Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Complications of a Fallen World Comparing The White Devil and Paradise Lost - Literature Essay Samples
Websterââ¬â¢s presentation of the fallen world in Act V of The White Devil appears as a more developed and grander reflection of Miltonââ¬â¢s fallen world in Book IX of Paradise Lost. Miltonââ¬â¢s outstanding attributes of the fallen world are developed by Webster in his presentation of evil characters who, being part of a fallen society, display the same characteristics as the post-fall Adam and Eve at the end of Book IX ââ¬â mirroring the darker emotional development of the pair, undergoing a transition from blissful innocence to uncontrollable greed, lustful desire and falsity. However, though Miltonââ¬â¢s protagonists must undergo a fall in order to understand the knowledge of evil, those in Websterââ¬â¢s The White Devil are already fallen and possess this knowledge in excess, creating a farcical accentuation of the already established attributes to a fallen being ââ¬â as Websterââ¬â¢s characters not only possess these traits but actually become represen tative of them thematically. Websterââ¬â¢s characterisation in The White Devil is based upon the sins committed by the fallen Adam and Eve, yet he accentuates them to make his fallen world seem obsessive over these sinful traits. Webster too, like Milton, uses his work in order to emphasise the corruption of the contemporary world; Milton attempting to ââ¬Ëjustifyââ¬â¢ it, giving reasoning behind the fall, and Webster to later elaborate by subtly, through his use of revenge tragedy, bringing metaphorical justice to King James I who, at the time, could be representative of Satan ââ¬â the most fallen being of all. In Miltonââ¬â¢s fallen world, women become the centre of all blame as the patriarchal hierarchy collapses. Adamââ¬â¢s final speech in Book IX of Paradise Lost states that destruction ââ¬Ëshall befall thee who worth in women over trustingââ¬â¢, resonating in the mind of the reader as the book draws to a close that the fault of the ââ¬ËFallââ¬â¢ lies entirely in the hands in Eve who, having asked ââ¬Ëtrustââ¬â¢ in her faith from Adam, failed to prove her ââ¬Ëworthââ¬â¢ by undergoing temptation by Satan. Similarly, in The White Devil, Flamineo encourages men to ââ¬Ëneââ¬â¢er trust a womanââ¬â¢ and accuses them also of having the fault that would bring pain amongst ââ¬Ëmenââ¬â¢, echoing Adamââ¬â¢s chastising words to Eve. Vittoria and Isabella, the two most prominent female presences in the play, act as the driving force for Francisco to take revenge ââ¬â allowing him to develop his fallen senses of pride and gluttony alongside a murder ous obsession with death. Tynan believes that scarcely an act is committed that is not motivated by greed, revenge or rapacity; the actions listed by Tyran are committed by the men in Websterââ¬â¢s The White Devil under an influence of a sexual greed, sexual revenge or sexual rapacity ââ¬â therefore driven by the temptation of the woman to the man, as Adam is tempted by Eve and later driven to ââ¬Ëcast lascivious eyesââ¬â¢ in acceptance of his new found destructive sexuality. Brachiano similarly, like the fallen Adam, is driven by an undying sexual lust and following love for Vittoria which causes the failure of his patriarchy over her due to her ââ¬Ëfemale charmââ¬â¢; his love for Vittoria is arguably what causes his downfall, just as Adams love and later lust for Eve leads him to supposed ââ¬Ëdeathââ¬â¢ ââ¬â he is ââ¬Ënot deceivedââ¬â¢ by her outward ââ¬Ëfemale charmââ¬â¢ but instead ââ¬Ëovercome as his patriarchy becomes outweighed. Bra chiano develops into the contemporary mirror of the anti-Adam, falling from his high position in the hierarchy and faces death for his failure ââ¬â just as Adam believes that ââ¬Ëdeathââ¬â¢ will be the punishment for his failed patriarchal control. Both Milton and Webster could therefore be suggesting that the fallen world must undergo a loss of the patriarch due to the temptation of the male by the female, using her sexuality as a weapon to lure him in. Miltonââ¬â¢s use of the breakdown of the ââ¬ËChain of Beingââ¬â¢ in Paradise Lost by the loss of control from Adam and Eve over nature emphasises this idea of the patriarch being required in order to hold up society and the hierarchy entirely. Brachianoââ¬â¢s downfall not only causes the chaotic death of himself but many other characters within the play, and the cause could be narrowed down for his lust and love for Vittoria which is illuminated in the very first lines of the play: ââ¬Ëlostââ¬â¢ suggesting that he has entirely forgotten his patriarchal cause due to his love. The fallen world appears therefore to be left in chaos, as the fallen characters descend into revenge and murder for their own person vendetta and forget the need of unity that is displaye d by Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden at the start of Book IX. Without a hierarchy to confine characters to specific idealised roles and expectations, both Webster and Miltonââ¬â¢s characters are left in a ââ¬Ësurvival of the fittestââ¬â¢ style battle for power over others, lusting to get back the perfection which was lost originally by Adam and Eve. This chaotic loss and simultaneous fight for fain reflects on both Milton and Websterââ¬â¢s own societies, where King Charles II and King James I respectively, having believed in the ââ¬ËDivine Right of Kingsââ¬â¢, either attempted to or managed to dissolve parliament and other influential government bodies in order to have sole tyrannical rule over the country. Perhaps Milton and Webster are attempting to suggest that the King is the most fit representative of the fallen Adam and Brachiano-figure; driven by lust for power and ridden with fallen greed. Satan, however, is the ultimate driving force behind the destruction of society and descent into chaotic madness ââ¬â acting both as an influence in Paradise Lost directly, and in The White Devil through specific evil characters that reflect Miltonââ¬â¢s portrayal of the Devil; yet, following the actual Fall of Man, Satan has no further presence within the epic, having completed the job which he set out to do. Flamineo and Francisco, however, being the two most influential representative of Satan in Websterââ¬â¢s The White Devil, remain present until the closing of the play due to a lack of justice that allows them to remain alive for almost the entirety. Alike Satan, Francisco and Flamineo use the people around them purely for their own personal cause ââ¬â having no regard for the consequences it may bring on themselves; Flamineo has no insight into his downfall until it becomes obvious: ââ¬Ëmy life was a black charnelââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëblackââ¬â¢ connoting images of darkness and the unknown, and Francisco similarly shows a lack of concern for the later consequences his actions might have: ââ¬Ëtush for justiceââ¬â¢, having no concern for the lives of his mercenaries but yet protecting his own in the use of them. Satan too is consumed wholly by taking revenge on God, and this is later reflected on Eve who is totally controlled by her innate desire for the fruit leaving her ââ¬Ëdefacedââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëdefloweredââ¬â¢ ââ¬â the authors seem to be suggesting that personal gain through desire is completely consuming in the fallen world. Websterââ¬â¢s use of obsessive personal gain in his characterisation of Flamineo, Brachiano and Francisco is reflective of the revengeful, personal desire of Satan which is later reflected on Eve ââ¬â Brachianoââ¬â¢s desire seems to spark a chain of revenge, yet all of the characters remove themselves from blame. Satan, in his opening speech in Book IX, attempts to convince himself of hi s innocence, and Eve later following her fall excuses herself from blame by accusing Adam as the patriarch that he should have ââ¬Ëcommand(ed) her absolutely not to goââ¬â¢. As stated earlier, this may be because those involved in the fallen world believe that they are above the justice system, like the contemporary Kings. The formation of ââ¬Ëblameââ¬â¢ as a fallen aspect in Adam and Eve leads to the breakdown of the relationship between them, just as blame in The White Devil leads to the literal breakdown due to the committed murders which severs marital and family relationships. This breakdown of relationships allows the characters to blame each other for their fallen aspects, just as Adam and Eve argue at the closing of Book IX, and this is what leads to ââ¬Ëdeathââ¬â¢ and the total fall from grace. Tillyard relates the fall to ââ¬Ëthe yielding of reason to passionââ¬â¢, where the characters are unable to interact rationally but instead, directed by the p assionate desires for personal gain attributed to fallen beings, have to yield to their evil desires. Contextually, this relates to Miltonââ¬â¢s own fallen nature ââ¬â having blindly written Paradise Lost in a state of political alienation and therefore having a personal connection with his fallen nature, and Webster similarly writing about current Italian affairs which represented most accurately the fallen acts of the contemporary world. The relationship between King and people has been severed, and therefore people can attempt in their fallen desire to climb the social ladder. Innate desire is left unchecked, and is therefore wholly and personally consuming. The relationship with the self is also severed as disguise and false premise becomes more important that being one true and holy self in the eyes of God. In The White Devil the revengers take on disguises as a feign for innocence which will allow the trust of others so that they can then manipulate their targets ââ¬â this reflects Satanââ¬â¢s character in Paradise Lost when he takes on the body of a ââ¬Ësnakeââ¬â¢, reducing himself to ââ¬Ëbestial slimeââ¬â¢ in order to best tempt Eve into falling. Once Adam and Eve have fallen, they themselves take on a disguise as they attempt to hide their fallen nature and the attributes associated with it, most specifically ââ¬Ëshameââ¬â¢, by undergoing disguise and covering with ââ¬Ëfig leavesââ¬â¢ to hide their fallen nature. A false presentation of innocent characteristics is what allows the fallen characters to trap and, in the case of Webster, kill innocent characters such as Isabella and Camillo by presenting a Satan-like false premise of security. Ludovicoââ¬â¢s disguise is most prominent of feigned innocence in Websterââ¬â¢s narrative, having taken the ââ¬Ëvowââ¬â¢ to become a monk in order to present himself as wholly virtuous and therefore trustworthy, despite underneath planning the murder of the Duke Brachiano with his fellow mercenaries. The lack of true selfhood again connotes a chaos which is typical to the fallen world, everything that may seem innocent is corrupted, and innocence is just an act that can be put on, as Eve does ââ¬Ëwith sweet accent renewedââ¬â¢ in her temptation of Adam. This further develops the already established theme of the breakdown of relationships as trust in each other is further removed, since the self that Adam believes Eve is, describing her after the fall as ââ¬Ëholy, divine, good, amiable or sweet ââ¬â how art thou lostââ¬â¢, recognising that all of the qualities of goodness she once possessed have been ridden of due to her fallen nature, perhaps also suggesting that these qualities were just weak falsity that can be easily broken. Webster uses the earlier dialogue between Marcello and Flamineo, where Marcello recognises the innate evil of his brother despite his often innocent exterior when protecting his sister. Flamineo most prominently uses disguise, a feigned madness, in order to present himself as innocent following the murder of Isabella ââ¬â unable to cry at the news of her death. The removal of his disguise later causes the realisation of his true self: ââ¬ËI am falling to piecesââ¬â¢, as well as revealing many details about the true and corrupt nature of the society surrounding him. Similarly, Brachiano realises his weakness in the breakdown of his pompous ââ¬Ëdisguiseââ¬â¢ of the virtuous Adam figure as he too descends into true madness: ââ¬Ëhave I not the power to lengthen mine own a twelvemonth?ââ¬â¢ as suddenly his sense of reason disappears and is replaced by raving passion which can be seen in Adam and Eve following the fall ââ¬â their madness is in their loss of reason and their loss of reason is their true moral understanding. The relationship therefore with the true ââ¬Ëselfââ¬â¢, full of goodness, is suggested to only appear at the moment of the characterââ¬â¢s downfall ââ¬â such as Flamineo and Brachianoââ¬â¢s oncoming deaths. Like Adam and Eve, who realise their loss of goodness and prepare to face judgement for their actions, Brachiano and Flamineo face a twisted justice in their deaths as punishment for the murders of Isabella, Camillo and Marcello. However, the justice that is given to the men is not served by God, as is expected in Paradise Lost, having the ââ¬Ëresolution to dieââ¬â¢ at his hand, but at the hands of other men in The White Devil, since now in their fallen state they believe that they have the power to give out justice. The false disguise could be interpreted therefore as becoming god-like, endowing the self with ultimate power (as Satan does earlier in Book IX) and the appearance of innocence like th at of God. Both Webster and Milton may have used this image in order to comment on the behaviour of Charles II and James I; Charlesââ¬â¢ reign ended the Republic, and his tyrannical behaviour may have been thought to be like that of God, as Charles believed in the ââ¬ËDivine Right of Kingsââ¬â¢ which gave him ultimate rule. James too believed in the doctrines and both installed and pardoned his close friends in the court, acting as if he was above the reaches of human justice, but giving it out as he willed. As Ribner states, ââ¬Ëthe only moral law appears to be a nemesis punishing sin with new sin in a never ending cycleââ¬â¢. The fallen world in Paradise Lost is completely consumed by its own evil ââ¬â there is no hope left at the end of Book IX as the couple begin to breakdown into helpless blame and argument. However, in The White Devil, Act V closes with Giovanni, the innocent son of Brachiano and Isabella, having taken on his father title as Duke, punishing the conspirators and taking control over the murderous situation; this gives us hope at the end of the play that the fallen world is not totally consuming over the characters and that the fallen cycle can in fact be broken. Act V of The White Devil could therefore be described as a development on the fallen world of Milton, who had attempted to justify the ways of God and explain the Fall of Man as a contemporary fallen being, but Webster perhaps may, building on this original belief of damnation, be suggesting an end point of hope where humanity and the goodness of the Garden of Eden is restored once evil has been punished. Webster, writing la ter than Milton, may have more hope under the reign of James I that a better society may evolve following his reign, which contrasts Milton who wrote Paradise Lost following the restoration of the monarchy and Charles IIââ¬â¢s regain of the throne ending the Republic. Webster perhaps is hoping that justice, as given to the fallen characters in The White Devil will soon come to his society even if it means innocent death and destruction along the way ââ¬â as often James I would execute the innocent and pardon the wicked. Giovanniââ¬â¢s break of this fallen cycle at the end of the play could be representative of the restoration of the Garden of Eden and personal relationship with God that the Protestants would have craved in both Milton and Websterââ¬â¢s time by the ridding of evil influences such as James I ââ¬â Simkin argues that Websters targets here is specifically the Catholic Church. Websterââ¬â¢s The White Devil could be argued to be a revenge tragedy of the people against the fallen oppressor ââ¬â both Church and King, contrasting Miltonââ¬â¢s heroic success of Satanââ¬â¢s corruption of the world and promoting evil. Websterââ¬â¢s presentation of the fallen world is then, in conclusion, not a presentation of a final state of evil and a total loss of innocence, but a momentary fall that hopefully will be addressed and removed by the remaining moral humanity.
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