The Duchess of Malfi
4.5 / 5 based on 4 ratings
- Created by: Efrost16
- Created on: 18-11-17 17:59
The Duchess
- A strong woman who defies her politically powerful brothers and social custom by marrying beneath her social status
- Has three children, 2 with Antonio and 1 from previous marriage
- Argus that in marrying him, she has 'not gone about this to create/Any new world or custom'
- Bravely faces death
- Antonio claims she 'stains the time past, lights the time to come' and that 'all sweet ladies' should 'break their flatt'ring glasses/And dress themselves in her' - i.e model themselves upon her
- Is never broken- 'I am Duchess of Malfi still'
1 of 16
Antonio
- Is a commoner by birth and Master of the Duchess's household - her servent
- Delio, an aristocrat by birth, is his close friend
- Admires the Duchess but would not dare to woo her openly
- Is wooed by her and marries her in private
- Has two children with her
- Is a mouthpiece for Webster for his opinions about rule and misrule
- Is unable to protect the Duchess due to his social inferiority
- Is killed accedently by Bosola when trying to find a way to reconcile himself to the Cardinal, who has secretly planned his murder.
2 of 16
Ferdinand
- Is the Duchess's twin brother and a powerful Duke
- Uses the law 'like a foul black cobweb to a spider' to serve his personal interest
- Is passionately interested in his sister's sexual life
- Loses control when he discovers she is secretly married and has children.
- Tortures her mentally - severed hand, waxworks, madmen; gives Bosola the order to kill her and her children
- Regrets this immediately afterwards and loses his balance entirely
- Imagines he is a wolf
- Wounds his brother in the final scene and gives bosola his death wound
3 of 16
The Cardinal
- Machiavellian brother of the Duchess
- Has bribed his way into the church and only missed making 'Pope' by being too brazen in his methods
- Is instigator, first of the banishment of Antonio and his sister, and then of the apprehension and murder of the Duchess and her children
- Says she has 'attained' their 'royal blood' in marrying a commoner
- Scorns Ferdinanand's passionate nature - 'Why do you make yourself/ So wild a tempest?'
- Murders Julia and plans to murder Bosola after using him to kill Antonio
- Dies as a result of his own ruse to protect himself from the discovery of his murder of Julia.
4 of 16
Julia
- Is the attractive young wife of Castruchio, an impotent old man
- Is the mistress of the Cardinal
- Is solicited by Delio, but refuses him
- Fancies Bosola and seduces him
- Is used by Webster to parody the tender and loving wooing of Antonio by the Duchess
- Represents another strong woman who refuses to conform to her society's rules, saying that 'modesty in ladies/Is but a troublesome familiar/That haunts them.'
- Is poisioned by the Cardinal as a result of her lust for Bosola, as the Duchess dies as a result of her love for Antonio.
5 of 16
Bosola
- A commoner like Antonio - with no Duchess to 'raise' him to a higher social sphere
- Determined to 'thrive some way'.
- Employed by the Cardinal, through Ferdinand as an unsuccessful spy in their sister's household
- Orchestrates the torture and murder of the Duchess, her children and Cariola
- Claims to feel remorse after Ferdinand throws him off and threatens him for having killed his 'best friend'.
- Kills Antonio accidentally, then the Cardinal and Ferdinand intentionally, claiming revenge for the Duchess, Antonio, Julia and himself
- Blames his actions on the Cardinal, Ferdinand, the stars, fortune or life in general
6 of 16
The results of bad government
- Antonio tells Delio that the French King casts off sycophants and listens to his advisors - then we see Ferdinand telling his courtiers to 'take fire when I give fire' and 'laugh when I laugh', even if it is not funny
- The brithers represent uncontrolled power
- We learn at the start that the Cardinal has bribed his way to the church and 'suborn'd' murder.
- Ferdinand abuses the law and cruelly tortures and orders the murder of his sister and her children
- All the misrule in the world of the play ends in disaster, for bad and good alike.
7 of 16
Social inequality and individual merit
- 'Some would think the souls of princes were brought forth by some more weighty cause than those of meaner persons; they are decieved; there's the same hand to them'. (Bosola)
- 'Shall... the royal blood of Aragon and Castile/Be thus attained?' (Cardinal)
- 'who would have thought/ So great a lady would has matched herself/Unto so mean a person...?' (Pilgrim)
- 'Can this ambitious age/Have so much goodness in't as to prefer/A man merely for worth...?' (Bosola)
- 'Say that he was born mean:/Man is most happy when's own actions/Be arguments and examples of his virtue.' (Duchess)
8 of 16
Time for a new order?
- 'She stains the time past, lights the time to come'. (Antonio)
- 'I am going into a wilderness/ Where I shall find nor path, nor friendly clew/To be my guide.' (Duchess)
- 'Why might not I marry?/I have not gone about in this to create/Any new world or custome.' (Duchess)
- 'Why should only I/ Of all the other princes of the world/Be cased up like a holy relic? I have youth/And a little beauty.' (Duchess)
- 'The birds that live i'th'firld/On the wild benefit of nature, live/Happier than we: for they may choose their mates/and carol their sweet pleasures to the spring.' (Duchess)
9 of 16
Disguise, deceit and poision
- 'Hypocrisy is woven of a fine small thread.../Your darkest actions, nay, your privats't thoughts/Will come to light.' (Ferdinand)
- 'For I'll conceal this secret from the world/As warily as those that trade in poison/Keep poison fro their children.' (Cariola)
- 'The great are like the base, nay, they are the same,/When they seek shameful ways to avoid shame.' (Antonio)
- 'So, I will only study to seem/the thing I am not.' (Ferdinand)
- 'Oh misery, methinks unjust actions/Should wear these masks and curtains.' (Duchess)
- 'Why dost thou wrap thy poisoned pills/In gold and sugar...?' (Duchess)
10 of 16
The rule of King James
- Surrounded himself with sycophants as do Ferdinanad and the Cardinal
- Did not wish to listen to his advisors, suspending his Parliament unless he needed them to grant him money
- Believed in the Divine Right of Kings and saw his word as law
- His 'favourite' Robert Carr was after the prestigious post of Master of the Horse, the positioin that sways Bosola into accepting the role of spy
- Was superstitious and would have believed that horoscopes, such as the one Antonio has drawn up for his first-born, were crediable
- Anyone who opposed his rule executed without compunction
11 of 16
Jacobean society
- Was violent and bloody - public executions were popular entertainment
- Was broadily divided into two classes, commoners and aristocrats - crossing the boundry through marriage was seen as dangerously subversive.
- Aristocratic women had their husbands chosen for them by their fathers or brothers - Duchess goes against this idea
- As a result, they often had sexual liaisons such as those of Julia in the play
- as long as these did not threaten the status quo they were 'winked at' and their cuckolded husbands seen as a joke
- Two murders took place at the court at the time the first play appeared
- Prince Henry, heir to the throne and Webster's friend Sir Thomas Overbury, were both killed by poison.
12 of 16
Important events and Dates
- 1564 - Shakespeare and Marlowe born
- c. 1578 - Webster born
- 1587 - Mary Queen of Scots executed
- 1604 - Coronation of James I
- 1605 - Gunpowder plot
- 1612 - Prince Henry dies; The White Devil at the Red Bull Theatre - a flop
- 1613 - First production of The Duchess of Malfi - a success
- 1616 - Shakespeare dies; Robert Carr and Frances Howard found guilty of Overbury's murder
- 1620 - Mayflower sails
- 1625 - James I dies - Charles I crowned
- c. 1632 - Webster dies
- 1649 - Charles I executed and a 'new order' established - a Commonwealth
13 of 16
Form
- Revenge Tragedy
- Could be described as prophetic - allegorical - political and social commentary
- Appeals fully to the auditory and visula senses of the audience through: Auditory - dance, songs, echos, Ferdinand's mad ravings, Cariola's screams and struggles, the Cardinal's fruitless and desperate cries for help. Visual - the waxworks, the severed hand, the dumb show, the masks, the madmen scene, DBosola's disguise as executioner, the on-stage murders
14 of 16
Stucture
- Follows a circular pattern: opens with the idea that a society's healthiness is determined by the actions of its rulers; ends with the expression of determination to effect change at the top.
- Second half of the play mirrors the first half:
- Julia's seduction of Bosola parodies the Duchess's wooing of Antonio
- the Cardinal's plot to hide his murder of Julia mirrors Delio's plot to hide the pregnancy of the Duchess
- Timing of enterances, exits and soliloquies neatly underline themes
- Scenes poften conclude with sententiae (brief moral sayings) also refelective of themes
15 of 16
Language
- Imagery: poison, light and dark, corruption and decay, appearance and reality, the weather, animals e.g. 'This mole does undermine me...' (Antonio of Bosola)
- Sententiae: e.g. 'Iam armed 'gainst misery/Bent to all sways of the oppressor's will/There's no deep valley,but near some great hill.' (Duchess)
- Irony: e.g. 'Doth she make religion her riding-hood/ To keep her from the sun, and tempest' - (the Cardinal, who commits murder with impunity, while literally robed in religion).
- Double entendres: e.g. 'I have got well by you...Gentlemen/I would have this man be an example to you all,/So you shall hold my favour.' - (Duchess farewell to Antonio).
16 of 16
Similar English Literature resources:
0.0 / 5
0.0 / 5
0.0 / 5
2.0 / 5 based on 1 rating
2.0 / 5 based on 7 ratings
3.0 / 5 based on 1 rating
4.0 / 5 based on 7 ratings
5.0 / 5 based on 2 ratings
0.0 / 5
Comments
No comments have yet been made