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Suffering In Shakespeare

’s Plays Essay, Research Paper


Suffering In Shakespeare’s Plays


How does suffering affect one’s actions? Do different types of suffering


affect one in different ways? This paper seeks to determine how William


Shakespeare’s character’s respond to various types of suffering. Suffering can


be defined in two ways; physical suffering, in which the character is inflicted


with physical pain and trauma, and emotional suffering, where the character


suffers an emotional trauma or loss.


In The Tempest, the physically traumatized characters, are Trinculo and


Stephano. They are chased by dogs but their physical trauma has not induced any


sign of remorse or guilt. Ferdinand, on the other hand, is overcome by


emotional suffering at the “loss” of his son. In King Lear, Lear is plagued


emotionally. He feels that he has lost the love of his favorite daughter


Cordelia, and he feels the harsh hatred of his two evil daughters. At the


conclusion of the play, his sanity is restored but he has suffered tremendously


in an emotional manner at the hands of Regan and Goneril. In Othello, Brabantio


goes through emotional suffering when he must succumb to his daughter’s wishes.


Desdemona also goes through emotional suffering when she is accused by Othello


of cheating on him when he is convinced of this by Iago.


In The Tempest, the theme of purification through suffering can


clearly be seen. Prospero, in his long exile from Milan, has more than attoned


for whatever mistake he might have made while he ruled. Ferdinand must suffer


through Prospero’s hardships and laborious tests before he can win Miranda’s


hand. Most significantly, Alonso must undergo the suffering that Prospero has


designed for him before he is forgiven.


Prospero, who is the real Duke of Milan was overthrown 12 years earlier


by his younger brother Antonio. Prospero was driven out of the island along


with his daughter Miranda; the two were cast out to sea. His suffering has


occured in a physical and a non-physical way, he is deeply hurt from losing his


kingdom and from being cast out to die. Despite this, he is generous in


forgiving. He is not only in control of those around him but he punishes the


guilty and demands repentance.


When Ferdinand meets Miranda, they instantly fall in love with each


other. “I might call him…a thing divine; for nothing natural…I ever saw so


noble.” ( Tempest, I, ii, 417-419). He is perfect for her in that he is pure and


appreciates her innocence and purity. To make sure that Ferdinand is worthy to


marry Miranda, Prospero makes him endure heavy labor. “The mistress which I


serve quickens what’s dead and makes my labors pleasure.” (Tempest, III, i, 6-7)


Alonso, Sebastian, and Antonio, who are denounced as “men of sin”


(Tempest, III,, iii, 53) are driven by Ariel into a frenzy of madness. Alonso is


deeply affected, he believes the “death” of his son to be punishment and he


confesses his guilt and seeks to atone for it. He is purified through the trial


and reconciled with Prospero at the play’s end. Neither Antonio nor Sebastian,


who are equally guilty, is affected in this way. They remain impenitent. Their


incapacity for remorse is punished, Ariel suggests by a “ling’ ring perdition,


worse than any death.” ( Tempest, III, iii, 77)


Stephano, the King’s butler, and Trinculo, the jester, plot to overthrow


Prospero. Their trial and suffering take form in a physical way. They are


submerged in a horse pond and then hunted by Prospero’s dogs.


King Lear allows one to see how physical suffering can bring on


emotional suffreing. This can be seen in the two main characters of each subplot.


Lear, King of Brittain, is described as “a very foolish old man, fourscore and


upward.” His fatal flaw of rashness causes his suffering. The Earl of Gloucester


lacks Lear’s capacity for wrath but shares his fatal flaw of rashness. Like Lear,


he is made to suffer greatly by his children before he gains true insight.


Cordelia, Lear’s daughter, suffers emotional pain. She is disowned by her father


but in the end, she survives to comfort him and proves her own selflessness.


King Lear is the epitomy of suffering. “His suffering includes a sense


of guilt for misusing his past powers.” (Bloom, 80). He endures a parents worst


nightmare. First, he is outraged by his daughters lack of love for him. “Love


and be silent” (I, i, 69). “I am sure my love’s more ponderous than my tongue.”


(King Lear, I, i, 78-79). Because of this, he ends up banishing her from his


kingdom and cutting her from the inheritance. He splits the land in two leaving


her with nothing. to his dismay, Lear discovers that life with his two other


daughters is no joy. He is outraged by their cruel behavior, a “Sharp-tooth’d


unkindness” (King Lear, II, iv). Lear is thrown out by his two daughters to rage


against natures harsh elements. “To be thrown from being king of Brittain to a


fugitive in the open, pelted by merciless weather, and betrayed by ungrateful


daughters is indeed an unpleasant fate.” (Bloom, 1). Lear has now completely


gone mad from exposure to the storm and the anguish he has suffered at the hands


of his daughters.


“Gloucester must go through intense suffering before he can identify


with the deprived.” (Bloom, 74). He is convinced that his son is secretly


planning to kill him. His bastard son Edmund convinces Gloucester that Edgar,


his natural son, wants to kill him. Edmund then convinces Edgar to flee from


his father’s wrath.” My father watches. O, sir, fly this place,…Fly, bro

ther,-


Torches, torches!- so farewell.” (King Lear, II, i, 20, 31-32). Gloucester’s


suffering continues as he attempts to help his friend Lear and his followers,


but is betrayed to Cornwall and Regan by Edmund. As punishment, Gloucester is


blinded and sent to rage the storm with Lear. “…I would not see thy cruel


nails pluck out his poor old eyes” (King Lear, )III,iii, 58-59) “Let’s follow


the old earl, and get the bedlam to lead him where he would. His rougish madness


allows itself to anything.” (King Lear, III, iii, 105-106).


Cordelia’s suffering begins when she tells her father the truth- “I love


your majesty according to my bond, no more nor less.” (King Lear, I, i, 93-94).


He then banishes her and cuts her from his will. Despite all that has happened


to her, She still loves her father and is there when he needs her. When she


hears word of his treatment, she returns to help him. Lear’s sanity is restored


with loving care on her part. “From his vision of universal guilt, Lear moves


to a vision of universal suffering, the basis for a different kind of


mutuality.” (Bloom, 90). His final suffering is at the end of the play. He


enters carrying Cordelia’s body. As he weeps for her, he is surrounded by the


bodies of Goneril and Regan, the survivors can only stare in respect.


In Othello , the suffering comes about through emotions. Othello is


suffering because he feels that his wife has been unfaithful to him. Brabantio


suffers because he feels that his only daughter has been kidnapped and seduced.


Desdemona suffers because her father disapproves of her marriage and she is


plotted against by the evil Iago, making her husband think that she has been


disloyal. Othello represents how jealousy, particularly sexual jealousy, can


bring on corruption, suffering through ones emotions.


Brabantio, a Venetion Senator, is terrified that his only child has been


kidnapped by Othello and has been seduced with drugs and potions. ” It is to’


tree an evil, Gone she is,…O, unhappy girl!-… O, she deceives me,…O,


treason of the blood!… is there not charms by which the property of youth and


maidhood may be abused?” (Othello, I, i, 178-195). When he learns that Desdemona


is in love with the moor he is bitter and resentful. “At each house I’ll call. I


may command at most.- Get weapons ho! and raise some special offices of the


night.” (Othello, I, i, 203-205). He accepts the defeat but not graciously; he


will not allow Desdemona to stay in his house while Othello is at war. Despite


his harsh reaction, Brabantio is not a villain, he is only a hurt father, hurt


by his daughter’s deceptions, that she married behind his back. He is so wounded


that when he dies, it is probably of a broken heart.


Desdemona, a young Venetian woman, has lived a sheltered life in her


father’s home. She falls in love with a man several years older than herself,


from a foreign land and of a different race. Fearing her father’s disapproval,


she elopes with Othello and goes with him to the war zone. Desdemona is


portrayed as a lovely, gentle woman, deeply in love with her husband.


Unfotunately, being so delicate causes her vulnerability to the terrible plot


and accusations brought on by Iago. “Desdemona is helplessly passive. She can do


nothing, she can not retaliate, even in speech.” (Bloom, 80). Although Othello


finds her unfaithful, there is no room in her world for the things he has


accused her of. It is her very innocence that makes her a victim.


Othello’s sexual jealousy is one of the most corrupting and destructive


emotions; it is the cause of Desdemona’s pain. Desdemona goes from a state of


vulnerability to a state of suffering. Iago’s contribution to Othello’s jealous


rage also affect her suffering. “The marriage might have succeeded had it not


been for the evil character, Iago.” (Jorgenson, 59). Iago tries to convince


Othello that Desdemona is having an affair with Cassio. When Desdemona goes to


see her gentle, loving husband, she finds him in an overwrought emotional


condition. When she tries to soothe him by stroking his head with a handkerchief,


he becomes irritated and throws it to the side. “Are you not well?… Let me but


bind it hard; within this hour it will be well.” (Othello, III, iii, 325-329).


Later, Iago uses the same handkerchief to incriminate Desdemona. Together,


Othello and Iago agree that Desdemona should be put to death. Out of rage,


Othello smothers Desdemona in bed and kills her. “She must die, else she’ll


betray more men.” (Othello, V, ii, 6).


In conclusion, there is evidence that Shakespeare designed his


characters to be affected by different types of suffering in different ways. The


characters who underwent emotional suffering, usually ended up purified or at


least in a better state of mind. On the other hand, those who only underwent


physical suffering did not change from their past behaviors and did not repent.


Evidence of this can be seen in the following ways: Ferdinand in The


Tempest, is struck by emotional pain. Because of this, he is purified through


his trial and he repents. In Othello, the main character is caught in an


emotional battle- who is he to believe- his loyal servant or his new bride?


Unfortunately, Othello does not realize the truth until it is too late and has


already killed Desdemona. In King Lear, Lear becomes temporarily insane from the


pain and turmoil he endures from his daughters. He does not come to terms about


his mistake until, like Othello, it is too late and Cordelia has already been


killed.

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