“Why
then I do but dream on sovereignty,
Like
one that stands upon a promontory
And
spies a far-off shore where he would tread,
Wishing
his foot were equal with his eye,
And
chides the sea that sunders him from thence,
Saying,
he'll lade it dry to have his way:
So
do I wish the crown, being so far off,
And
so I chide the means that keeps me from it,
And
so, I say, I'll cut the causes off,
Flattering
me with impossibilities,
My
eye's too quick, my heart o'erweens too much,
Unless
my hand and strength could equal them.”—Richard, Duke of Gloucester (the future
King Richard III), in English playwright-poet William Shakespeare (1564-1616), King Henry VI, Part 3 (1591)
Several
months ago, bored during a TV commercial break, I switched channels and came
across, on a PBS station, The Hollow Crown: The Wars of the Roses.
I watched transfixed for about a half hour. Nearly 40 years after first
encountering this multitude of characters on the printed page, the pitch-dark
political vision of William Shakespeare began to make sense to me. I
resolved to watch the whole thing on DVD as soon as I had the chance. This past
week, I finally did.
If
you want to understand much of the creative inspiration for Game of Thrones,
with its rival houses plunging entire kingdoms into division, chaos and
violence, you can start here. (GOT novelist George R.R. Martin admitted
as much in a 2014 interview with Rolling Stone Magazine’s Mikal Gilmore.)
At
the same time, I can’t help but think that this nine-hour BBC miniseries,
combining Richard III with its less well-known predecessors, the three
parts of Henry VI, took much of its look—notably, its stress on location
shooting and bloody battle scenes—from the long-running HBO series. (And this
was only the second half of this TV treatment of Shakespeare’s English history
plays—the first half covered Richard II, Henry IV Parts I and II,
and Henry V.)
In
any case, Dominic Cook and Sam Mendes—director and executive producer,
respectively, of The Hollow Crown—have made me look at Shakespeare’s “Wars of the
Roses” tetralogy in a way I never imagined when I took a college course on The
Bard nearly 40 years ago. The course was an academic sprint that felt like a
marathon: all of the playwright’s 37 plays, plus his poetry, compressed into
two semesters. Some plays received extensive treatment; others, barely a
mention. I only took the first semester, on Shakespeare’s early career. I can’t
say I missed taking the other semester.
Among the works
shortchanged in all of this were the Henry VI plays. I didn’t appreciate either their rich
language or their complex, compelling characters until I saw the magic that
Cook conjured with the help of his all-star British cast, which included Hugh
Bonneville, Sophie Okonedo, Judi Dench and Tom Sturridge.
Oh, yes: and Benedict Cumberbatch as Richard III (in the image accompanying this post). Though
Shakespeare named this early portion of his play cycle after Henry VI, this
last of the Lancaster monarchs increasingly is overshadowed by the hunchbacked
villain.
From the moment he first
appears onscreen, with his character’s misshapen form blocking out the sun as
he lurches through a doorway, Cumberbatch (beloved by thousands of mystery fans
as Sherlock) convincingly depicts Richard as a demon of the dark, desperate to fill
his psychic void with increasingly bold grasps for power.
In the passage quoted
here, Richard is all too aware of the obstacles blocking him from the English
throne, which at this point appears “so far off” (including, at this point, the
possibility that his brother, King Edward IV, and his wife Lady Anne Grey might
produce heirs). Previously ruthless but at least indefatigable and brave in
battle fighting on behalf of his family, the House of York, he now reveals that
he hopes to seize the throne himself—even if that involves the removal of his brothers
and Edward’s young children.
Energy and audacity,
channeled constructively, can lead to accomplishment and fame. But through
Richard (whose soliloquys continually invite us into his schemes), Shakespeare
shows how those qualities can be warped by the unscrupulous pursuit and
retention of power.
Along with being a master
psychologist, Shakespeare also unravels the conditions that set the table for
authoritarians: vacillating and/or innocent current leaders (such as King
Henry), people in the orbit of a usurper who are gulled by his brazen lies, despite
themselves (Anne Neville, who agrees to wed Richard), and the enablers (Hastings,
Catesby, and Buckingham) who mistakenly believe they can aid his rise without
falling victim to his machinations themselves.
What stands between
Richard and his current counterparts around the world are a series of
restraints on power, which can indeed, as he notes, look as formidable as a
sea. That makes all the more astonishing his resolve to “lade [i.e., drain] it
dry to have his way.” It’s a frightening metaphor for a process that leaves the
security and liberty of a nation as void as its would-be authoritarian’s own
emotional and spiritual resources.
As Abraham Lincoln
scholar Douglas L. Wilson’s Winter 2012 article in The American Scholar noted, America’s 16th President was
a fan of Richard III. He thoroughly absorbed its lesson that a leader’s energy had to be
tempered by integrity and compassion in using power. If he ever got around to
seeing or watching Shakespeare (itself a doubtful proposition), Lincoln’s
current GOP successor in the White House long since forgot that message.
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