Major Themes
Britain and Rome
Britain and Rome are, so to speak,
brother empires in the English imagination. English mythology has it that the
same Trojans who founded Rome continued on to found London, and in
Shakespeare's day, when the English were formulating their self-concept as an
imperial state, they most often alluded to their ancient heritage as justifying
present-day conquest. Thus Cymbeline is a play that is concerned, in an
important way, with British self-definition. Shakespeare is careful throughout
the play to use the term "Britain" when discussing Cymbeline's
domain. In fact, during the time that the historical Cymbeline ruled England
the term "Great Britain"-which refers to the combined states of
England and Scotland, Wales and Ireland-was not in use.
Thus, as ever unconcerned with
factual history, Shakespeare dramatizes the bumpy but ultimately harmonious
relationship of brother empires. The story of Cymbeline's conflict with Lucius,
whom he greatly admires, is akin to that of a son rising against a father, or a
younger brother against an elder. In the end, "Britain" wins the
conflict-led against impossible odds by the representative "brain, liver
and heart" of England, respectively, Belarius, Guiderius and
Arvigarus-only to renege upon this victory and realign with Rome. This ending
would have obviously appealed to the audience of Shakespeare's day,
demonstrating as it does both the pluck and resolve of the English over the
Roman as well as the ultimate harmony between the two states. In Shakespeare's
time, the English were indeed ambivalent about Rome-they identified with the
Ancient Empire while struggling with the Roman Catholic Church. Shakespeare
effectively captures this ambiguity in his political plot.
Birds
One of the consistent sets of
imagery running throughout Cymbeline is that of birds. Posthumus, for
instance, is referred to as an eagle-first by Imogen in Act One scene two. The
Roman Empire is also called an eagle in Philarmonus' prophesy. Imogen is
referred to on two occasions as the Phoenix, which appropriately illustrates
both her singularity (she is, after all, virtue among the virtuous) and her
death and restoration. Bird imagery pervades description of the other
characters as well-Belarius is called a wise crow; Cloten is called "a
puttock."
In general, this bird imagery-like
other imagery in the play-tends to reinforce the element of divine guidance
that emerges in Act Five. All along, the soothsayer suggests, the gods have
been guiding the action of the play, so that in the end, after considerably
bumpy going, the rightful heirs to England are restored, the wicked Queen and
her prince are dead, the virtuous Imogen is reunited with the duped but noble
Posthumus, and so on. In the same way, the characters very language appears,
throughout the play, to be guided by a divine hand. When they refer to one
another and themselves as birds, each ignorant of the other's imagery, they are
in fact making up a great harmonious choir, where each has its place.
Shakespeare the poet guides this mystic order, just as the gods guide us to the
harmony in Act Five, which is in turn symbolized in part by avian imagery. Each
element of the play, then, becomes a part of a narrative order greater than the
individual participant's knowledge; this is as true of the poetry as it is of
the action.
Divinity
For four fifths of Cymbeline,
the presence of divinity is purely rhetorical. Characters evoke the gods for
emphasis, and though there is one prophesy, it appears to be totally wrong. In
the last Act, however, during a bizarre mini-drama involving the descent of the
god Jupiter and the ghosts of Posthumus' family, divinity becomes the
organizing force at the center of the play. Jupiter suggests that he himself
has deferred the redemption of his favorite characters in the play because, he
says, "Whom best I love I cross; to make my gift, / The more delay'd,
delighted." In a phrase, this is the dramatic schema of the play as a
whole-resolution of all the characters compounded misunderstandings is delayed
until the last possible minute, when the pressure of truth finally bursts
through. When he gives Posthumus a tablet with a prophesy inscribed on it, we
get the impression that Jupiter himself is taking charge, and that it is His
virtuosic capacity for harmonious resolution that creates such a head-spinning
scene five.
Additionally, Cymbeline is himself
considered in English mythology to be the king who reigned during the life of
Christ. The play's redemptive trajectory, as well as Jupiter's allusion to
"cross[ing]" the one he loves best, provides some basis for a reading
of Cymbeline as Christian allegory. Additionally, the tablet that
Jupiter leaves in Posthumus' cell resembles, in a way, the tablets God gave
Moses on Mount Sinai; like those tablets, Jupiter's prophesy represents a
covenant of sorts, a promise that Posthumus will be freed. Such a reading might
oversimplify a play that intrinsically resists simplification, but certainly
Christian elements of forgiveness and resurrection are also strongly present
generally in the drama's resolution.
Clothes
In Cymbeline, "the
clothes make the man" is more than a cliché-it's a theme of sorts, and an
ambiguous one at that. Many of the characters in the play obsess over the
relation between one's identity and one's clothes. Cloten, to take the most obvious
example, is offended to the quick, and driven to contemplate rape and murder,
simply because Imogen declares that Posthumus' "mean'st garment" is
worth more than he is. She insults Cloten in countless other ways as well, but
it is this one that sticks in his mind, which is fitting, because the play as a
whole obsesses over clothes as well.
This makes sense, of course, in a
drama that is so concerned with appearances. Cloten appears to be a prince,
thus placing enormous value on his clothing; in fact, he behaves in a
completely un-princely manner. He is all show, no substance. Because he places
such value in appearances, it makes sense that Imogen's preferring of
Posthumus' appearance-which Cloten knows to be less valuable, in a strictly
superficial sense, than his-would drive him insane. The true princes in the
play-Guiderius and Arvigarus-are royal despite their rustic appearances.
Similarly, the penitent Posthumus best shows his substance when he fights, on
the British side, dressed as a peasant. Simple, lower-class clothes provide
relief from which true character distinguishes itself.
But perhaps in no case do the
clothes make the man so much as in Imogen's. When she puts on a man's doublet
and hose, she becomes a man, pure and simple. Because she performs a man, she
is a man in others' eyes, even in those eyes to which she was known in her
female identity. Shakespeare suggests that gender is a matter of performance.
Characters are not, perhaps, essentially male or female, it is all a matter of
how they act, and how they are perceived. Certainly in the end Imogen is
restored to her female identity, but keep in mind that during Shakespeare's era
women did not act professionally. The person who played Imogen in the original
production was, in fact, a man. And so Imogen is a man playing a woman playing
a man, who is restored to a woman. It's enough to make anyone's head spin, and
it most likely creates complication-which Shakespeare exploits again and again
in his plays-as to what makes a man a man, or a woman a woman. Maybe it is
the clothes.
Divinity
For four fifths of Cymbeline,
the presence of divinity is purely rhetorical. Characters evoke the gods for
emphasis, and though there is one prophesy, it appears to be totally wrong. In
the last Act, however, during a bizarre mini-drama involving the descent of the
god Jupiter and the ghosts of Posthumus' family, divinity becomes the
organizing force at the center of the play. Jupiter suggests that he himself
has deferred the redemption of his favorite characters in the play because, he
says, "Whom best I love I cross; to make my gift, / The more delay'd,
delighted." In a phrase, this is the dramatic schema of the play as a
whole-resolution of all the characters compounded misunderstandings is delayed
until the last possible minute, when the pressure of truth finally bursts
through. When he gives Posthumus a tablet with a prophesy inscribed on it, we
get the impression that Jupiter himself is taking charge, and that it is His
virtuosic capacity for harmonious resolution that creates such a head-spinning
scene five.
Additionally, Cymbeline is himself
considered in English mythology to be the king who reigned during the life of
Christ. The play's redemptive trajectory, as well as Jupiter's allusion to
"cross[ing]" the one he loves best, provides some basis for a reading
of Cymbeline as Christian allegory. Additionally, the tablet that
Jupiter leaves in Posthumus' cell resembles, in a way, the tablets God gave
Moses on Mount Sinai; like those tablets, Jupiter's prophesy represents a
covenant of sorts, a promise that Posthumus will be freed. Such a reading might
oversimplify a play that intrinsically resists simplification, but certainly
Christian elements of forgiveness and resurrection are also strongly present
generally in the drama's resolution.
Misogyny
The debate over whether or not
Shakespeare is a misogynistic writer can be argued infinitely from either side.
Surely, however, the question is complicated; and given the historical period
in which Shakespeare wrote, during which male supremacy was taken for granted
even by powerful women, this complexity is in itself remarkable.
In Cymbeline, most
expressions of misogyny, the most impassioned of which is Posthumus' diatribe
at the end of Act Two, are starkly ironic. Posthumus blames all of womankind
for all the faults of humankind. And why? Because a man, Iachimo, has falsely
convinced him that his blameless wife is guilty of adultery. It is a man who
gets it wrong; it is a man who does the deceiving; it is Posthumus himself who
demands of Pisanio hasty revenge, only to regret it later. The common
misogynistic thinking of Shakespeare's day, held, as Posthumus states in his
excoriation, that women are above all inconstant. Boccaccio wrote in The
Decameron, "I have evermore understood that man was the most noble
creature formed by God...and woman in the next degree to him, But man...is the
more perfect of both. Having then the most perfection in him, without all doubt
he must be so much the more firm and constant." In direct refutation of
this, it is the men in Cymbeline-especially Iachimo and Posthumus-who
are mutable and Imogen who is constant.
Complicating this, however,
Shakespeare provides us with the Queen, a woman who is indeed duplicitous and
Machiavellian and vengeful and many of the wicked things Posthumus ascribes to
womankind. But even the Queen, in her heart, is constant to the one she loves:
Cloten. When Cloten goes missing, the Queen dies of grief, which is more than
we can say of, for instance, Cymbeline when his daughter goes missing. Or his
sons, for that matter. Even in the comically wicked Queen, then, the issue of
misogyny is complex. On the whole, it appears that Shakespeare has given us a
largely unjust, male-run society, one in which Imogen is judged guilty of a
crime she did not commit and forced to disguise her sex merely to survive this
false judgment. The case can be made, on the basis of Cymbeline, for
Shakespeare the proto-feminist. This is true whether the bard himself knew it
or not.
Music
Even if Cymbeline has not
always been admired as a whole, it, like The Two Gentlemen of Verona,
has always been loved for its songs. It is one of Shakespeare's most musical
plays, with two of his most famous songs, "Fear no more the heat o' th'
sun," and "Hark, hark, the lark at heaven's gate sings." Merely
looking at the song titles shows how intimately these songs are bound up in the
thematic concerns of the play. "The lark" reminds us that Cymbeline's
chief symbol-set is avian, and further reminds us that birds are distinguished,
like Cymbeline, for their songs. "The heat o' th' sun" reminds
us of the final image in the play, of the Roman eagle shrinking into the great
Western sun of England. Indeed, at the time the song is sung, Imogen fears very
much "the heat of the sun," that is, the wrath of her father. On top
of these songs, Cymbeline contains a musical interlude of sorts, very
rare in Shakespeare, almost more akin to Greek or Roman drama (and the analogue
is obviously apt), wherein Posthumus' ancestors intercede with Jupiter on his
part.
But beyond the actual music in the
play, music is itself a theme of Cymbeline. At the play's end,
Philarmonus notes, "The fingers of the powers above do tune / The
harmonies of this peace," presenting the play as a musical composition in
its own right, with discords and motives and ultimate harmonic resolution.
Shakespeare, that most lyrical of lyricists, has created a play that is, in its
very architecture, musical.
Nobility
Looking at Cymbeline, we
might easily conclude that Shakespeare landed squarely on the side of nature
over nurture. His child-figures in the play-and the nature-nurture issue is
obviously most relevant to children-are predetermined, more or less, as
virtuous or not. And virtuousness, in Cymbeline, is determined on the
basis of an authentic nobility. Guiderius and Arvigarus, who have been raised
from infancy in rusticity, have inexplicable noble traits. They long to charge
into battle, to speak the sweet rhythms of the court. Indeed, they do these
things, without training, and are totally successful. Moreover, they recognize
Imogen, in her guise as Fidele, as possessing the same noble bearing as they.
Posthumus, too, to a lesser extent, has qualities of nobility that beam through
his peasant's garb during the battle with the Romans. This lesser extent, by
the way, befits his lesser noble status. He is a mere gentleman, though a
genuine one, whereas Guiderius, Arvigarus and Imogen are the children of the
King.
Then there is Cloten. It is unknown
who Cloten's father is-his ignoble nature suggests, perhaps, even without
saying it, that he is a bastard-and his mother is another ignoble noble. Yet as
the play begins he is a prince, next in line after Imogen for the throne.
Nevertheless, his nobility is not genuine. He lacks regal comportment, completely
fails in the games of nobility, and does not appeal to the impeccable nose for
nobility of Imogen. Even the sycophantic nobles who follow him around do so in
part to make fun of him; he commands no respect. Cloten is noble in appearance
only; as Shakespeare suggests (much to the pleasure of his patron, King James,
we can imagine), true nobility cannot be learned. It is not a matter of
nurture. It is a simple matter of blood.
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