'What May Words Say . . . ?'

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'What May Words Say . . . ?'

A Reading of the The Merchant of Venice

Literary studies: general Literary studies: plays and playwrights

Author: Inge Leimberg

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Language: English

Published by: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press

Published on: 24th February 2011

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 286 pages

ISBN: 9781611470017


Introduction

"What May Words Say…?" A Reading of The Merchant of Venice contains, in a form resembling a running commentary, a comprehensive and in many respects unconventional interpretation of The Merchant of Venice. The play's development of ideas is unfolded in a literary analysis that focuses on the poet's words in their philological, historical, and philosophical contexts.

Key Themes

What the words say is that the play is dominated by the three Delphic maxims, Know thyself, Nothing too much, and Give surety and harm is at hand. Within the intellectual and ethical compass of these tenets the two-stranded action of the play is developed, and the question why Shakespeare added the story of the caskets to the story of the bond is answered by the words law and choice, which are as closely connected semantically as the two stories are interrelated in the dramatic structure.

Conclusion

The self-knowledge achieved in the musical cadence of the play is everyone's seeing God's image in the other person, and the law finally chosen is forgiveness.

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