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Evil For Evil In The Merchant Of

Venice Essay, Research Paper


Few characters in Shakespeare embody pure evil like The Merchant of Venice’s


Shylock. Shylock is a usurer and a malevolent, blood-thirsty old man consumed


with plotting the downfall of his enemies. He is a malignant, vengeful


character, consumed with venomous malice1; a picture of callous, unmitigated


villainy, deaf to every appeal of humanity2. Shylock is the antagonist


opposite the naive, essentially good Antonio, the protagonist; who must


defend himself against the “devil” Shylock. The evil he represents is one of


the reasons Shakespeare chose to characterize Shylock as a Jew, as Jews of


his time were seen as the children of the Devil, the crucifiers of Christ and


stubborn rejectors of God’s wisdom and Christianity.


However, when Shakespeare created Shylock, he did not insert him in as a


purely flat character, consumed only with the villainy of his plot. One of


the great talents that Shakespeare possessed, remarks Shakespeare analyst


Harrold R. Walley, was his ability to make each key character act like a


real, rational person. Walley said of all of Shakespeare’s characters, hero


or villain, that “Their conduct is always presented as logical and


justifiable from their point of view3.” To maintain the literary integrity of


the play, “Shakespeare is under the necessity of making clear why a man like


Shylock should be wrought to such a pitch of vindictive hatred as to


contemplate murder4.” His evil must have some profound motivation, and that


motivation is the evil done to him. Shylock is not an ogre, letting lose harm


and disaster without reason. He was wronged first; the fact that his revenge


far outweighs that initial evil is what makes him a villain. Beneath Shylock’


villainy, the concept of evil for evil runs as a significant theme through


the play.


In order to understand the concept of evil for evil, one must examine the


initial evil, aimed at Shylock, through Shylock’s own eyes. Some may see the


discrimination aimed at Shylock as justified, as he is a malicious usurer;


certainly the Venetians thought so. However, the discrimination took its toll


on Shylock, until he began to hate all Christians. Shylock saw himself as an


outsider, alienated by his society. The evil he saw done to him took three


major forms: hatred from Antonio, discrimination from Christian Venetians,


and the marriage to a Christian of his daughter Jessica.


Shylock’s main reason for making the bond was, of course, his hatred of


Antonio. Antonio, a “good” Christian who lends without interest, constantly


preaches about the sin of usury and publicly denounces Shylock for practicing


it. In addition, Shylock hate Antonio for an economic, even petty reason, and


remarks that


He lends out money gratis and brings down


The rate of usance here with us in Venice. [I. iii. 44-45].


Antonio also spit on him in public and called him a “cut-throat dog.”


Shylock also recognizes Antonio’s anti-Semitism, calling him an enemy of


“our sacred nation” [I. iii. 48]. Antonio was always trying to coerce Shylock


to convert to Christianity, he even remarks to that effect to Bassanio after


the bond is made, and Shylock can sense this and it further fuels his hatred.


Shakespearean critic D.A. Traversi finds an additional thought plaguing


Shylock. Tied in with his anti-Semitism is an apparent supremacy Antonio


feels over Shylock, expressed in his ruthlessly complacent expression of


superiority,


I am as like to call thee so again,


To spit on thee again, to spurn thee too; [I. iii. 130-131]


so that we may even feel that, when he explicitly tells Shylock:


If thou wilt lend this money, lend it not


As to thy friends; for when did friendship take


A breed for barren metal of his friend?


But lend it rather to thine enemy; [I. iii. 132-33, 135]


he puts down Shylock as someone who can never be his friend or equal5.


In addition to evil from Antonio, Shylock is despised by the Christians. He


himself attributes his woes to the fact that “[He is] a Jew” [III. i. 58]6.


He says he hates Antonio because “he is a Christian” [I. iii. 42], and he


sees Christians as his oppressors. His thrift is condemned as miserly


blood-sucking7, when it is just his own means of survival, based on his own


separate standards8. His own insistence on the pound of flesh becomes the


direct result of renewed insult9.


The final insult Shylock receives at the hands of Christians is the marriage


of his daughter Jessica to a Christian. Walley examines Shylock’s feelings at


that moment, that “[Shylock] has been betrayed by his own flesh and blood,


and robbed to boot. He now takes on the dual roles of grief-stricken father


and duped-miser, though it is almost entirely the latter10.” Either way,


Shylock has once again been dealt evil by the Christians who segregate him.


While it is clear that he was an oppressed man, no reader of Shakespeare


would shed a single tear for poor Shylock. The evil he returns far outweighs


the measure received, even if one would judge the Christians’ discrimination


by today’s standards. Shylock is the villain of the play, and he is far from


innocent.


The most outright demonstration of evil

by Shylock is his insistence on the


pound of flesh at the trial scene. Shylock had in the past been seen as evil


for his miserly love of money, but now he insists on much more. He is willing


to give up three times the loan in exchange for a pound of Antonio’s flesh.


This tenacious pursuit of homicidal intentions toward Antonio is


representative of Shylock’s character. He is completely devoid of mercy; that


and other positive virtues are beyond his comprehension11. Traversi


characterizes Shylock’s personality as being full of “blind spots,” basic


human limitations, that when persisted in, “make a balanced human life


unattainable12.” The evil Shylock commits is further compounded by the


helplessness of Antonio’s situation.


When one examines the signing of the bond, further duplicitous treachery on


Shylock’s part becomes evident. Shylock puts Antonio in a situation where he


cannot say no to the apparently innocuous but potentially dangerous bond.


When Antonio approaches Shylock, he asks for the money, yet insists that


Shylock lend it “to thine enemy,” an implicit, unstated rebuke of usury.


Shylock then pounces on this opportunity, and offers a proposal that seems to


act upon Antonio’s teaching, slipping in his seemingly ridiculous contingency


of a pound of flesh, which Antonio would never dream could be taken


seriously. This puts Antonio in a precarious position: he must agree, as to


reject reformation is to nullify censure13. Further duplicity on Shylock’s


part is seen in the fact that he himself acts as if he does not take the


pound of flesh seriously, when he imparts to Antonio the perfectly reasonable


contention, “If he should break this day, what should I gain?” [I. iii.


163]14.


Literary critic James E. Siemon, finds further evidence to point out the


profound evil Shylock exudes in Shakespeare’s setup of the trial scene. By


that point it is obvious to all that Shylock is consumed with evil and will


stop at nothing to have his revenge, and the trial is both a condemnation of


Shylock and a hope of reform for him. The Duke, a figure of authority and


supreme judgement, speaks true when he calls Shylock a “stony adversary, an


inhuman wretch / Uncapable of pity” [IV, i. 4-5]15. The audience is meant to


realize, if they have not already, that a man cannot live without the


qualities of mercy and pity, and it is the lack of these that makes him


commit evil deeds. Siemon remarks that


Portia’s plea is essentially a plea for Shylock rather than for Antonio. She


is pleading with him to throw off his stony, inhuman nature and to take his


place as a man among men, to acknowledge…that he is a man and that all men


live by mercy.16


The audience is meant to understand that Shylock must change his very nature


in order to be a member of society. The fact that Shylock does not respond to


Portia is further proof that Shylock is a complete villain.


Siemon opens his essay on The Merchant of Venice with the following


statement: “The Merchant of Venice is the first of Shakespeare’s comedies to


attempt a full-scale depiction of evil.17″ Indeed, evil is a major theme of


the play, and certainly one of the most profound characteristics of Shylock.


He represents the tormented receiver of evil from society, the evil villain


plotting to destroy the hero, and most importantly, a man fueled by others’


evil to exhibit his own.


Bibliography


Kerr, Walter, 1960, from Shakespeare Criticism, Sandra L. Williamson and


James E. Person, Jr., editors, (Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1991),


volume 12


Siemon, James E., 1970, from Shakespeare Criticism, Sandra L. Williamson and


James E. Person, Jr., editors, (Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1991),


volume 4


Shakespeare, William, The Merchant of Venice


Traversi, D.A., 1968, from Shakespeare Criticism, Sandra L. Williamson and


James E. Person, Jr., editors, (Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1991),


volume 4


Walley, Harrold R., 1935, from Shakespeare Criticism, Sandra L. Williamson


and James E. Person, Jr., editors, (Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1991),


volume 4


1Harrold R. Walley, 1935, from Shakespeare Criticism, Sandra L. Williamson


and James E. Person, Jr., editors, (Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1991),


v. 4, p. 244


2 Ibid., p. 245


3 Ibid., p. 245


4Ibid., p. 245


5 D. A. Traversi, 1968, from Shakespeare Criticism, Sandra L. Williamson and


James E. Person, Jr., editors, (Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1991), v.


4, pp. 316-317


6Walley, p. 247


7 Ibid., p. 247


8Traversi, p. 316


9 Walter Kerr, 1960, from Shakespeare Criticism, Sandra L. Williamson and


James E. Person, Jr., editors, (Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1991), v.


12, p. 124


10 Walley., p. 247


11 Traversi, p. 316


12 Ibid., p. 316


13 Walley, p. 245


14 Ibid., p. 245


15 James E. Siemon, 1970, from Shakespeare Criticism, Sandra L. Williamson


and James E. Person, Jr., editors, (Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1991),


v. 4, p. 320


16 Ibid., p. 320


17 Ibid., p. 319


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