Friday, March 15, 2019

Shakespeare on Machiavelli: The Prince in Richard III Essay -- Richa

Shakespeare on Machiavelli The Prince in Richard III According to many, Shakespeare intentionally portrays Richard III in ways that would have the world hail him as the ultimate Machiavel. This launch up only serves to further the dramatic irony when Richard falls from his throne. The reputation of Richards character is key to discovering the commentary Shakespeare is delivering on the nature of tyrants. By conniption up Richard to be seen as the ultimate Machiavel, only to have him short destroyed, Shakespeare makes a dramatic commentary on the frailty of tyranny and such(prenominal) men as would aspire to tyrannical rule. From the outset of the play, it is obvious that Richard subscribes to the legal age of the Machiavellian principles. Certainly, he is not ashamed or afraid to spell heinous murder, and he does so with an ever-present false front. I do mistake my person all this while,1 he muses, plotting Annes death transactions after having won her hand. He w ill not even carry the ideas in public, demanding they Dive...down to his soul.2 He knows that he mustiness be ruse and soulless to succeed in his tasks. Richard also knows it is essential to guard against the curse of the populace, as Machiavelli warned. He breeds anger in Clarence and the populace, not of himself, but of Edward and the just heirs. We are not safe, Clarence, we are not safe,3 he exclaims as his brother is hauled away to the tower. He preys on the hateful luxury And brute(prenominal) appetite4 of the citizenry, catapulting himself to the thrown over a heap of bodies deaths that cohere on his head. But, it is Richards attitude that his end goal of the crown justifies the murderous heart and soul that so closely links ... ...t meet Shakespeares demands the chances are slim. He must be a paradox amoral and god fearing. 1 profess I. Sc. II. Ln. 257 2 get along I. Sc. I. Ln. 40 3 Act I. Sc. I. Ln. 70 4 Act III. Sc. V. Ln. 79-80 5 Act IV. Sc. II. Ln. 60-5 6 Act I. Sc. II. Ln. 125-8 7 Act IV. Sc. IV. Ln. 51-2 8 Act IV. Sc. IV. Ln. 397-400 9 Act V. Sc. III. Ln. 179 10 Act V. Sc. III. Ln. 201-2 11 Act I. Sc. I. Ln. 1 12 Act I. Sc. I. Ln. 20 13 Act I. Sc. I. Ln. 28, 30 Works Cited and Consulted Nicole Machiavelli, The Prince, pp. 359-386. Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, Dubuque, Iowa, 1998. Ornstein, Richard. Richard III. Richard III. New York Signet Classic, 1988. 239-264. Shakespeare, William. Richard III. The Norton Shakespeare. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. (New York W.W. Norton and Company, 1997), 515-600.

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