<SPAN name="love"></SPAN>
<h3> "LOVE'S LABOURS LOST" </h3>
<p>[161] Love's Labours Lost is one of the earliest of Shakespeare's
dramas, and has many of the peculiarities of his poems, which are also
the work of his earlier life. The opening speech of the king on the
immortality of fame—on the triumph of fame over death—and the nobler
parts of Biron, display something of the monumental style of
Shakespeare's Sonnets, and are not without their concerts of thought
and expression. This connexion of Love's Labours Lost with
Shakespeare's poems is further enforced by the actual insertion in it
of three sonnets and a faultless song; which, in accordance with his
practice in other plays, are inwoven into the argument of the piece
and, like the golden ornaments of a fair woman, give it a peculiar air
of distinction. There is merriment in it also, with choice
illustrations of both wit and humour; a laughter, often exquisite,
ringing, if faintly, yet as genuine laughter still, though sometimes
sinking into mere burlesque, which has not lasted quite so well. And
Shakespeare [162] brings a serious effect out of the trifling of his
characters. A dainty love-making is interchanged with the more
cumbrous play: below the many artifices of Biron's amorous speeches we
may trace sometimes the "unutterable longing;" and the lines in which
Katherine describes the blighting through love of her younger sister
are one of the most touching things in older literature.* Again, how
many echoes seem awakened by those strange words, actually said in
jest! "The sweet war-man (Hector of Troy) is dead and rotten; sweet
chucks, beat not the bones of the buried: when he breathed, he was a
man!"—words which may remind us of Shakespeare's own epitaph. In the
last scene, an ingenious turn is given to the action, so that the piece
does not conclude after the manner of other comedies.—</p>
<p class="poem">
Our wooing doth not end like an old play;<br/>
Jack hath not Jill:<br/></p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
and Shakespeare strikes a passionate note across it at last, in the
entrance of the messenger, who announces to the princess that the king
her father is suddenly dead.</p>
<p>The merely dramatic interest of the piece is slight enough; only just
sufficient, indeed, to form the vehicle of its wit and poetry. The
scene—a park of the King of Navarre—is unaltered throughout; and the
unity of the [163] play is not so much the unity of a drama as that of
a series of pictorial groups, in which the same figures reappear, in
different combinations but on the same background. It is as if
Shakespeare had intended to bind together, by some inventive conceit,
the devices of an ancient tapestry, and give voices to its figures. On
one side, a fair palace; on the other, the tents of the Princess of
France, who has come on an embassy from her father to the King of
Navarre; in the midst, a wide space of smooth grass.</p>
<p>The same personages are combined over and over again into a series of
gallant scenes—the princess, the three masked ladies, the quaint,
pedantic king; one of those amiable kings men have never loved enough,
whose serious occupation with the things of the mind seems, by contrast
with the more usual forms of kingship, like frivolity or play. Some of
the figures are grotesque merely, and all the male ones at least, a
little fantastic. Certain objects reappearing from scene to
scene—love-letters crammed with verses to the margin, and lovers'
toys—hint obscurely at some story of intrigue. Between these groups,
on a smaller scale, come the slighter and more homely episodes, with
Sir Nathaniel the curate, the country-maid Jaquenetta, Moth or Mote the
elfin-page, with Hiems and Ver, who recite "the dialogue that the two
learned men have compiled in praise of the owl and the cuckoo." The
ladies are [164] lodged in tents, because the king, like the princess
of the modern poet's fancy, has taken a vow</p>
<p class="poem">
to make his court a little Academe,<br/></p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
and for three years' space no woman may come within a mile of it; and
the play shows how this artificial attempt was broken through. For the
king and his three fellow-scholars are of course soon forsworn, and
turn to writing sonnets, each to his chosen lady. These
fellow-scholars of the king—"quaint votaries of science" at first,
afterwards "affection's men-at-arms"—three youthful knights, gallant,
amorous, chivalrous, but also a little affected, sporting always a
curious foppery of language, are, throughout, the leading figures in
the foreground; one of them, in particular, being more carefully
depicted than the others, and in himself very noticeable—a portrait
with somewhat puzzling manner and expression, which at once catches the
eye irresistibly and keeps it fixed.</p>
<p>Play is often that about which people are most serious; and the
humourist may observe how, under all love of playthings, there is
almost always hidden an appreciation of something really engaging and
delightful. This is true always of the toys of children: it is often
true of the playthings of grown-up people, their vanities, their
fopperies even, their lighter loves; the cynic would add their pursuit
of fame. Certainly, this is true without exception [165] of the
playthings of a past age, which to those who succeed it are always full
of a pensive interest—old manners, old dresses, old houses. For what
is called fashion in these matters occupies, in each age, much of the
care of many of the most discerning people, furnishing them with a kind
of mirror of their real inward refinements, and their capacity for
selection. Such modes or fashions are, at their best, an example of
the artistic predominance of form over matter; of the manner of the
doing of it over the thing done; and have a beauty of their own. It is
so with that old euphuism of the Elizabethan age—that pride of dainty
language and curious expression, which it is very easy to ridicule,
which often made itself ridiculous, but which had below it a real sense
of fitness and nicety; and which, as we see in this very play, and
still more clearly in the Sonnets, had some fascination for the young
Shakespeare himself. It is this foppery of delicate language, this
fashionable plaything of his time, with which Shakespeare is occupied
in Love's Labours Lost. He shows us the manner in all its stages;
passing from the grotesque and vulgar pedantry of Holofernes, through
the extravagant but polished caricature of Armado, to become the
peculiar characteristic of a real though still quaint poetry in Biron
himself, who is still chargeable even at his best with just a little
affectation. As Shakespeare laughs broadly at it in Holofernes or
Armado, so he [166] is the analyst of its curious charm in Biron; and
this analysis involves a delicate raillery by Shakespeare himself at
his own chosen manner.</p>
<p>This "foppery" of Shakespeare's day had, then, its really delightful
side, a quality in no sense "affected," by which it satisfies a real
instinct in our minds—the fancy so many of us have for an exquisite
and curious skill in the use of words. Biron is the perfect flower of
this manner:</p>
<p class="poem">
A man of fire-new words, fashion's own knight:<br/></p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
—as he describes Armado, in terms which are really applicable to
himself. In him this manner blends with a true gallantry of nature,
and an affectionate complaisance and grace. He has at times some of
its extravagance or caricature also, but the shades of expression by
which he passes from this to the "golden cadence" of Shakespeare's own
most characteristic verse, are so fine, that it is sometimes difficult
to trace them. What is a vulgarity in Holofernes, and a caricature in
Armado, refines itself with him into the expression of a nature truly
and inwardly bent upon a form of delicate perfection, and is
accompanied by a real insight into the laws which determine what is
exquisite in language, and their root in the nature of things. He can
appreciate quite the opposite style—</p>
<p class="poem">
In russet yeas, and honest kersey noes;<br/></p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
he knows the first law of pathos, that</p>
<p class="poem">
Honest plain words best suit the ear of grief.<br/></p>
<p>[167] He delights in his own rapidity of intuition; and, in harmony
with the half-sensuous philosophy of the Sonnets, exalts, a little
scornfully, in many memorable expressions, the judgment of the senses,
above all slower, more toilsome means of knowledge, scorning some who
fail to see things only because they are so clear:</p>
<p class="poem">
So here you find where light in darkness lies,<br/>
Your light grows dark by losing of your eyes:—<br/></p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
as with some German commentators on Shakespeare. Appealing always to
actual sensation from men's affected theories, he might seem to despise
learning; as, indeed, he has taken up his deep studies partly in sport,
and demands always the profit of learning in renewed enjoyment. Yet he
surprises us from time to time by intuitions which could come only from
a deep experience and power of observation; and men listen to him, old
and young, in spite of themselves. He is quickly impressible to the
slightest clouding of the spirits in social intercourse, and has his
moments of extreme seriousness: his trial-task may well be, as Rosaline
puts it—</p>
<p class="poem">
To enforce the pained impotent to smile.<br/></p>
<p>But still, through all, he is true to his chosen manner: that gloss of
dainty language is a second nature with him: even at his best he is not
without a certain artifice: the trick of playing on words never deserts
him; and [168] Shakespeare, in whose own genius there is an element of
this very quality, shows us in this graceful, and, as it seems,
studied, portrait, his enjoyment of it.</p>
<p>As happens with every true dramatist, Shakespeare is for the most part
hidden behind the persons of his creation. Yet there are certain of
his characters in which we feel that there is something of
self-portraiture. And it is not so much in his grander, more subtle
and ingenious creations that we feel this—in Hamlet and King Lear—as
in those slighter and more spontaneously developed figures, who, while
far from playing principal parts, are yet distinguished by a peculiar
happiness and delicate ease in the drawing of them; figures which
possess, above all, that winning attractiveness which there is no man
but would willingly exercise, and which resemble those works of art
which, though not meant to be very great or imposing, are yet wrought
of the choicest material. Mercutio, in Romeo and Juliet, belongs to
this group of Shakespeare's characters—versatile, mercurial people,
such as make good actors, and in whom the</p>
<p class="poem">
nimble spirits of the arteries,<br/></p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
the finer but still merely animal elements of great wit, predominate. A
careful delineation of minor, yet expressive traits seems to mark them
out as the characters of his predilection; [169] and it is hard not to
identify him with these more than with others. Biron, in Love's
Labours Lost, is perhaps the most striking member of this group. In
this character, which is never quite in touch, never quite on a perfect
level of understanding, with the other persons of the play, we see,
perhaps, a reflex of Shakespeare himself, when he has just become able
to stand aside from and estimate the first period of his poetry.</p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
1878.</p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
NOTES</p>
<P CLASS="noindent">
162. *Act V. Scene II. Return.</p>
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