The Shakespearean Ethic - Vyvyan John
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Originally published by Chatto & Windus in 1959, this book has long
been out of print and largely neglected by Shakespearean scholars.
It offers a viewpoint seldom considered: an unusual and
exceptionally clear insight into Shakespeare’s philosophy. It does
so with freshness, modesty and conviction.Appreciating the danger
Shakespeare faced in writing at a time of major religious
intolerance, Vyvyan shows how subtly the plays explore aspects of
the perennial philosophy allegorically. In doing so, Shakespeare
raises the fundamental question of ethics: What ought we to do?
‘Shakespeare,’ says the author, ‘is never ethically neutral. He is
never in doubt as to whether the souls of his characters are rising
or falling.’ There is a constant pattern in the tragedies: ‘first
the hero is untrue to his own self, then he casts out love, then
conscience is gone – or rather inverted – and the devil enters into
him.’ Vyvyan shows us this pattern of damnation, or its counterpart
– a pattern of regeneration – working out in certain plays,
contrasting Hamlet with Measure for Measure and Othello with The
Winter’s Tale, where a similar dilemma and choice confront the
hero. His intuitive insights also illumine Macbeth, Julius Caesar
and Titus Andronicus which focus on the fall, whereas The Tempest
explores most fully the pattern of regeneration and creative mercy.
Here is a book, both thought-provoking and persuasive, which will
send many readers back to Shakespeare’s plays with fresh vision and
clearer understanding. To assist such readers, this edition
cross-references the quotations in the text to the relevant place
in the play. The text has been completely reset and the index
expanded. John Vyvyan, born in 1908 in Sussex, was educated mainly
in Switzerland. His first profession was archaeology, and he worked
with Sir Flinders Petrie in the Middle East. Illness, which dogged
him all his life, ended this kind of arduous field work, and he
retired from archaeology to become a Shakespearean scholar and to
write. Studies such as The Shakespearean Ethic, Shakespeare and The
Rose of Love (1960) and Shakespeare and Platonic Beauty (1961), led
to the offer of a visiting lectureship at the State University of
New York. He died in Exmouth in 1975.