Monday, September 2, 2019
Role Of Jaques in Shakespeares As You Like It :: Shakespeare As You Like It Essays
      Role Of Jaques in As You Like It           The essentially healthy emotional intelligence of Rosalind and Orlando and  their suitability for each other emerge from their separate encounters with  Jaques (in some editions Jacques), the melancholy ex-courtier who is part of  Duke Senior's troupe in the forest. Both Rosalind and Orlando take an instant  dislike to Jaques (which is mutual). And in that dislike we are invited to see  something vitally right about the two of them.           For Jaques is, in effect, the opposite of everything Rosalind stands for. He  is a moody cynic, who likes to look at life and draw from it poetical  contemplations at the generally unsatisfactory nature of the world. He is, in a  sense, an initial Hamlet-like figure (the comparison is frequently made),  someone without any motivating erotic joy, who compensates for his inadequacy by  trying to drag everything down to the level of his empty emotions and by  verbalizing at length in poetical images. He takes some pride in what he calls  his very own brand of melancholy which can suck the joy out of life as a weasel  sucks the protein out of an egg (an interesting image of the destruction of new  living potential), and he spends his time wallowing in it. His own social desire  seems to be to find someone else to wallow in the same emotional mud as he does.  But the spirits of the other characters, especially of Rosalind and Orlando, are  too vital and creative to respond favourably to J   aques's attempts to cut life  down to fit his limited moods.           That judgment no doubt sounds quite harsh. And perhaps it is, for Jaques is a  relatively harmless person, who deceives no one (nor does he try to), and his  poetical reflections, like Hamlet's, are often seductive. But we should not let  the fame of some of his utterances (particularly the famous "Seven Ages of Man"  speech in 2.7, a frequently anthologized piece of so-called Shakespearean  "wisdom") conceal the fact that his approach to life is thoroughly negative. He  sees no value in anything other than calling attention to the world's  deficiencies. He does not recognize in the fellowship, music, and love all  around him any countervailing virtues.  					    
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