Wednesday, January 22, 2020
The Importance of Time in Shakespeares The Winters Tale Essay
The Importance of Time in The Winter's Tale     Ã      Leon. No foot shall stir.     Paul. Music, awake her; strike! [Music]     Tis time; descend; be stone no more; approach;     Strike all that look upon with marvel. Come!     I'll fill your grave up: stir, nay, come away:     Bequeath to death your numbness; for from him     Dear life redeems you. You perceive she stirs:     --The Winter's Tale (V.iii.98-103)      Ã       Unlike most of Shakespeare's earlier plays, The Winter's Tale moves from  tragedy to comedy. The disastrous consequences of Leontes' jealousy and tyranny  are resolved by the passing of time. Only after sixteen years can the two royal  families come together again. Time also plays a significant role in the reading  of the chosen passage. The passage is full of commas, colons, semi-colons, and  periods, which force the lines to be slowed and pausing. The frequent  punctuations draw the reader's attention to time and its effects on the words  being spoken by the characters. The scansion of the passage illustrates  Shakespeare's mastery of time as he manipulates the rhythm of the lines using  varying foots and meters. Time seems to be the crucial element in not only the  scansion of this passage, but in the development of the play as a whole.      Ã       Line ninety-eight begins with a half-line consisting of only two feet, "No  foot shall stir." The brevity of the line and the slowness of the opening  spondee help to create the tension before Paulina attempts to summon the statue  of Hermione. Leontes wants everyone to stand still while Paulina tries to give  life to the statue. He says, "No foot shall stir" (98). Meanwhile, the metrical  feet in line ninety-eight do "stir" as the pentameter is broken up into two  ha...              ...vidual from imminent danger. When time is misused or misjudged, as seen in  Leontes' hasty accusations and also in Antigonus' tardiness in returning to the  ship, Time can lead to utter destruction.      Ã       Works Cited      Gomez, Michelle. "A History of Clocks." Online posting. 4 Mar. 2001.      Shakespeare, William. The Winter's Tale. Ed. J.H.P. Pafford. London:  Routledge, 1994.      Works Consulted     Bloom, Harold. The Winter's Tale (Modern Critical Interpretations). Chelsea  House Publishers, 1992.     Granville Barker's Prefaces to Shakespeare: A Midsummer Nights Dream: The  Winter's Tale: The Tempest. Granville Barker. Heinemann, 1994.     Innes, Sheila. The Winter's Tale (Cambridge School Shakespeare). Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 1999.     Pyle, Fitzroy. The Winter's Tale: A Commentary on the Structure. New York:  Routledge & Paul, 1969.     Ã                        
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