The casting forth to crows thy baby daughter
To be or none or little; though a devil
Would have shed water out of fire ere done’t.
Nor is’t directly laid to thee, the death
Of the young prince, whose honourable thoughts,
Thoughts high for one so tender, cleft the heart
That could conceive a gross and foolish sire
Blemished his gracious dam.
Nowhere are the poet’s metaphors more nakedly material; nowhere does he verge more often upon a sort of brutality of phrase, a cruel coarseness. Iachimo tells us how:
The
cloyed will,
That satiate yet unsatisfied
desire, that tub
Both filled and running, ravening
first the lamb,
Longs after for the garbage.
and talks of:
an eye
Base and unlustrous as the smoky light
That’s fed with stinking tallow.
‘The south fog rot him!’ Cloten bursts out to Imogen, cursing her husband in an access of hideous rage.
What traces do such passages as these show of ‘serene self-possession,’ of ‘the highest wisdom and peace,’ or of ‘meditative romance’? English critics, overcome by the idea of Shakespeare’s ultimate tranquillity, have generally denied to him the authorship of the brothel scenes in Pericles but these scenes are entirely of a piece with the grossnesses of The Winter’s Tale and Cymbeline.
Is there no way for men to be,
but women
Must be half-workers?
says Posthumus when he hears of Imogen’s guilt.
We
are all bastards;
And that most venerable man,
which I
Did call my father, was I
know not where
When I was stamped. Some
coiner with his tools
Made me a counterfeit; yet
my mother seemed
The Dian of that time; so
doth my wife
The nonpareil of this—O
vengeance, vengeance!
Me of my lawful pleasure she
restrained
And prayed me, oft, forbearance;
did it with
A pudency so rosy, the sweet
view on’t
Might well have warmed old
Saturn, that I thought her
As chaste as unsunned snow—O,
all the devils!—
This yellow Iachimo, in an
hour,—was’t not?
Or less,—at first:
perchance he spoke not; but,
Like a full-acorned boar,
a German one,
Cried, oh! and mounted:
found no opposition
But what he looked for should
oppose, and she
Should from encounter guard.
And Leontes, in a similar situation, expresses himself in images no less to the point.
There
have been,
Or I am much deceived, cuckolds
ere now,
And many a man there is, even
at this present,
Now, while I speak this, holds
his wife by the arm,
That little thinks she has
been sluiced in’s absence
And his pond fished by his
next neighbour, by