, as though in revenge the hatch upon his secret terrors a fear shown at
upon dozy and disappointing maturity. In this this point in Zeffirellis film by Mercutios sudden

42 43
and alarming distance from his friends. The rising
menace, and the clear intimacy of the soldier to
the speaker, shows the dream-vision moving closer
and closer to wakefulness. The volatility ceases to
be that of dream and becomes that of half-waking:
and so of an adulthood anxious to slide away
from memory and accountability and back
into intoxication.
Ultimately, Mercutios endlessly unfolding
conceit wants to wither down both significance
and experience. Pretending merely to offer an
entertainment to his friends, he reveals a
peculiarly lonely and even sadistic psycho-
pathology, in which super-soldering wit burns
itself up into cold and wintry exile. (It is suggestive
here that the sole hint of Mercutios nature in
Shakespeares source was that he had cold hands).
Mercutio tries to construct his own rival cosmos,
free from the pricks and disappointments of flesh
a parallel dimension in which metaphoric
language takes the place of bodies, action, and
motive. But his fantasy eventually turns into
exactly what he would escape misogyny and
physical disgust, the invisible seeds of life turned
ugly and malevolent:

That is that very Mab


That plaits the manes of horses in the night
And bakes the elf-locks in foul sluttish hairs,
Opposite: Queen Mab, Gustave Dor, (1832-1883)

44
Which, once untangled, much misfortune bodes. a kind of magical causal energy, half-blessing,
This is the hag, when maids lie on their backs, half-cursing all action performed in its wake.
That presses them and learns them first to bear, The moment Mercutio stops speaking, Romeo
Making them women of good carriage. [1.4] confesses that his mind misgives that the night
revels to which Mercutio is leading him shall
The fairy tale wagon with which the speech expire the term of a despised life. Already
began has mutated into the good carriage mercurially, as Mercutios name suggests Queen
of unwanted pregnancy, just as Mab has Mab is at work, the midwife of violence, turning
metamorphosed into a devilish succubus. desire into death.
Mercutios vision also clearly recalls the Nurses
husbands jest about Juliet falling backward
that is, having sex when she has more wit:
How does Mercutio
here, in Mercutios dystopian scene of genesis, is prepare us for Juliet?
the more wit that this earlier scene predicted.
The point to grasp is that Mercutio, through sheer It is a basic purpose of Mercutio at once to dazzle
imaginative force, has become a rival nurse, and us and tire us out, to seem to take us far from home
even midwife, to the tragic tale of the heroine. or from our comforts, and to make
One sign of this is that his vision carries clear us long for something simple, plaintive, and true,
maledictory force. As the critic Joseph A. Porter something we think we already know: and this
says, there is an effect of clairvoyance in known thing, of course, is true love. Shakespeare
everything Mercutio says and does; his visions and absolutely understands these feelings. He
curses work telepathically, and live beyond him in orchestrates and satisfies them, as Mercutios
others. Romeo begs him peace, peace, Benvolio hurly-burly garrulousness makes way for the
complains that his words blow us from ourselves, silent, gazed-upon wonder of Juliet. However, the
as though both are afraid of falling into the self- difference between them is only part of the story.
same vortex as their friend. And they are half-right Of course it is the violent contrast between
but Romeo is not being blown from himself but Mercutio and Juliet that will most immediately
strangely into himself, the vortex being the world strike home especially as this contrast plays with
of Mercutios fantasy, threatening to come Romeo, in terms of competing claims upon the
surreally true. Consequently, the speech generates heros attention. Here Mercutio has no chance.

46 47
The freshness of Juliets beauty suggests an Romeos interruption is indeed a kind of dagger,
incommensurably different creation from that of sending his friend precipitously into peace. And
Mab, just as Mercutios crabbed and prevented as such, it symbolically achieves exactly what his
homo-eroticism cannot compete with the fully actual death does a few scenes later Mabs good
possessed, full-frontal sensuousness of Juliet. carriage gives vent to Juliet: This is she. In the
That Mercutio is relatively so crippled telepathic logic of Shakespeares creation, she is
suffering the simple impossibility of satisfied or precisely the nothing of which Mercutio speaks:
even fully articulated desire is his personal nothing in the sense of a woman (the irresistible
tragedy. But as much as Juliet is Mercutios vagina-joke made various times in the play);
opposite, replacing sexual repulsion with delight, nothing in the sense that this imminent fairy
she is no less of a death-dealer than Mab. If queen has not yet come to be.
Mercutio is Juliets rival, she is also his inheritor. There is nothing haphazard about what
Once he dies, his astonishing diabolical energy is Shakespeare is crafting here. He is gestating Juliet,
passed as though by osmosis into her. He is killed, almost giving birth to her, all the time that Mercutio
in a very basic sense, for her. But what we need to spins his fantastical web. He miniaturises what the
see is that this osmosis is already at work in the play expands into tragedy. For as we shall see,
Queen Mab speech not least because, among there are compelling subterranean affinities
many things, it also enacts a rehearsal or between the rival fairy queens, Mab and Juliet:
premonition of Mercutios killing, struck down in they both redeem clichs and render creation
full hyper-comic flow: newly vital, swarming with unconsidered
possibilities; they both make words and passions
MERCUTIO come alive, as though for the very first time.
This is the hag, when maids lie on their backs, Furthermore, the two fairy queens share in the
That presses them, and learns them first to bear, driven remorselessness of their vocations, as
Making them women of good carriage: revealed in the action of the speeches and stories
This is she that render them: both pledged to the pitilessness
ROMEO of desire, and to the fact that it takes no prisoners
Peace, peace, Mercutio, peace. on the path to satisfaction; both aware of how the
Thou talkst of nothing. [1.4] coming alive of dreams is necessarily a coming into
mortality, into flesh as the end, in all senses, of sex.

48 49
Juliets private passions repeatedly imagine Why is Romeos first
dissevered bodies and ghastly death-in-life unions,
ultimately played out in a ghastly tomb. And yet it
glimpse of Juliet so
is not the macabre or even the fleshly that is the important?
final resting place of their companionship. Both of
them, Mab and Juliet, inhabit some space beyond The idea of Juliet as a kind of time-traveler, or
the mortal, so that all of their actions, as seen in delicate alien, is repeated when Romeo first lays
flesh, seem to be only traces of a far truer eyes upon her: What lady is that which doth
metaphysical domain, of which their visible lives enrich the hand/Of yonder Knight? Romeos
can give only tantalising witness and promise. response is characteristically ardent, lyrical, and
There are worlds elsewhere. conceit-ridden, but there is a change from the
Queen Mab showcases the terrors and narcissistic pseudo-paradoxes of before. His
charisma of a truly Shakespearean imagination. language has suddenly fastened upon a subject
This is why the speech is so celebrated, and why it of both recognition and wonder:
is never cut in performance: it is difficult to know
the speechs purpose in the story or relevance to O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright.
the speaker, but it is always clear that it is a It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night
masterpiece of creative improvisation. We seem to As a rich jewel in an Ethiops ear
be listening in to creation at its source, or to be Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear [1.5]
seeing it anew, like a god might, each secret
constituent magnified and weirdly manifest. This The terms of praise that Romeo uses are now
is the supercharged mind that creates worlds like intimately keyed in to Shakespeares deeper
Romeo and Juliet a mind and a vision that cannot purposes. This un-named lady teaches the
rest in what is merely apparent; that cannot help Torches to burn bright. Most immediately this
seeing what lies beneath; that cannot resist looking invokes the torches at the night-mask. She gives
so closely at beauty that it begins to look like the event, designed to identify and rank beauty, its
horror. Mercutios x-ray vision is the plays. model to imitate. The torches are also bearers or
symbols of desire, the hopeful fire that carries the
masquers through the evening. But Juliet does
more than light the sensual flame. The secret is in

50 51
Shakespeares alliterations. She teaches, and the S IX KEY Q U O TES
teaching becomes a torch; she torches, and in that


teaches. Similarly, she burns, and the burning is
bright; she is bright, and the brightness burns. We
Whats in a name? that which we call a rose
By any other word would smell as sweet.
can feel her heat, at source, as the alliteration Juliet [2.2]
discharges a physical transference that works like



touch, or even impregnation. The words produce  O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright.
each other in such a way that everything is at once It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night
a noun, an adjective, and a verb: in other words, a As a rich jewel in an Ethiops ear
quality moving with life. Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear!
Romeo [1.5]
The conceits that herald Juliet never simply
dress her, in the way of language as ornament.
They never simply compare her to some already-
known superlative. They produce her, and she
He jests at scars that never felt a wound.

But, soft, what light through yonder window breaks?
It is the east and Juliet is the sun.
produces them: It seems she hangs upon the Romeo [2.2]



cheek of night,/As a rich Jewel in an Ethiops ear.
O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?
We sense immediately that Romeo is the first truly
Deny thy father and refuse thy name.
to recognise her as being from elsewhere, as not Or, if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love,
being home, as far from the habitual as is And Ill no longer be a Capulet
imaginable. Juliet [2.2]
This is suggested by the exotic Ethiop, but more
subtly by Romeos curious placing of her. For it is
telling that this hanging upon the cheek of night


A plague o both your houses!
Mercutio [3.1]


completes a couplet: O she doth teach the torches
Give me my Romeo; and when I shall die
to burn bright:/It seems she hangs upon the cheek Take him and cut him out in little stars.
of night. The Ethiops ear only comes in at the
And he will make the face of heaven so fine
end of the next line, contributing to a quite That all the world will be in love with night,
different couplet. The image we remember is this And pay no worship to the garish sun.
one: she hangs upon the cheek of night. In this Juliet [3.2]
image she does not hang from anything (like an

52 53
ear), but upon the cheek. She defies gravity, with its names and institutions. In other words, she
magically suspended; there is no source for the is essentially at odds with the clocks. Her time is
hanging, or none but herself. She is self-sufficient, no one elses. When she enters into passion her
a mini-world in herself. But Juliet makes worlds love for Romeo, the torch burning bright she
as much as embodies them. simply re-makes night or day as her own property.
Words here are not so much describing as And if the premise is absolute, so must be the
ushering possibilities into motion. As the torch consequences. She has to burn up, because the
that burns bright, Juliet precedes even the sun; as given world cannot accommodate her. But as much
the sole bright white pearl on the cheek of night, as she will pass from these houses, she will not
she makes the sunless sky her own. In either case, finally pass away, because she must return to
without her before or after her there is absolute where she has come from the world of original
darkness. This makes Juliet far more than a primal energy. This is a crucial source of the plays
flame, more than a source of life or a model of remarkable imaginative afterlife.
beauty. For if torches is Juliets personal verb as
well as an objective noun she torches then it
reinforces the literally consummating suggestion What is it that makes the
of burn. Such radiance cannot last; it is premised
on expiring. She will end, but so will the world of
balcony scene so
which she is the animating spirit. When she is gone memorable?
and it is already certain she will go the world
will be dull, grey, passionless, lukewarm, even as it The scene on the balcony is the most celebrated
survives into the bone-coloured day. in the play perhaps the most famous scene in all
Romeos praise establishes the first principles of drama. It grabbed the attention from the very
of Juliets presence. She is more autochthonous (of start. The vogue for Romeo and Juliet was clearly
earth and origins) than anyone else in the play, at its height in the last years of the century, leading
because more intimately conspiring with the to the rash of parodies and/or tributes in 1600-01
matter that exists before names and orders. But if such as in Ben Jonsons Poetaster (1601) and
she is this matter kinetic, flushed through with Marstons The Insatiate Countess (performed in
energy she will necessarily only be a kind of 1610 but probably first scripted ten years earlier).
visitor to anyone elses world, the punctual world The parodies tell us much about Romeo and

54 55
Juliets reception and repetition, repeatedly by Romeos attention to simple physical presence
exaggerating the same few things. But what of Juliets body so close, her shining eyes, the voice
the original? about to speak, and above all her cheek, already
The balcony scene begins with a soliloquy from hanging in the plays air as the mysterious epitome
Romeo. The speech is amusing and intimate, as of beauty. The tension comes from her proximity.
Romeo, unseen by anyone but ourselves, watches That she may overhear him as he can overhear her;
Juliet emerge from her upper window. Whereas that she may see him as he sees her; that she hasnt
before Shakespeare was giving Romeos words a yet done so, but he and we wish she would, though
depth-charge which exceeded the speakers simple perhaps not quite yet... The tension is exquisite
purpose of praise, here Romeo speaks with the and, inevitably, erotic.
careful, explicatory detail of clear intention: It is It is suggestive that cheek is Juliets cue-word,
the East, and Juliet is the Sun,/Arise fair Sun and and that it is spoken twice earlier in the speech
kill the envious Moon... Of course his metaphors inviting Juliet to enter early with repeated sighs of
of sun, moon, and heaven are conventional but Ay me. This reinforces the most obvious effect of
they escape convention, or rather validate it, the speech, which is to suspend us in desire to hear
precisely because they are a coming-true of what Juliet properly speak, as herself, free from the
we have already glimpsed and treasured: barriers that so far have inhibited her (with Nurse
and Mother, obviously) but also in her first
Two of the fairest stars in all the heaven, surprised meeting with Romeo, when she was
Having some business, do entreat her eyes forced to hide behind the masked charade of
To twinkle in their spheres till they return. Pilgrims hands and Saints prayers.
What is her eyes were there, they in her head? And now, at last, Juliet truly speaks. It is no
The brightness of her cheek would shame those accident that this moment also heralds the most
stars famous line in the play: O Romeo, Romeo,
As daylight doth a lamp. Her eyes in heaven wherefore art thou Romeo? This is the first full
Would through the airy region stream so bright line spoken by Juliet to herself. The line can be
That birds would sing and think it were not hard to think about because it is so well-known.
night. [2.2] But it does contain a puzzle or two. The line is
often misheard or misinterpreted, so as to mean
But the speech is at the same time kept honest where is Romeo? (rather than why or with what

56 57
dire consequences he is named Romeo). There The simple visual irony of the scene certainly begs
may be some performative explanations for this the question. After all, Romeo is right there, but
it is likely that an actor will stress the first syllable, she doesnt know it, and already we assume that
where, perhaps swallowing or eliding fore. she longs, as he does, for the beloveds human
Either way it is likely that Shakespeare recognised presence.
the potential ambiguity; he might have written The second puzzle is that Juliet bemoans his
why instead of wherefore. However, he doesnt, Christian name rather than what by rights she
and this allows us legitimately to infer the question should be cursing, which is the surname he shares
we feel sure she is thinking, even if it is concealed with the rest of the Montagues. But the
in a different question: where art thou, Romeo? explanation is clear: Romeo is so much more

Marstons Jack Drums same thing the satiric (4.10. 1-8).


Entertainment (1600) intelligence. Jonsons parody is
mockingly sugars the Ben Jonsons parody of rooted in distaste for clich.
language of ardour to the balcony scene in Here she is, another
saccharine excess. And of Poetaster (1601) is a case in besotted lover, on another
course the tradition has point. The Emperor balcony, and how
T H E B A LCO N Y gone on. But what was it that Augustuss daughter, Julia, inconvenient that, yet again,
S CE N E seems to have made the enters above at her the absence of a staircase
scene so immediately chamber window and calls should so frustrate the
In the years after Romeo and iconic? These days, the out Ovid? My love?, to course of true love! Jonson
Juliet the popular stage scene is mainly celebrated which he replies, in a stock is also getting a hit in against
witnessed a series of as one of simple, ardent, romantic conceit, Here, Shakespeares Juliet. Who
parodies of the balcony young love, precious partly heavenly Julia. quibbles over words in a
scene, a sure sign of instant as a kind of primal romantic Immediately Julia begins love scene, as Juliet does
fame. Henry Porters Two scene (spawning a million quibbling over their with her rose is a rose.
Angry Women of Abingdon imitations), partly as a fresh, situation: Here? And not Shakespeare simply cannot
(1598) and Thomas as yet un-disappointed here? Oh, how that word keep to decorum! Jonsons
Dekkers Blurt, Master expression of hope, truth, doth play/With both our parody makes the whole
Constable (1607) both faith, and delight. This fortunes, differing like balcony scene absurd and
replace the scenes already- alone, perhaps, is easily ourselves;/Both one, and tasteless witness Julias
famous love lyricism with mocked, especially by the yet divided, as opposed:/I desperate imprecation to
frank bawdy punning; John disappointed or much the high, thou low, and so on enjoy me amply still.w

58 59
intimate to Juliet than Montague could ever be. Juliets is an answering call for Romeo answering
The sound of his name is beautiful to her, the more Romeos desire, our desire, and the now-redundant
so in English with its adjacent sighs (oh) separated desires of Romeos friends.
only by the personal pronoun (me). The relatively The conversation that follows is remarkable for
tinny and adult Montague could not remotely how it is at once a miracle of hearts meeting, and
perform this function. As it is, Ro-me-o, thrice- almost completely dictated, in its ebbs and spurts,
spoken, gathers a charge of eroticised wordplay by Juliet. Romeos speeches are all in essentials
(preparing for her ecstatic punning on the wedding identical. He is in love, carried by it as though by
night). The result is that one sense her ostensible an ideal made manifest; all of the world, in his eyes,
rejection of the name is subverted by another: shall collude in this love, and so he indiscriminately
her powerful feeling for the name. harnesses metaphors from the worlds abundance
For Romeo, as the title declares and everyone as vows or vehicles of his passion. There is no
already knows, is the only name that belongs with doubt or mystery in the cues the actor gets, no
Juliet. Indeed Juliet almost conjures with the questions left hanging in the cues he gives Juliet.
name here, as though calling upon his spirit to His target is there to be aimed at, and aim he does.
appear by the simple charm or incantation of her Juliet is written very differently. She keeps
repetitions. Here as elsewhere, Shakespeare gives shifting register speaking very plainly and
to Juliet the prestige of making things come true. insisting on plainness in return; risking all with
So, her conjuring with Romeos name follows sudden confessions; moving unpredictably and
immediately upon Mercutios mock conjuring, often ambiguously between self-address and direct
immediately before this scene, of the wrong address to Romeo; leaping into rapturous
mistress, Rosaline (I conjure thee by Rosalines exclamations which, achieved with difficulty,
bright eyes... Scarlet lip... Quivering thigh,/And the follow upon the convolutions of her nervous fear
Demeanes, that there Adjacent lie), which itself (fain would I dwell on form, fain, fain, deny/What
followed hard upon Benvolios desperate call for I have spoke... Or if thou thinkest I am too quickly
Romeo, my Cozen Romeo, Romeo. Shakespeare won...). When she first speaks unguardedly,
is setting up symmetrical or answering scenes, as Juliets language is strikingly simple. She wants to
he often does in this play, whereby a false call (or start from the ground up, from the evidence of
name, or praise, or lament) is succeeded by the what is before her, free from the tyranny of any
true one. Understood in this simple scenic sense, kind of proper nouns:

60 61
Tis but thy name that is my enemy: T.S. Eliot, hearing the balcony exchange as a
Thou art thyself, though not a Montague. textured musical pattern, calls this the dominant
Whats Montague? It is nor hand nor foot phrase of the whole duet, as though its central
Nor arm nor face nor any other part theme is sung for the first time pure and entire.
Belonging to a man. [2.2] And certainly at such moments her speech can
seem astonishingly simple, not borrowed at all,
Juliets words are very close to her, intimate to despite its unoriginality. It is original in a more
her emergent sensuality: My ears have yet not profound sense.
drunk a hundred words/Of thy tongues uttering, Jacques Derrida writes of the terrible lucidity
yet I know the sound. In emphasising the sound of Juliet and it is almost always she who has the
and not the meaning, she returns to the passion truest words for the occasion:
with which, apparently contrary to semantics, she
repeated her Romeos name, so clearly relishing I have no joy of this contract tonight:
the feel of the sounds in her mouth. Likewise, the It is too rash, too unadvisd, too sudden,
sensory confusion here (ears drinking) is not so Too like the lightning, which doth cease to be
much malapropism as a kind of category-eluding Ere one can say It lightens. [2.2]
synaesthesia. All her senses blend into a single
excitement. This is consistent with her basic Eliot calls lightning the plays key-word,
purpose in the play, to see through, or exist before, because significant of the sudden and disastrous
the divisions which artificially separate experience power of her passion. But the significance is
from enjoyment. more than this. This passion is indeed too like the
Her speech gathers a joyful, foundational lightning. She is left in or as the lightning, and in
irresistibility that Romeos more habitual the portentous darkness that succeeds it, waiting
rhapsodies never quite achieve: for the crash, and in the condition of beholding an
astonishing experience, outside it as much as in it.
But to be frank and give it thee again; Partly, of course, Juliets prescient simile
And yet I wish but for the thing I have. anticipates how short-lived this contract will be,
My bounty is as boundless as the sea, over almost before it has begun. But she is also
My love as deep: the more I give to thee acknowledging a passion that makes her
The more I have, for are infinite [2.2] consciously feel her inability to muster the words

62 63
3.
T E N FACT S A Midsummer Nights Dream, also written
AB OUT ROMEO A N D JU L IET around 1595, may parody Romeo and Juliet in
the entertainment performed by Bottom and
friends before the court. In this burlesque
1. interlude, the young lovers, Pyramus and Thisbe,
At least 20 operas have been based on Romeo and are separated by a vile wall. They attempt to
Juliet. The earliest is Georg Bendas Romo und elope, but Pyramus, mistakenly thinking Thisbe
Julie (1776), and the best-known Gounods Romo has been killed, commits suicide, whereupon
et Juliette. Berliozs Romeo et Juliette, a Thisbe stabs herself in despair: This is the silliest
symphonie dramatique for mixed voices, chorus stuff I ever heard, declares Hippolyta.
and orchestra, premiered in 1839. Tchaikovskys
Romeo and Juliet Fantasy-Overture, a long 4.
symphonic poem, has the best known theme. Romeo and Juliet has been filmed more than any
The most famous ballet is by Prokofiev. It was other Shakespeare play except Hamlet, and in
commissioned by the Kirov Ballet, but it was more languages 61 times since 1900. The earliest
rejected by them, first because Prokofiev film (1902) was followed by a number of other
attempted a happy ending, and then because silent films including one from Italy (1911), the
the music was too experimental. first to use Veronese locations.
2. 5.
Romeo and Juliet is one of the first Shakespeare Franco Zeffirellis 1968 film starred a 15-year-old
plays to have been performed outside England: a Olivia Hussey as Juliet. Zeffirelli had to get
shortened, simplified version was performed in the special permission from the Italian censors for
Bavarian town of Nrdlingen in 1604. Later, Hussey to appear in the nude wedding night scene.
Goethes version of 1811 would hold the Berlin She wasnt legally able to attend the London
stage until 1849. Unusually, he cut Queen Mab; premiere of the film because she was under 18
more prophetically, he also cut the final and the film contained a nude scene.
reconciliation.
6. 9.
There is a municipal organization in Verona As with all Shakespeares plays, Romeo and Juliet
dedicated to replying to the thousands of love- has been repeatedly adapted and changed to suit
struck correspondents who write each year to contemporary tastes. The prime example of this is
Juliet asking for her blessing. David Garricks great 18th-century adaptation.
First performed in 1748, it held the stage for nearly
7. a century. Garrick trimmed comic passages, and
The play has inspired much popular music, removed bawdy ones. Juliet wakes before Romeo
including Elvis Costellos Mystery Dance, The Juliet is dead, and Garrick added 75 lines of pathetic
Letters, Dire Straits Romeo and Juliet and Romeo dialogue after Romeo takes the poison. In 1750,
had Juliette, from Lou Reeds 1989 album New due to audience demand, he also cut all references
York, as well as tracks by The Supremes, Bruce to Rosaline, as a blemish on Romeos character
Springsteen, Tom Waits and Radiohead. The play heroes should be ideally noble.
also inspired Leonard Bernstein and Stephen
Sondheims West Side Story, set in mid-1950s New 10.
York between the feuding Puerto-Rican Sharks Suicide occurs an unlucky 13 times in
and white working-class Jets. Shakespeares plays. It occurs in Romeo and Juliet
where both Romeo and Juliet commit suicide, in
8. Julius Caesar where both Cassius and Brutus die
In 1593 the Privy Council closed all London by consensual stabbing, as well as Brutus wife
theatres, initially because of a riot, then because Portia, in Othello where Othello stabs himself, in
there was an outbreak of the plague. The theatres Hamlet where Ophelia is said to have drowned in
remained closed until 1594. The critic Jonathan suspicious circumstances, in Macbeth when Lady
Bate notes how plague is subtly woven into the plot Macbeth dies, and finally in Antony and Cleopatra
of Romeo and Juliet it is because Friar John is where suicide occurs an astounding five times
detained for fear that he might have been infected (Mark Antony, Cleopatra, Charmian, Iras and Eros).
that Romeo doesnt receive Friar Laurences
crucial letter.

66 67
that might control it or credit it: ere one can say, it
lightens. The simple descriptive phrase, it
lightens, is belated, inadequate, somehow tiny
and irrelevant. The event has already happened;
words come limping meekly after.
The new world that she has entered is far too
vivid and particular for such (approximate)
denotations: it lightens is a tired generalisation,
far removed from life-giving passion. Again we can
see how Juliets true language never simply
describes things. Description assumes that the
thing described is separate from the language
being used, or from the passion that attends its
experiencing. Description escapes experience; it
A scene from the 1961 film West Side Story. Leonard Bernsteins musical,
puts it to rest, leaves it behind, accommodates set in 1950s New York, was inspired by Romeo and Juliet (see page 66)
itself without struggle to evolving eventualities: it
lightens. Such phrases flatten and generalize
experience, allowing for livable continuity. Merely Whats in a name?
to be able to say it lightens is the impossible
antithesis of Juliets situation. There would be Names and the significance attached to names
relief in such words; they would signify survival, a are very important in Romeo and Juliet. This
light ahead, a light-ening of terror. But this is not is clear from certain names that Shakespeare
Juliets experience. Lightning, for her, is not invents Mercutio, for example, inevitably
alleviation. It is the sudden irrevocability of that suggests mercurial, which is the perfect adjective
thing, lightning, which she and her lover have for that characters dazzling unpredictability,
become and it is the stunned, silent darkness that his quicksilver volatility.
succeeds it. But it is the eponymous couple whose names
matter most. It is an easy point to miss, but the
title itself the plays name encapsulates their
tragedy. It is not named Capulet and Montague.

68 69
It is not called this, we might want to say, because there is everything to play for, at another it is all
those are not their names. They are Romeo and already written:
Juliet! They are not to be bound up in those
patriarchal surnames, surnames which (fail to) ROMEO:
distinguish any number of Veronas wealthy rabble. Is she a Capulet?
The young lovers are unique, they are individuals, O dear account! My life is my foes debt
they demand Christian names alone. It is precisely JULIET:
their dissevering of name and identity from the My only love sprung from my only hate.
dead signature of family that makes them what Too early seen unknown, and known too late![1.5]
they are. And indeed, even individual Christian
names are not really what these lovers achieve. Juliet, as ever, pounces upon the true difficulty:
They create a new compound, Romeo-and- that knowing is not simply an attribute of seeing
Juliet, or Juliet-and-Romeo, which rings through and appraising. It is not open to us to experience
the city and ages like an integral life-force, an someone as though no one has ever been here
unimpeachable, shared persona. before us, or to pretend that we can know who they
But of course all of this is only half-true. They are merely from such witnessing. For this person
are always also Montague and Capulet. These precedes the meeting, and is already named. The
names cannot be disowned, and they follow, name is like a stamp, or a brand, linking the person
shadow, and survive the titular names like an backward to a family and forward to a destiny.
enveloping doom: or if they dont survive them in Hence the word character: in Shakespeares
popular memory, in our world, they most certainly day this didnt principally mean ones nature or
do in the playworld of Verona. personality; it didnt mean a role in a story. It meant
That this play is a drama of naming, a drama writing, the letters themselves. Character
about the possibilities and pre-determinations of is written: it is a name. Our modern understanding
being named, is clear from the way the couple first of character was beginning to emerge (partly
meets. As Susan Snyder nicely puts it, they meet through Shakespeares work). But if Romeo and
unlabelled, a faceless youth and an anonymous Juliet contributes powerfully to an ideology of
girl. They are ignorant of each others name; we subjective freedom, in which we can forge our
are not, and we await the delicious re-writing or own characters, and come to our own conclusions
de-writing of the family scripts. But if at one level about the characters of others we meet, it also butts

70 71
up hard against the obstacles to such freedom. naming as the acme of such convention, in the
Of course Juliet resists, as she must, the tyranny cause of sensory and sensual immediacy. And part
of this signifier: of this immediacy is a kind of instinctive
resistance to proper nouns:
Tis but thy name that is my enemy:
Thou art thyself, though not a Montague. Deny thy father and refuse thy name.
Whats Montague? It is nor hand nor foot Or if thou wilt not, be but sworn my love
Nor arm nor face nor any other part And Ill no longer be a Capulet. [2.2]
Belonging to a man. O be some other name.
Whats in a name? That which we call a rose Be but sworn my love: the name she prefers is
By any other word would smell as sweet... [2.2] not primarily a name, although of course she can
address him simply as that. My love is a feeling,
Juliet is fighting against convention, and against an action. Of course the compounding of verb and

directions, and clearly either insight into how the story written had grown up too
records or prescribes was cut to ensure a swift and much, or because they were
theatrical performance. streamlined performance. touring. The new actor may
Quite where it comes from is The cuts are mainly of have lacked the experience
CUTS, CENSORINGS much disputed. It may have four kinds: one, unnecessary to take on Juliets more
AND PERFORMANCE been abridged from a fuller narration/reportage; two, challenging speeches -
VERSIONS playtext for the purposes of long speeches of piety or hence the renewed accent
performance, probably as a poeticizing, particularly on stage directions to carry
From the very start, it would touring copy. It may have from the Friar; three, bawdy the part. More broadly the
seem, Shakespeares full text been a pirated copy, punning; four, Juliets cuts produce a swiftly
of Romeo and Juliet has published to exploit the speeches, especially in the economical acting text,
almost never been plays obvious popularity. It second half of the play. Most getting rid of highly
performed. The very first may have been put together of these changes can be conceited passages, of the
printed version of from the memory or notes of explained by performance. kind that perhaps reward
Shakespeares play from people who have witnessed For example, it may be that a reading more than hearing.
1597 is much shorter than the full play, either in the new actor had to take over Clearly some aspects of
the one usually published in audience or as actors. But the part of Juliet, because the play were from the very
modern editions. It includes whatever the story behind the adolescent for whom the start acknowledged to be
lots of unique stage the text, it gives us a good part had originally been theatrically unwieldy or

72 73
indulgent. And every much more the expected name in one word is another epitome of one of
successful version of the thing. It becomes a simple
play has cut it radically. story of true love. The lovers
the plays central tragic paradoxes that the thing
The same cuts recur lose their wildness and we wish to possess can only be possessed in the
again and again: Romeos eccentricity, and become passing; that to freeze or canonize it is to rob it
love for Rosaline, his bad basically good and ideal. of life; but that without such naming all we have
poetry, and his murder of This is especially true of
Paris; Juliets erotic Romeo. Shakespeares
is loss.
wordplay, sexual hunger, Romeo is much more In his essay, The Murdering World, Kiernan
and morbid fantasies; lots of satirized than most of his Ryan says that for Juliet and Romeo a way of life
Mercutios puns (though later incarnations, which had seemed unquestionable is exposed as a
they always include Queen particularly early on, and he
Mab); Benvolios plot is more violent later in the
prison-house, whose walls are built of words.
summaries; the Friars play. Shakespeares Juliet is Among the words which make the walls are their
tutorials; the musicians much more sexual and names. But the names their first names, both
singing and joking after death-driven than most treasured individually and as a compound are
Juliets apparent death; the subsequent versions allow.
Nurse is sometimes cut More than anything, the
also stolen from their families and re-possessed
sharply (Luhrmann), popular versions tend to cut passionately as their own. Names brand us as
sometimes expanded as the Shakespeares stylistic mortal and confined; they also confer immortality.
fallible moral heart of the variance his ironies,
story (Zeffirelli, West Side sudden juxtapositions of
Story).
The ending is usually
style or scene, ironic
counterpoints.
How does Juliet speak her
changed. For centuries
Juliet would wake before
Shakespeares play is
more of an ensemble-piece;
love?
Romeos death, to allow a there are more telepathic
final exchange between the connections between
Juliet is as restless in language as she is in her
two. These days the play characters (eg Mercutio and home as restless and searching as any of
tends to end very quickly Juliet); it is much more Shakespeares great originals. It is she who gives
after Juliets suicide, cutting antic. As Dr Johnson has it: the balcony scene its powerful feeling of
the Friars explanations and, his pathetic strains are
often, the fathers always polluted by some
imminence of something life-changing about to
reconciliation. unexpected depravations. happen. But she also knows that this imminence
Some of the cuts are no Shakespeares adaptors have depends for its power upon its very real
doubt good ones. But in the long felt it their duty to precariousness. Things could go either way they
main they make the story protect us from the
much less tonally various, playwrights bad taste.w
might be found out, her beloved killed; he might be

74 75
tricking her, or seducing her merely for immediate
satisfaction (I will take thy word, yet if thou
swearst,/Thou mayest prove false). She is the one
who, very directly, declares love in a manner that is
not hedged by convention, and who demands an
answer from the other (Dost thou Love?). She is
the one who blasts away, through sheer lucidity of
thought and feeling, any carapace of romantic
precedent, just as she refuses all the oaths of
attachment, as being in hock to discredited
convention. She is the one who is repeatedly called
back by the umbilical cord of home (the Nurse or
Mothers cries) but who repeatedly returns despite
it, preferring the silken thread of a love that shall Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting in Franco Zeffirellis 1968 film
kill with much cherishing. She is the one who,
returning after confessing her love, cannot but absolutely as she ultimately does the killing
push through to the marriage that is indeed her knife. In this Juliet establishes the model for many
only honourable course again risking the of Shakespeares women: the heroines of comedy,
young boys retreat or even ridicule. who always tutor the men in erotic truth, all the
He doesnt retreat, of course but it is she who way to Cleopatra, who after the fumbling
makes all the running. It is Juliet who at once humiliations of Antonys attempts at suicide shows
alters the given world, apprehends the risks, and how it really should be done.
pushes through regardless. And Romeo is If there is a single speech which sums up Juliet,
electrified into his truth by her galvanized out of it is perhaps the liberating, violent intensity of this:
borrowed gestures or easy self-gratification.
And what is true here of his language is repeated Hist! Romeo, hist! O for a falconers voice
throughout their story. Each time Romeo is there To lure his tassel-gentle back again.
first (to love, erotic anticipation, self-destructive Bondage is hoarse and may not speak aloud,
resolutions, suicide) but in a slightly callow, Else would I tear the cave where Echo lies
theatrical way. Juliet takes the stakes into herself And make her airy tongue more hoarse than mine

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With repetition of my Romeos name. [2.2] down and wail life and body away is untrue to the
flint of passion. Juliets fierce grief or rage is
She is calling for Romeo, wishing herself more perhaps closer to the mark is absolutely
powerful, unafraid of transgressing gender roles (a embodied. It garners its energies and its pain
falconer with a bird), impatient of restrictions, precisely from physical tension: she will tear the
bursting to escape the bondage of home and cave, make the tongue hoarse, in a radical
language. Juliet is alone here, calling at once for assault upon all confining origins, including those
her lover and for a better language, a fuller voice: of her own feminine body. So, the cave here
the two are reciprocal, for she knows how it is the evokes a multiple primal home Echos retreat,
language of their society, in the fullest sense of and so the cave of mythical possibility; the room
available communication and interpersonal rules, which so far in her life has kept her in bonds; a
which inhibits her desire from free expression. voicebox or throat; and perhaps a womb. It
Romeo is briefly absent; she fears he has amounts to a powerful defiance of social
disappeared; so she imagines, with the full force of prescription. Neither her body nor her mouth will
her being, herself as the abandoned lover, left to stay demurely closed. This speech, for all that it is
grieve the cruelly departed boy. This is why she vehemently whispered, is in fact a virtual, virtuoso
inhabits and transforms the archetypal lovelorn scream. A bracing dare to be challenged, this
figure of Echo, who in Ovids Metamorphoses speech shows Juliet imaginatively throwing
Shakespeares favourite book wails so much for caution to the winds. She has flown the roost,
her lover as to turn, literally, into a bodiless irrevocably.
lamenting voice. Juliets conceit telescopes time
and place. It takes her beyond this moment,
extending it into a fate and a myth, pushing back
into the primal tales of Shakespeares creative
world. Simultaneously she projects ahead into her
own future state, when she will herself become a
mythical model of the abandoned tragic lover.
But she is not content to repeat Echos misery
Juliet disdains to be a mere echo. For Juliet, Echos
abandonment to defeat is doubly a lie to lie

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How does Shakespeare lovers deaths. It is a basic principle of pretty much
handle time in Romeo and every scene.
For instance, the sense of time in the balcony
Juliet? scene is delicate and multiple. The lovers haste
and urgency makes their clock faster than anyone
The Romantic critic William Hazlitt says of the elses. But equally the Nurses and mothers calls
play that it presents a beautiful coup doeil of the from off-stage relate their own urgent fear that
progress of human life. In thought it occupies temporal boundaries are being breached young
years, and embraces the circle of the affections Juliet should be in bed! This is the context of her
from childhood to old age. However, it does not repeated leaving and returning, the trope of
represent this progress sequentially. Instead, reluctant departure which features so often in the
Romeo and Juliet is always running simultaneously balcony-scene imitations around 1600. But Juliets
at different speeds. The story hinges on returns are not formalised in any way. They are
disjunctions of timing most notoriously, the breathless, yearning, dangerous, showing her
accidents that lead to the catastrophe: the letter straining to break from the Bondage both of
telling Romeo that Juliet is not dead is outpaced home and daily time.
by the false report that she is dead; she wakes A further effect is to multiply our sense of the
up after he has taken the fatal poison. The lovers knowledge of each other, in a sense to
philosopher Jacques Derrida writes this of extend their experience far beyond the clock-
the lovers: minutes it is lengthened by. Each return comes
after a farewell; each adieu is a miniature death,
They live in turn the death of the other... Both like all such partings, a rehearsal of the final one.
are in mourning and both watch over the So each time she comes back on stage she is in a
death of the other, attend to the death of the sense resurrected, not so much kissed alive as
other... They both live, outlive the death of coming alive to kiss. The effect is miraculous but
the other. also incipiently tragic, because we know it is all
happening on borrowed time: the clock is ticking,
However, this anachrony, as Derrida calls it and lovers do not have infinite lives. All of these
meaning time at cross-purposes, one time not returns, in the way of this play, are rehearsals for
harmonising with another is not confined to the the departure that will define them. However

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bright the lightning of their meeting, the The play keeps such things at the forefront of our
darkness is waiting, irremovable. minds. This is the reason for Capulets apparently
The lovers time is both a vast expanse, irrelevant fussing over the day of the proposed
measured by recurring cosmic metaphors of star nuptials. Adult measurements are always at odds
and night, and a fugitive capsule an eternalised with Loves Herald, either retarding (as with the
single moment, as enduring as the passion. Juliet Nurse) or precipitous (as Capulet with the
in particular is keyed in to this subjective time: wedding day). And Juliet, very simply, achieves
more in the span of a moment than anyone else
JULIET: her fantastical anticipation is in a sense no less
What o clock tomorrow shall I send to thee? mercurial and swift than Mercutios fantastical
ROMEO: conceits. The Nurse is off busying herself with
By the hour of nine. whatever, just as her parents are fussing and
JULIET: ordering and arranging things, never still. But even
I will not fail. Tis twenty years till then. [2.2] if all she does is wait in her room, Juliet lives more
lives than the rest put together.
A similar asymmetry between clock-time and her It is all to do with intensity and here she is far
time recurs when, having sent the Nurse to meet more concentrated than even her lover. Romeo is
with Romeo, Juliet waits impatiently for her return: careful of his servant, has the leisure to indulge in
lengthy exchanges of wit with Mercutio and
The clock struck nine when I did send the Nurse, courtliness with the Nurse. He is often absent
In half an hour she promisd to return.. from the social world (for example during the
O, she is lame. Loves heralds should be thoughts fracas, or when off with Juliet) but the moment
Which ten times faster glides than the suns he returns he instantly flows with its rhythms. He
beams remains societys man. This is so even when he
Driving back shadows over lowering hills tries to intervene in the quarrel, inadvertently
Now is the sun upon the highmost hill helping Tybalt to kill Mercutio, a surviving
Of this days journey, and from nine till twelve allegiance to social codes which means he cannot
Is three long hours, yet she is not come. [2.5] restrain himself from killing Tybalt in return. The
tragedy, from this angle, is rooted in Romeos
Everything is urgent, running against the clock. irresistible socialisation.

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Juliet, by contrast, steams alone, staring at the
clock, projecting alternative worlds, cutting
straight to the kill the moment she is able:

O God she comes. O honey Nurse what news?


Hast thou met with him? Send thy man away.
[2.5]

Intermediaries like the Nurse or the servant are


much more to her than delaying nuisances. They
are insults to the immediacy of feeling. Whereas it
takes either ostentatious self-pity or fateful
accidents to make Romeo truly cast himself
beyond society, from the moment Juliet commits
to love, she is instinctively a rebel:

But old folks, many feign as they were dead


Unwieldy, slow, heavy, and pale as lead. [2.5]

As often happens, her words return to bite her,


with fatal irony, when she herself feigns death and
soon is pale as lead. She will be the victim of all she
would reject but not before she has condemned
it, in the name of electric passion, to irrelevance
and superannuation.
Hence her marvellously invigorating entrance
to the Friars in the next scene. The Friar has been
tutoring Romeo about loving moderately and in
good time, wise saws about how the sweetest
honey/Is loathsome in his own deliciousness,

84
too swift arrives as tardy as too slow. On this cue, registers. So, his description is also a judgement:
Juliet enters. She left the previous scene with a her tread is light (delicate and swift) but also light
brisk Hie to high Fortune and it is with the same (idle and wanton); she is carefree but also
swiftness that she now enters. The Friar notes careless; her bodys airy summer ease is the
her excitement and seeks at once to meld it to opposite of cold everlasting flint; but it will wear
his sententious purposes: away before the flint does.
In terms of the plays tragic destiny, this is all
Here comes the lady. O, so light a foot true. But in terms of its emotional compulsion, it
Will neer wear out the everlasting flint. deserves to be swept away as life-denying and even
A lover may bestride the gossamers grudging. (The Friars wisdom requires the fall
That idles in the wanton summer air that Juliets summer forestalls.) Of course, the
And yet not fall; so light in vanity. [2.6] Friar can be played in performance in all sorts of
ways failed moralist, avuncular friend,
As always in this play, the speech works at different reluctantly delighted, at odds with his profession, a

RSC, nicely captures the audience wants is to go political persuasion. At the


parts difficulty for modern home, in which he tells us in end, the Friar realises he has
audiences. At first he lugubrious detail the story tampered unconscionably
thought the Friar a we already know. The man is with natural processes and
bumbling, boring old twerp a complete waste of time, a he panics. In this there is a
who gets it all wrong and bland, ineffectual fool who clear structural parallel with
THE FRIAR screws up everybodys lives. merely acts as a catalyst. He the Nurse, recommending
(When I told the actor hasnt even got any jokes! bigamy, betraying her ward.
If later theatre gossip is to Richard Johnson, a fine However, once entrusted The Friars final speech is all
be believed, it may well be Romeo in his day, that I was with the part, his view for him, to try to repeat and
that Shakespeare himself to take the part, he was changed: a guru-figure free himself of grief and
played the Friar. If so, he vehement Hes an old though one intensely guilt: I personally think the
chose a figure that, for all bastard, I hate him!) The practical he will unblock play should be re-named
its apparent moral self- last thing we want is a vicar your drains as soon as your something like The Tragedy
certainty, seems peculiarly with a very long speech morals; a sort of touchstone of the Goode Brother. The
prone to attract ambivalent about nature. He also has a of goodness and emotional children have passed over to
responses. Julian Glover, dreadfully tiresome speech responsibility, accessible to a better place he has to
who played the Friar for the at the end, when all the people of every age, class or stay and suffer in this one.w

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leaf in the breeze, a nosy pander but whatever months of surreptitious sex. Shakespeare cuts it to
choices are made here his text occupies a different a single night, and this grabbed in the immediate
sense of time and priority to Juliet. He has the long wake of a crime that they both know has already
view; she sees only what is before her; he turns foreshortened everything. The doom is upon
everything into small statuettes for our perusal; them. The lovers are thus at once in the present,
her thoughts are like the moment, flying beyond and already past it the act that preceded the
capture. So when the Friar invites her to nuptial night has already taken Romeo away. As
Hazlitt says, Shakespeare founded the passion of
...let rich musics tongue the two lovers not on the pleasures they had
Unfold the imagind happiness that both experienced, but on all the pleasures they had not
Receive in either by this dear encounter. [2.6] experienced and we might add, would not. We
only see the lovers in the wake of their night
Juliets instant rebuke is beautifully deflating of his together, and the way we see them says it all. They
presumptuousness: are aloft at the window, debating whether the
fearful birdsong was the lark or the nightingale:
Conceit more rich in matter than in words,
Brags of his substance, not of ornament. JULIET:
They are but beggars that can count their worth. Wilt thou be gone? It is not yet near day.
[2.6] It was the nightingale and not the lark
That piercd the fearful hollow of thine ear.
She knows we know how fervent is her Nightly she sings on yond pomegranate tree.
imagind happiness, but it is not something to be Believe me, love, it was the nightingale.
rehearsed for an old busybodys delectation. She is ROMEO:
instinctively liberating, a rebel for the heart. It was the lark, the herald of the morn,
The feminist critic and philosopher Julia No nightingale. [3.5]
Kristeva notes the ambiguous compression of
time caused by the immanence of death, and this Juliet desperately wants it to be the nightingale,
is epitomised by how Shakespeare contracts their so as to sustain their loving night. Romeo knows
lovemaking to one night, already nearly over. In that the envious and severing morning has
Brookes source-tale, the lovers enjoy a few come. But as much as the passage from nightingale

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to lark marks the necessity of time, and so of their by the birds that they immediately invoke. The
passing from each other, equally there is no telling lovers are carried by the birds, as by a living
which bird it is. The effect is suggestively metaphor: the song is an echo of their intimacy, but
metaphysical: the birds have joined to become also of their flight from one another. Like
one; each bird has consumed the other. The everything tuned to their love, it heralds birth and
passing of time, then, is also its erasing, or its death. Consequently, there is an intimate link
distilling into a single moment. And in turn this between the most lived-in physicality sensuous
moment when the birds meet eternally restlessness, the avidity of Juliet, the delicacy of
repeats the act of the lovers union: as the touch, their desire to linger and the impulse to
nightingale (Juliet), and the lark (Romeo), sing eternalise: if not to erect a monument, then to
and bill and consume one another. arrest time, and to possess something in defiance
The scene when they wake, therefore, is indeed of its impatience. And what we have, of course, is
a wake a bittersweet ritual of death-marked the play
remembrance. They are recalling what has been,
wishing it replayed, but more profoundly Why is Juliet so young?
preparing for memories of it to come. We thus
witness the lovers as already subjects of nostalgia. The German philosopher Hegel says this of Juliet:
In this way, the consummation which the whole
story seeks not just sex, of course, but union is Juliet cannot otherwise be taken at the beginning
not quite given. We have missed it, or await it. The than as a quite childlike simple girl... we perceive
scenes are structured so that we, like the lovers, that she still has no inner consciousness of herself
feed upon lack, and wish time faster (hurtling and the world, no movement, no emotion, no
toward extinction) or slower (stopping time, and wishes; on the contrary, in all naivet she has
so another form of extinction). peeped into her surroundings in the world, as into a
Its not that we need to see the two making love; magic lantern show, without learning anything
its not that we doubt the marriage is from them or coming to any reflection on them.
consummated; the dawn scene is usually played Suddenly we see the development of the whole
with them still in bed, more or less languorously strength of this heart, of intrigue, circumspection,
post-coital. But this scene, for all its simulation of power to sacrifice everything and to submit to the
homely naturalism, is more essentially animated harshest treatment; so that now the whole thing

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looks like the first blossoming of the whole rose at confronted by the same exciting invitations.
once, in all its petals and folds, like an infinite Who wouldnt be awed and delighted by a
outpouring of the inmost genuine basis of the soul, beautiful older boy, calling you divine and kissing
in which previously there was no inner you, and what is more your familys sworn enemy?
differentiation, formation and development, but Who wouldnt be a little scared, worried about the
which now comes on the scene as an immediate dangers she has so often gone to bed believing
product of an awakened single interest, unbeknown (Capulet men prowling the grounds ready to shoot
to itself, in its beautiful fullness and force, out of a any strangers!)? And then, this wonderful treat
hitherto self-enclosed spirit. It is a torch lit by a once offered, what 13-year-old wouldnt sit
spark, a bud, only now just touched by love, which impatiently and petulantly curse when boring old
stands there unexpectedly in full bloom, but the adults the slow fat Nurse, the tedious moralising
quicker it unfolds, the quicker too does it droop, its Friar get in the way?
petals gone. And then the hysterics of the wedding night, the
wild vacillations between raging grief and desire,
I have been writing about Juliet as though she is an the wish that the night should never end and this
independent woman, scrupulous about language, manboy never leave her bed, leaping at a new trick
alert to hypocrisy or pretension, self-policing, to further fool her parents, and the ghoulish old
prudent at first, but once committed, unabashed wives graveyard fantasies that follow. What isnt
and adventurous; unafraid of passion, intent upon simply childlike as though her life enjoys the
emotional and existential fullness rather than magical facility of making childhood fancies come
timidity or evasion and so on. But she is 13! The true?
age is Shakespeares invention, specified repeatedly, But this is precisely the problem. The dreams
in a fashion he repeats nowhere else. In all of the come true, and Juliet remains only 13. What
earlier versions of the story, Juliet is at least 16, difference does it make to give to a 13-year-old
often 18 years old. What does this mean? such heat, such ecstatic sexual anticipation, such
How can a 13-year-old be an exemplar of an awful end, buried alive in a tomb and stabbing
femininity, a pattern for all aspiring subjects? Or is herself with a rusty knife? Is it scarier than if she
it wrong to think Shakespeare sees her as such? were 18 or 16? In her essay, Romeo and Juliet: The
She is 13, a child, and she runs the same gamut of Nurses Story, Barbara Everett writes this:
instinctive emotions that any such child might do The choice of an age slightly young even by

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romantic standards achieves the sense of extremity, to take responsibility for the catastrophe. Her
of a painful too-soonness... a sharp recognition of parents, yes, because they want to push her into
unripeness, of a pathos and gravity recognisably marriage so young: but then Juliet leaps at the
childish, and an acknowledgement that the grief same thing. So do we return to us, or the playwright,
experienced is itself full, fine, perfect. or the romantic genre which we and the playwright
relish, and which so often likes to sacrifice young
This is very eloquent, but does it not beg women on its altar, as though mere counters in a
questions, and in particular make us wonder about larger game of pathos? We might here compare
the sacrifices required for such full, fine, perfect Juliet, the 13-year-old, to the 14-year-old Marina
pathos to be achieved? in Shakespeares later romance, Pericles: Marina
If we were to hear of such a thing in the real is abducted by pirates for the purposes of gang
world we would feel, I think, sorrowful and rape, the scene ends, and next we see her she is
compromised, certain that the poor girl was a being sold as a nice fresh whore to a brothel. What
victim of delusions or fantasies beyond her station happened in the interim? No one knows; no one
in life. Does the fact that Juliet is in a play license asks! Her experience is either impossible it didnt
ethical forgetfulness? Isnt it simply creepy to be or couldnt happen! or else it is ugly and scandalous
egging her on, or even to be listening in to a childs and deeply shaming to anyone who desires it.
sexual fantasies? Shouldnt we feel chastised and Dont we turn away from Juliets childishness in
guilty? It is bad enough for a young woman to kill the same way? So, she isnt 13, not really: she is a
herself for love but a 13-year-old? It is disgusting, child of romantic tragedy, sculpted for admiration,
obscene; to revel in it, even to imagine it is exemplary sentiments, and ultimately pathos. She
pornographic! At the very least, shouldnt the fact remains the generic heroine, the pastoral princess
of her youth make it all simply sadder, with the of hope and possibility, ingenuous symbol of both
overwhelming feeling being that she is too young individuality and community, seen in a hundred
for such emotions or such a fate, that she was plays and a thousand fairy tales and romances.
mistaken, horribly precocious, that childhood itself We might further defend ourselves by admitting
has somehow been stolen from her and violated? that we half turn away from Juliets age, but that
But these protests dont quite wash either. Even this is not so much an instinct of moral cravenness
if her extreme youth makes Juliet blameless, forgetting morality in the interests of aesthetic
because untutored, then someone, surely, needs pleasure as a basic doubleness, an is and is not,

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which is typical of Shakespeare. Juliet is and is not she has sex, she even dies! Her life is accelerated,
13 this is a simple fact of how we process her as quickly as she wishes time to be for her. She
story. One of her distinctive metaphysical gifts is rushes past barriers, into futures. If she enters as a
that she grows up separate from others, at a child, she lives into marriage and dies a widow.
different pace or in a subtly different space. This is But at the same time, hers is the tragedy of
foreshadowed in numerous ways for example, never growing up, and of being precipitously cut
the first glimpse we get of her, when her father says short before life can truly begin. Who is she to
she is yet a stranger in the world; in her back and carry a great tragedy, or to speak such astonishing
forth during the balcony scene, with each exit and metaphors, or to risk death as she does, not once
re-entrance telescoping vast experiential spaces; but repeatedly? All of this engineers a subtle sense
the obsessive puns that she speaks, or that rather that she has been taken over by something,
speak her, suggesting a possession in need of possessed by a force too huge for someone so young.
exorcism, stretching her apprehensions way She knows it is all too sudden too quick, too
beyond social convention or her experience, premature but this lightning comes from
beyond even the kinds of sexual rumour that elsewhere. It is her, in her, but not chosen by her or
youngsters trade in (as Romeo does early on, for plotted. This helps furnish the sense of a universal
example, with Benvolio and Mercutio). Above all, emotion, with Juliet the chosen vessel or the
the changes or decisions that, in real life, only sacrificial lamb. More darkly, it presages the
duration in time allows, are concentrated into implacability of this world, as she is impelled by
single scenes or even speeches of Juliets, which something huge and irresistible that carries her
thereby stand in for their actual doing. beyond all she has known and into death. It is then
The effect is of accelerated maturation, as somehow real and right, and all the more
though Juliet is the host to possible futures, ones frightening, that Juliet should so intimately
that we never see happening but that are bundled imagine consorting with corpses, living as the
into her as her privilege and burden. She is the undead amid the dead. [4.3] In some sense she is
heroine who experiences too much, too quickly, on always un-dead, always beyond, a refugee from
behalf of too many. She is not 13, or 16, or 20: she is both life and death.
simply on the cusp, faced with temptations and
forced into decisions that matter. Of course Juliet
takes it further. She flies over the cusp. She marries,

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4. It was their own fault. A fourth group argue that
FOU R WAYS CRITICS we have to blame Romeo and Juliet themselves:
HAVE S E E N TH E TRAG EDY they demand too much and defy the rules of society.
To these critics the Friar is right: these violent
delights have violent ends. D.A. Stauffer says the
1. It was fate. Some critics argue that the lovers are causes of the tragedy lie in the sufferers themselves,
no more than puppets. J.W. Draper says they are whose dangerous fault is their extreme rashness.
literally star-crossd victims, the puppets of the
stars and planets and of the days and times of day. R.S. White, collecting recent critical approaches to
the play, suggests critics fall into one of two camps:

2. Romantic love is always doomed. Other critics Throughout the 20th century, criticism of Romeo
believe, as John Lawlor puts it, that Romeo and and Juliet oscillated between [two] poles. At one end
Juliet are conquered by the unchanging limits of lies psychoanalysis, with its belief in the individual
life and love, the inflexible imperatives of human life. psyche, and its assumption that all people are driven
Frank Kermode says: just as [love] is in its very from within by universal, primal feelings that seek
nature the business of the young, with passions fulfilment and happiness but are more often than not
hardly controlled, so it is in its very nature associated thwarted, perverted, sublimated into other pursuits,
with disaster and death. Norman Rabkin says the or repressed.
lovers are doomed by the self-destructive yearning At the other pole lies cultural materialism, which
for annihilation that we recognise as the death-wish. assumes we are driven from without by our
circumstances, by chance meetings and random
contingencies, by social and cultural attitudes which
3. It was just bad luck. Another school of criticism are unavoidable, by advertising, the sentiments of
stresses the unfortunate failure of Friar Laurences popular music, family conventions and so on.
message to reach Romeo in Mantua and the At issue are the cherished but contradictory
calamitous timing of events at the tomb. As L.S. western notions of individualism and of universal
Champion puts it, perhaps we understand the play human nature. It is significant that defenders of each
better if we think of it as a tragedy of bad luck. To pole, in their very different ways, deny freedom of
such critics, says Franklin Dickey, the tragedy is choice in our emotional lives. One group asserts that
flawed because the catastrophe is embarrassingly we are compulsively driven and our destinies shaped
fortuitous the accident of chance to which all by largely inherited or manipulated feeling states and
human life is subject. expectations, the other that we are at the mercy of the
very limited culture of which we have experience.

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How does Shakespeare still often are in productions today.
show Juliets erotic We might compare Juliets words with the mad
songs and discourse of Ophelia, with their
longing? unwonted bawdy and hints of repressed longings.
But Juliets speech is different it isnt fractured
From the moment she commits to her passion, and nostalgic, but rip-roaringly hungry, racing into
there is a primal demonism in Juliet, reckless, commission of the longed-for act. The sexual puns
violent, hungry, and strangely carnivalesque. rise thick and fast, as though from suddenly
Her big soliloquy in Act Three, Scene Two is the awoken flesh, a flesh that speaks through her, that
key speech here. when she is patiently awaiting has taken her tongue hostage. But she intends
the night to come and her marriage to be every word:
consummated. Many readers may have wished
that Shakespeare had used some old-fashioned Spread thy close curtain, love-performing night,
device of soul-struggle, such as the good and bad That runaways eyes may wink, and Romeo
angel in her ear, causing Juliet to ventriloquise all Leap to these arms untalkd-of and unseen.
the things she could never have dreamed of saying. Lovers can see to do their amorous rites [3.2]
But he doesnt: it is Juliet speaking, very
deliberately, and for centuries the fact has caused This is the consummation of Juliets identification
distress: the most scandalous obscenity usurps with the cheek of night. She calls upon night to
the place of that virgin purity, as A. De Lamartine cover everything, so that no one will see them have
protested in 1865. De Lamartines sense of sex. Equally, the close curtain she longs to
personal affront is understandable, much more so spread is her own her legs and, more to the
than attempts to pretend that the speech isnt point, her labia. She is coming into adulthood,
outrageous or to euphemise it by patronising piece by piece, looking pitilessly at what she is
appeals to adolescent energy or youthful about to perform, the maidenhood she is set to
impatience (as though to say she doesnt know lose, and saying come she says the word six
what she means) or even ecstasy, with its times, and each time with the full sense of arrival
suggestion of out-of-body experience. And it is leading to orgasm. (That the one who finally
surely better that the audience feel the offence comes is the Nurse is a nice piece of bathos.) The
than for the offending passages to be cut, as they fact that she is 13 makes it at once monstrous in

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the sense of a strange possession and awesome learn from me, in that she and her beau will enact a
in the sense of precociously sublime, as she is pattern for the universe:
taken over by forces that dwarf her education.
Mercutio has just died, and as I have suggested, Give me my Romeo; and when I shall die,
much of his demonic energy passes into Juliet. Take him and cut him out in little stars,
They have always shared astonishing velocity, and And he will make the face of heaven so fine,
this ecstatic speech is Juliets answer to or echo of That all the world will be in Love with night. [3.2]
Queen Mab, likewise in league with the under-
spirits that carry desire beyond all formal or social This exultant image is at once very simple and
boundaries and into our very bodies. But then even promiscuously suggestive. She is saying give me
this explanation seems protective of her him, and produces a scene ecstatically
willfulness. correspondent to the joy she anticipates, a world
For as much as Juliet is taken over by sexual somehow exploding with endlessly reconfigured
imagination, as much as every image turns into Romeos (images like this, and her earlier one of
delicious obscenity as though every last object in the lightning, probably suggested the repeated
the world is suddenly sexualised we can still hear scenes of fireworks in the night-sky in Baz
her speaking. Witness the mischievous ironies Luhrmanns film). It is characteristic that in the
(runaways eyes may wink), or her subverting phrase, when I shall die, the sexual meaning of
and transforming of musty authority: die is primary rather than dependent: it means
have sex (if not necessarily female orgasm). So,
Come civil night she imagines lying back and seeing the sky aflame
Thou sober-suited Matron all in black, with little stars, each of them a fraction or glisten
And learn me how to lose a winning match, of Romeo. He is at once gone from her, his essence
Playd for a pair of stainless maidenhoods. [3.2] fissured into de-individuated multiplicity, and still
at her beck and call, still pleasing her as his beauty
She imagines the old tutor as a widow in mourning, hangs above her. Rather than being shot into
the sober backdrop to her youthful intoxication. oblivion, like we might imagine sperm, her lover is
But in Juliets vision even the old and forgotten are re-composed in the act: take him and cut him
newly enfranchised in sexual delight: learne me, out. He is at her direction, putty in her hands or
she says principally teach me, but also implicitly perhaps like a folded sheet of paper, which the

102 103
dexterous girl can transform, with her craft and urgency of desire than with a desire for murder,
her scissors, into numerous little stars. seeing in her desire a reflection of utopian
Juliet is here given one of Shakespeares great possibility that can survive the blank fact of death .
imaginings of sex. We see this in the spaciousness This is certainly part of it. Nonetheless, there are
of the image; something deliberate in its making, undeniably demonic and even vampiric shades to
as she directs it to happen and then watches, Juliets sexuality. Her alliance with loving black-
half-out of her own body, as it does; the unfolding browd night makes her confederacy with the
repetitions, shapes within shapes, that magical dark side pretty clear a hint made manifest by
sense of a world slowed to ones own pulse and Romeos words over the apparently dead Juliet in
extended beyond normal possibility; the intense the catacomb:
wistfulness that wishes the moment longer,
somehow knows that it is longer than its actual Shall I believe
occurrence; an extensive intensity that connects to that unsubstantial Death is amorous,
things and survives in things which the daily world, And that the lean abhorred monster keeps
with its garish Sun, knows next to nothing about; Thee here in dark to be his paramour? [5.3]
even, perhaps, a melancholy anticipation that the
boy, having brought her to this little death, will There is something in Juliets great soliloquy
leave. All of this works to evoke, I think, the female which knows as it were before knowing that
orgasm (as Romeo is restlessly thinking about sex involves congress with animalism (the
getting up) insistent hawking and hunting images); that it
As anyone familiar with his sonnets knows, implies rational as well as physical abandon; that it
Shakespeare very often identifies erotic longing is jealous and hungry; that it is sort of stupid, in its
with deeply destructive instincts. Julie Kristeva multiple abdications, and yet crafty, in that the eye
suggests that the shattered, murdered solar is always on the target and obstructions are there
metaphor displays Juliets unconscious desire to to be avoided; that it turns the normal world into a
break up Romeos body. Certainly much of the facade, one that presents a false face of propriety
speech, like much of the play, can seem like a and sociality, when in fact the true face is leering,
testcase proving the coalition of Eros and panting, hot, in anguish; that compulsive punning
Thanatos, sex and death. Hugh Grady counters may well be the truest mode of speech, as every
that Juliets violence resonates more with the object one sees gets turned into a sexual

104 105
complement or conspirator; that our day-life, before taking the sleeping draught, does not
dressed, polite, efficient, at once securely named think of Romeo and Romeo alone, who is to
and essentially anonymous, is a bleached pretence; come and deliver her from the tomb; her love
that it cannot rest, or not for long, in a cosy never enters her thoughts, but she dwells with
satisfied hug; that if it is perverse to think of terror on the funeral vault in which she must be
mutilating your lover at the moment of greatest laid, on that abode of death and ghosts; she
intimacy, it is because sex is constitutionally describes the frenzy which may seize her, and
perverse: for it rehearses all the final things we can how she may profane the bones of her
never else survive. ancestors... As long as the story of Romeo and
Juliet was confined to the circle of Italian
Is there a moral in this literature, those vague and gloomy fancies...
were unknown.
play?
As the lovers head toward catastrophe, a
A young and beautiful couple, wrenched apart by powerfully gothic, grotesque, even demonic quality
bad luck, would rather die for their love than live increasingly takes over. In a scene entirely of
apart. The tale is so familiar as almost to neuter Shakespeares invention, he has Paris and Romeo
criticism. But what are we supposed to think about meet at Juliets tomb. Pariss lament is delicate:
it? I think that I speak for more than myself when
I assert that the love shared by Romeo and Juliet is Sweet flower, with flowers thy bridal bed I strew.
as healthy and normative a passion as Western O woe, thy canopy is dust and stones
literature affords us, writes Harold Bloom in Which with sweet water nightly I will dew [5.3]
Shakespeare:The Invention of the Human (1998).
The French critic Saint-Marc Girardin took a very He is careful about the sacred site, careful not to be
different view in 1844, arguing that it was seen trespassing, careful of invasion, careful too of
peculiarly English to turn Romeo and Juliet into the places own youthful vulnerability.
such a gloomy tale:
Under yond yew trees lay thee all along,
There is in English literature a very singular Holding thy ear close to the hollow ground;
taste for death... the young and beautiful Juliet, So shall no foot upon the churchyard tread,

106 107
Being loose, unfirm, with digging up of graves, There is the most violent contrast when Romeo
But thou shalt hear it. [5.3] enters. He speaks entirely of alienation from both
humanity and earth, with eyes only for his deadly
There is no satire here at all. Shakespeare takes target: Give me that Mattocke, and the wrenching
pains to portray a deeply sensitive sensibility. Iron. All the world and everything in it is an
This sacred ground is not, for Paris, guilty of or obstacle to be overcome; he is like a mandrake
greedy for the corpses it hides. Instead, the come to life, from very bitterness feeding death
earth itself is invaded, made weaker (unfirm) with more death: Thou detestable maw, thou
by the sorry penetration of the dead. The womb of death...
natural world imagined by Paris, quite unlike So, what is the moral status of the lovers? Is it
Romeos or Juliets, is delicate and young, to be even a worthwhile question? The Protestant
aided in its hopes of growth or survival. There is viewpoint, more or less orthodox in Shakespeares
real ecological feeling in his obsequies, at one day, is pretty clear; witness the prefatory Address
with his feeling for the too-soon defeated Juliet. to the Reader in Shakespeares main source:

Lady Montague; Benvolio opposition to all that emotions of a scene. This


and the Nurse are likewise surrounds them, they are often happens with the Friar.
abandoned, their carefully also the most perfect We may resent his warnings,
etched interests cast aside extension of their world. If or close our ears to them, at
as useless, irrelevant, or they were truly exceptional, the same time as accept their
culpable (in the sources the they could not be tragic. truth or suspect that they
Nurse is banished for hiding Consequently, we are rarely will indeed come true. It is
HOW EXCEPTIONAL the marriage from Juliets on safe ground dismissing too easy albeit probably
ARE THE LOVERS? parents; Shakespeare one figure or completely irresistible earnestly to
dismisses her, as though of trusting another even take sides and relish our
no interest, once she has Juliet can embarrass her resentments, to see the
Shakespeare gives us a play betrayed Juliet by her fervent admirers with her lovers as our avatars and
in which everyone is casual advocacy of bigamy erratic conceits, compulsive everyone else as the
doomed to irretrievable loss and led the wailing for the wordplay, and ghoulish preventers and not the
and failure. The examples of not-dead Juliet). The lovers violence. Elsewhere the prevented. For the plays
the prematurely slain are partly so moving wisest words can seem minor figures too are our
include Mercutio, Tybalt, because, as much as they strangely unwelcome, at proxies. We are all let us
Paris, Juliet, Romeo, even achieve their truth in odds with the momentum or not forget it the prevented.w

108 109
And to this ende (good reader) is this tragicall necessary, that the powers they seek to defy
matter written, to describe unto thee a coople of family, society, even night and day and the minute-
unfortunate lovers, thralling themselves to by-minute clock will exact their own payback.
unhonest desire, neglecting the authorities and Clearly it isnt good enough to gloss the lovers
advise of parents and frendes, conferring their story simply as one of prevented love or
principall counsels with drunken gossyppes, and frustrated idealism. Shakespeare adds much to
superstitious friers (the naturally fitte instruments the sources to give the lovers their own space, time,
of unchastitie) attempting all adventures of peryll, and motion, but also their own ethical world, as
for thattaynyng of their wishes lust, using auricular though playing by private self-cocooned rules. The
confession (the kay of whoredome, and treason) for effect is not to represent them as bad in terms of
furtheraunce of theyr purpose, abusing the disobedience or deception; it is not that we are
honourable name of lawefull marriage, the cloke asked to retain allegiance to an order (of
the shame of stolne contracts, finallye, by all behaviour, hierarchy etc.) that the lovers abjure.
meanes of unhonest lyfe, hasting to most unhappy Rather their commitment to themselves involves
death. (Arthur Brookes The Tragicall Historye of the efficient destruction of all other relations if it
Romeus and Juliet) doesnt kill them outright, it utterly ends their life
with or for Juliet and Romeo. The young couple do
We might think such stuff has nothing to do this knowingly, with eyes open, yet without a
with any tale ever written for purposes of pleasure; thought for the cost in suffering.
and clearly it is written from a vehement anti- The Danish philosopher Kierkegaard, in his
Catholic position the contempt for friars and Fear and Trembling, says of Gods injunction to
condemnation of confession which Shakespeare Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac, that the ethical
is unlikely to have shared. Indeed the tale that is the temptation. He means by this that the ethical
Brooke goes on to unfold fails to live up to this thing to do not to murder his boy, not to obey a
trenchant moral intolerance. But let us not forget, cruel and arbitrary command is paradoxically
either, that the lovers moments of greatest delight a sin, a worldly temptation. Abraham does not
are underpinned by doom. It is as though succumb to this temptation, but not out of meek or
Shakespeare is constantly whispering in the fearful obedience. He will kill his son, knowing
margins, reminding us not to trust too much, never that his son will return to him. It is absurd, but he
to forget, to open our eyes, to see that sacrifices are acts precisely on the strength of this absurd. The

110 111
absurd, then, is the absolute, beyond all ethical we care about boring Benvolio, who disappears,
negotiation. If he is wrong here, then Abraham is, hardly noticed? I doubt it. We might say here that
as Kierkegaard has it, lost. There is the absolute the play inculcates, or embodies, a terrible self-
or there is nothing. In some ways this is the world centredness, in which the presumed grace of
of Juliet and Romeo. They violate the ruling ethics the lovers allows and forgives anything. What if
of their society; although they have nothing to do everyone acted as this pair does? There would be
with a Christian God, they are each others deity, chaos; civilisation could not continue.
each others absolute. But unlike the biblical tale, But of course such statements are ridiculous
it is a godless, deathly, tragic absolute. Juliet dies and irrelevant. The point of the lovers rebellion
to Romeo, but she only returns alive to his death; is that almost no one does act like this, although
he dies for her, and can only return to her through almost everyone may have wanted to. The rebellion
the desperate conjoining of her phallic suicide. loses meaning if there are no walls to climb. And
There is no doubt at all that sympathies lie the play everywhere knows that life goes on. We
squarely with the lovers. Even Brooke, in survive with barely a thought to the disappearance
Shakespeares source, cannot stay true to the of Benvolio and the dropping dead of old Lady
moral condemnation which his prologue prepares Montague. We might resent the survival of Lords
us to expect. But sympathy and morality can Capulet and Montague beyond their children, and
be at odds; intimacy with a character does not think their promise of a statue in pure Gold a
necessarily mean approval. And so might it be presumptuous irrelevance. But can we really
the case that we are on the lovers side even as we resent the relative indifference of Peter and the
know, at some level, that they are foolish or wrong three musicians, who enter after the scene of
or destructive? lamentation over Juliets corpse, play Hearts
Consider poor Lady Montague. She only gets a ease, exchange a few jokes, and clearly feel more
couple of lines, trying to stop the fight, worrying concerned by what they can get away with than any
about her sad son, and then she is absent until in real grief for the dead daughter of the house? Or
the final scene we hear she has dropped dead from even the self-protectiveness of the Friar, who
grief. Surely she did not deserve this; surely her covers his ears and runs from the scene, facilitating
son was a grotesque egoist who should have the suicide of Juliet? We are all at the centre of our
thought more about his mother! own lives. This, as much as anything, is the moral
Then again, do we care, really? Any more than of Romeo and Juliets passion as well. Who is

112 113
anyone to exile us from our centres? My love is not predestined as though accidents themselves are
his love, her love is not yours. It is right that we should providential. It comes from elsewhere; it takes and
cherish our own, and be permitted in the instinct. possesses: the individual is at once helpless and
Finally, however, it is clear that social moralism emboldened, raised to their greatest, most
is not the plays endpoint not even the lesson purposive height by the recognition of
learnt by the parents about their destructive powerlessness in the face of such a force. This is
enmity. More to the point is the sheer imperative why their love is always couched in metaphors of
that we experience life in the stony face of death. sun, moon, night and so on. To the extent that
This, I take it, is the meaning of the fathers Juliet and Romeo are free subjects, they are tiny.
shamefaced attempts at reparation; they take their Thought is never free in Verona. Juliet and Romeo
punishment, and we can see in these closing reject one mode of determinism for another. This
movements: the glazed, shocked attempts of is why the work is so large and mythic. The lovers
parents trying simply to move in the wake of are taken, possessed: they embody the black
devastated guilt and grief. For death is the bass- cosmic comedy of our unfreedom.
chord and boundary of this play love is impossible
without it, just as a life is. Contrary to popular
reputation, Romeo and Juliet is not ultimately
about believing in love, or wanting to love or to be
loved, or identifying ones true love and going for it
whatever the cost. If it were, then Shakespeares
initial characterisation of Romeo, in love with
Rosaline, spouting lovelorn clichs, would be less
satiric, less premature and frankly disappointing
than it is.
The point about this first love is precisely that it
is too chosen, too much an effect or affectation
of will. The real thing hits as though by
lightning. It is accidental, in the sense of
unplanned and unpredicted. But precisely because
it is not willed or even chosen, it becomes as though

114 115
A SHORT CHR ONOLOGY

1562 Arthur Brookes 3,000 line poem, The Tragicall


Historye of Romeus and Juliet (1562), also a source
for The Two Gentlemen of Verona. There are twelve
allusions to Romeo by English writers between 1562
and 1583.

1564 Shakespeare born in Stratford-on-Avon.

1590-92 Henry VI parts I, II and III.

1593 English translations of two poems by Du Bartas


published in John Eliots Ortho-Epia Gallica.

1594 Loves Labours Lost.

1595-6 conventional date of Richard II and A


Midsummer Nights Dream. Romeo and Juliet, dated
by stylistic resemblance to Richard II and A
Midsummer Nights Dream, is generally thought to
have been composed between 1591 (11 years after the
Dover Straits earthquake) and 1595. 1596 is the
latest possible date, since by March 1597 the play
had been performed and sold to a printer. Richard
Burbage was probably the first Romeo, and Master
Richard Goffe Juliet. The play was immediately
successful on the title page of the first published
text it is referred to as one that hath been often
(with great applause) plaid publiquely.

Opposite: Rudolf Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn as


Romeo and Juliet in Paul Czinners 1966 film

116
1597 Romeo and Juliet first appears in print, in an actress, revived it, playing Romeo herself, recovering
unlicensed quarto edition, possibly assembled by the Shakespeares plot whilst still leaving out bawdy and
actors playing Romeo and Paris. A second quarto, lots of small scenes. It became all about her Romeo.
newly corrected, augmented and amended, was
published in 1599, probably produced from 1935 John Gielguds production, which returned
Shakespeares rough draft of the play. fully to Shakespeares text. He wanted it to be
operatic, so that the lovers shall sing those
1599-1602 Hamlet, Twelfth Night, Troilus and marvellous duets while the other characters speak
Cressida their lines.

1603 Elizabeth I dies. accession of James I 1947 Peter Brooks version concentrated on the
lovers, two children caught in the maelstrom
1603-1606 Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Measure for around them. Brooks key term was this: For now,
Measure, Antony and Cleopatra these hot days, is the mad blood stirring... Brook cut
widely, his accent on speed.
1616 23 April Shakespeare dies

1623 publication of a collected edition of


Shakespeares works, including Romeo and Juliet;
this becomes known as the First Folio.

1662 the great diarist Pepys called it the play of


itself the worst that ever I heard in my life.

1679 Thomas Otway adapted it to a Roman setting


Caius Marius - and had Juliet wake before Romeo
dies. This was very successful, and played for over 60
years.

1748 David Garricks revival, which held the stage for


97 years.

1800s having fallen into disfavour, with Romeo


thought too womanish Charlotte Cushman, the great

118
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Bloom, H, Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human, Kristeva, J, Love-Hatred in the Couple in White, R,
Fourth Estate, 1998 Romeo and Juliet, Palgrave Macmillian, 2001

Giraud, R, The Passionate Oxymoron in Romeo and Palfrey, S, Doing Shakespeare (revised edition),
Juliet, in his Mimesis and Theory: Essays on Arden, 2011; especially on the meaning of Mercutios
Literature and Criticism, 1953-2005, Stanford puns
University Press, 2008; A Theatre of Envy: William
Shakespeare, OUP, 1991 Palfrey, S and Stern, T, Shakespeare in Parts, Oxford,
2007; especially on shared and unshared cues
Goldberg, J, Shakespeares Hand, University of
Minnesota Press, 2003 Porter, J, Shakespeares Mercutio: His History and
Drama, Chapel Hill, 1988; extract in White, R,
Grady, H, Shakespeare and Impure Ethics, Romeo and Juliet, 2001
Cambridge University Press, 2009
Ryan, K, Shakespeare, Palgrave Macmillan (3rd
Everett, B, Romeo and Juliet: The Nurses Story, in edn), 2002
Young Hamlet, OUP, 1989; sees the nurse not as a
prattler, but a central character. Snyder, S, The Comic Matrix of Shakespeares
Tragedies, Princeton University Press, 1979
Hegel, G, Hegels Aesthetic: Lectures on Fine Art, vol
1, trans T.M. Knox, OUP 1975

Kahn, C, Mans Estate: Masculine Identity in


Shakespeare, University of California Press, 1981

120 121
INDEX of 11 101
First Folio 117 death of 67
A desire and authority, Friar Laurence 8587, 97, delusions, as victim of
Alliteration, use of 52 reconciliation of 14 113 94
Answering scenes 60 desire, direction of 15 demonic and vampiric
Antony and Cleopatra 67 ending 15 G sexuality 105
evasive nature of 16 Garrick, David 67, 117 Echo, as 78
B heroines, defence Gielgud, John 118 erotic longing,
Balcony scene 5 against male appetite Girard, Rene 29 handling of 100106
conversation on 6061 13 Girardin, SaintMarc 106 first scene 3436
Juliet speaking 57 marriage in 18 Globe Theatre 119 gestation by
Juliet, words of 6162 obedience to law of Glover, Julian 86 Shakespeare 49
memorable, being 5568 elders, turning on 13 Goffe, Richard 116 Goffe playing 116
O Romeo, Romeo, organisation 12 Goldberg, Jonathan 20 introduction of 3137
wherefore art thou Romeo and Juliet Gounod, Charles language of 68
Romeo?, meaning 5760 differing from 1221 Romo et Juliette 64 love, speaking 7579
parodies 5859 Critics, views of 9899 mad speech 100
Romeos soliloquy 56 Cushman, Charlotte 117 H marriage, consummation
Bate, Jonathan 66 Hamlet of 90
Benda, Georg D films of 65 Mercutio preparing use
Romo und Julie 64 Danes, Claire 33 Ophelia, madness of 100 for 4750
Benvolio 2427, 113 De Lamartine, A. 100 suicide in 67 Mercutios demonic
Berlioz, Hector Dekker, Thomas Hazlitt, William 11, 23, energy, passing of
Romo et Juliette 64 Master Constable 58 80, 89 102
Birds 8991 Derrida, Jacques 63 Hegel, G.W.F. 91 Nurse surrounding and
Bloom, Harold DiCaprio, Leonardo 33 Hussey, Olivia 19, 65, 77 overwhelming 35
Shakespeare: The Dor, Gustave 45 Paris, suit of 6, 3132
Invention of the Draper, J.W. 98 J play, taking over 5
Human 106 Dryden, John 37 Jonson, Ben presence, principles of
Brook, Peter 118 Poetaster 55, 59 54
Brooke, Arthur E Juliet private passions 50
Tragicall History of Eliot, John accelerated maturation Romeos first glimpse
Romeo and Juliet 17, Ortho-Epia Gallica 116 96 of 5155
89, 109110, 112, 116 Eliot, T.S. 6263 age 9197 separateness of 20
Burbage, Richard 116 Erotic longing back-story 37 sex, imagining of
destructive instincts, Capulets image of 103104
C and 104 3134 sleeping potion, taking
Capulet 3134 Juliet, of 100106 characteristic 6
Champion, L.S. 98 Everett, Barbara 9394 Shakespearian hero, as speech summing up 7778
Character, meaning 71 6 terrible lucidity 63
Chronology 116118 F cheek of night, torches, use of term
Comedies Failure, inevitability identification with 52, 5455
young, required to be to Juliet 102 nativity tales 3435 hunting of 2627
9197 genesis, dystopian indirect introduction
Julius Caesar 67 scene of 46 O of 2428
importance of 3747 Operas Juliet, first glimpse
K Juliet, preparing use Romeo and Juliet, based of 5155
Kahn, Coppelia 20 for 4750 on 64 Juliets tomb, at
Kermode, Frank 98 name of 69 Othello 67 108109
Kierkegaard, S. obstacle to central Otway, Thomas 117 marriage, consummation
Fear and Trembling 111 story, as 40 Ovid of 90
Kreyszig, F. 23 Queen Mab speech 4146, Metamorphoses 78 meeting Juliet 5
Kristeva, Julia 88, 104 4950 romantic, as 4
requirement to kill off P social world, absence
Lawlor, John 98 3738 Paris 3132 from 83
London theatres, closure rest of action, Juliet agreeing to speech 29
of 66 separate from 38 marry 6 vanity 2930
Luhrmann, Baz rival play, in 41 lament 107108 Romeo and Juliet
Romeo+Juliet 33, 74, unfolding conceit 44 adaptation and change
103 Zeffirellis film, in P 67
44 Pepys, Samuel 117 characters 7
M Midsummer Nights Dream, Pericles 95 conatus, striking on
Macbeth 67 A Playbill 85 1011
Maginn, William 22 date of 116 Porter, Henry cuts in 7274
Marston, John ending 16 Two Angry Women of date of 116
Insatiable Countess, patriarchy, escape from Abingdon 58 death, story mortgaged
The 55 13 Porter, Joseph A. 46 to 2021
Jack Drums Romeo and Juliet, Prokofiev, Sergei ending 1415
Entertainment 58 parody of 65 Romeo and Juliet escapist desire, about
Measure for Measure Montague and Capulet (ballet) 64 13
1314, 16 names 6975 films of 65
Merchant of Venice, The rivalry of 8 Q inevitability of
Bassanio, friends of 30 Montague, Lady 112113 Queen Mab speech 4146, failure, about 11
ending 16 Much Ado About Nothing 4950 irretrievable loss and
Portia, will of father 13 failure, everyone
as to 13 R doomed to 108109
Mercutio N Rankin, Norman 98 key quotes 53
anti-romantic, as 5 Names, importance of Romeo marriage, consummation
charm of 39 6975 Benvolio, conversation of 90
clairvoyance 46 Nurse 93, 101 with 27 moral of 106115
cold hands, with 44 exploration of events Burbage as 116 musicians 113
death of 3839, 48, 83 by 36 critics, views of 2223 names, importance of
demonic wit 4041 Juliet, speeches about first appearance 2830 6975
demonic energy, passing 3437 first love 114 operas based on 64
parodies 55 Time, handling of 7991
performance outside Twelfth Night 16
England 66 Tybalt 39
plot summary 89 death of 83
popular music,
inspiring 64 V
print, in 116117 Verona
rebellion, about 10 Juliet, letters to 66
Shakespeares comedies, men, boastfulness and
differing from 1221 brawling 24
source, changes from Montague and Capulet,
17, 111 rivalry of 8
time, handling of 7991 public world of 24
versions of 7274
worlds greatest love W
story, as 4 Wagner, Richard
Rosaline 30, 34, 60, 114 Tristan und Isolde 21
Ryan, Kiernan 11, 75 White, R.S. 99
Whiting, Leonard 77
S
Shakespeare in Love 12 Z
Shakespeare, William Zeffirelli, Franco
comedies 1221 Romeo and Juliet 44,
Friar, playing 86 65, 77
Sidney. Sir Philip
Astrophel and Stella 29
Snyder, Susan 70
The Comic Matrix of
Shakespeares
Tragedies 1213
Stauffer, D.A. 99
Suicide
Shakespeares plays, in
67
Symmetrical scenes 60

T
Taming of the Shrew, The
13
Tchaikovsky, Peter
Romeo and Juliet
Fantasy Overture 64
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