Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Theme of Corruption
- "A prince's court is like a common
fountain, whence should flow Pure
silver drops...Some cursed example
poison't near the head, Death and
disease through the whole land spread""
- Act 1, Scene
1
- Significant because it gives
the audience a blueprint of
what government can and
should be, and one which is
sharply contrasted against the
corrupt Italian courts.
- Antonio describing the
French court system and
how easily corruption can
spread from the top.
- Additionally, it introduces the
all-important prince-to-courtier
dynamic and imputes the
health or disease of the social
system to the integrity of the
prince, the fountainhead of the
system.
- Poison the fountains source.
This political metaphor of
the polluted fountain
suggests that a ruler's
behaviour, good or bad,
inevitably influenced the
health of the country.
- Imagery of disease and death
reflects Jacobean concerns
about the plague, reflects the
potential for corruption
spreading down the court due to
corruption of the figures of
authority.
- The Great Chain of Being- according to
the Medieval Catholic Church, everything
in the universe had a divinely planed,
unchangeable 'place', often pictured as a
chain stretching from the lowliest being
to God himself. This links to Antonio's
description of the French court system
as if someone high up on chain, for
example someone of royal status,
becomes corrupt, the said corruption
will fall down the chain and corrupt
everyone else in its path.
- "He and his brother are like
plum trees that grow crooked
over standing pools: they are
rich and o'erladen with fruit,
but none but crows, pies and
caterpillars feed on them"
- Act 1, Scene
1
- Describing natural objects
acting in a very unnatural
way. Instead of nourishing
the ground and water
underneath them with their
bounty, the brothers hoard
their wealth and thereby
bring a total halt to the
natural process of
generation.
- Bosola's reflection on
the Cardinal and
Ferdinand as corrupt
authority figures
corrupting the rest of
the court.
- Ideas of vitality becomes
ideas of corruption,
standing water is
corruptible, allows
diseases to fester.
- Meaning only those who can
fly up or sneak up to the top
can manage to get the
brothers riches.
- Crows, magpies and caterpillars
seem insignificant but are
actually an essential part of life.
The brothers see the people that
follow them, hoping to earn
their favour as important as it
allows them to have their dirty
work done for them, leaving no
proof that they were
responsible.
- Links to the allusion to
Tantalus and psychological
torment: “What creature ever
fed worse than hoping
Tantalus?”
- Reference to notorious figure in Greek
Mythology. Tantalus condemned to an
eternity of forever being hungry and
trying to reach an apple always out of
reach (for serving his son up at dinner).
- Further relevance to
Bosola- hoping to get
payment from the
Cardinal, always
promised it but never
quite receives it.
- The reference to Greek
mythology also foreshadows
the eternal damnation and
effects that corruption will
have on the characters.
- "thou 'rt poisoned with that
book... bound thee to't by
death"
- Ironic because a Cardinal is
a priest of great
importance in the church.
Cardinals are selected by
the pope. He uses the bible
to kill Julia and ignores the
bible reading "thou shall
not kill".
- Can be thought that he
does not truly care for
the religious teaching.
- Possibly became
cardinal simply for
more power.
- He profanes holy
scripture by using
the bible as an
instrument of
murder.
- Profanes his position.
- Not respectful of
religious practice.
- "bound thee to't
by death"
- She's found to
keep his secret in
death; idea that
deception can
only be
maintenance in
death.
- Act 5, Scene 2
- Can link this to the
Cardinal in general
due to his religious
position.
- Lots of scandals in Catholic
church- many nuns and
priests engaged in sexual
affairs much like the cardinal
does with Julia.
- Manipulates way into
position and attempts to
do the same in heaven.
Much like some priests
tried to do.
- The Catholic church
at the time had too
much power- reflects
the amount of power
the Cardinal has.
- Many priests were illiterate and
uneducated regarding
scriptures. Only got the
position based on family
connections, political pull and
bribery.
- Priests commonly go
against the codes
they preach about,
much like the
Cardinal does- "thou
shalt not kill"
(assuming that he
preaches at all)