Remember,
sir, my liege,
The Kings your ancestors,
together with
The natural bravery of your
isle, which stands
As Neptune’s park, ribbed
and paled in
With rocks unscaleable and
roaring waters,
With sands that will not bear
your enemies’ boats,
But suck them up to the topmast.
A kind of conquest
Caesar made here; but made
not here his brag
Of ‘Came, and saw, and
overcame’; with shame—
The first that ever touched
him—he was carried
From off our coast, twice
beaten; and his shipping—
Poor ignorant baubles!—on
our terrible seas,
Like egg-shells moved upon
the surges, crack’d
As easily ’gainst our
rocks; for joy whereof
The famed Cassibelan, who
was once at point—
O giglot fortune!—to
master Caesar’s sword,
Made Lud’s town with
rejoicing fires bright
And Britons strut with courage.
It comes with something of a shock to remember that this medley of poetry, bombast, and myth will eventually reach the ears of no other person than the Octavius of Antony and Cleopatra; and the contrast is the more remarkable when one recalls the brilliant scene of negotiation and diplomacy in the latter play, which passes between Octavius, Maecenas, and Agrippa on the one side, and Antony and Enobarbus on the other, and results in the reconciliation of the rivals and the marriage of Antony and Octavia.
Thus strangely remote is the world of Shakespeare’s latest period; and it is peopled, this universe of his invention, with beings equally unreal, with creatures either more or less than human, with fortunate princes and wicked step-mothers, with goblins and spirits, with lost princesses and insufferable kings. And of course, in this sort of fairy land, it is an essential condition that everything shall end well; the prince and princess are bound to marry and live happily ever afterwards, or the whole story is unnecessary and absurd; and the villains and the goblins must naturally repent and be forgiven. But it is clear that such happy endings, such conventional closes to fantastic tales, cannot be taken as evidences of serene tranquillity on the part of their maker; they merely show that he knew, as well as anyone else, how such stories ought to end.