Imaginary picture of the forest of Arden |
Romance and Realism in As You Like It
Shakespeare's
“As you like it’’ is the composition of romance and realism with its realistic
and romantic read of life and spirit. Romance
and realism are contrasted with each other. Realism means our ordinary world of experience where there is corruption, brutality,
misfortunes, frustrations,
usurpation, and so on. But in the world of
imagination or romance, there is no touch of worldly sorrows,
sufferings, frustrations,
humiliations, usurpations-love
of all kinds only prevails there. Here men come to one’s contact, over each
other, lead their life like the inhabitants of a utopian
world. But it is very striking that Shakespeare with his skillful
handling of theirs two antagonistic shares of life combine each other to
enhance the beauty of romance or pastoral life and to detest our real world.
The bitterness of reality is criticized through the romantic view and the extremity
of romance is criticized through the realistic view. Thus there is reconciliation
between the two extremities which makes the play more enjoyable.
real more about summary or character of Shakespeare drama or plays
Realism gets the upper hand in the first part of the play where the
scenes are exposed in the Duke's Court.
It is the life of Court where
brothers turn hungry monsters. Orlando
is deprived of his inheritance by his own elder brother Oliver talks with Charles
and his insinuation makes our blood boil. We
are stupefied to know how an elder brother instigates the murder of the younger
ones. Duke Seiner is banished by
the usurping Duke Fredrick. The
people of the Court are mean, jealous, and cowardly; wrestling is their sport. Even
the ladies hear the broken music, the music in loud lamentations when the limbs of
wrestlers are broken. There are noting but the unmistakable results of realism.
To escape the bitterness of reality, Shakespeare, on the wings of this
imagination, transports us to the “Forest of Arden’’, a field of romance. It is
a forest that existed only in the imagination of the dramatist and it is to be found anywhere on the map. It is a pure country of the mind, a forest where there are tropical snakes
and hungry lionesses. Here dwells mortal friendship between man and man, here
men live under the protection of mature, here fanciful lovers idle away their time without any care of
life. Orlando,
Adam,
Rosalind,
Celia,
Touchstone,
Duke Senior
and his
companions all become the victims of reality and flee to this happy romantic forest. Duke senior says,
And this our life exempt from
public haunt,
Find tongues in trees, books
in running brooks
Sermons in stones and good in
everything,
I would not change it.
Court life and life
in Arden are two different worlds
and none in the sheer combination of one spirit ei- their realism and romance.
Here one intrudes the domain of the other and serves as the criticism of it. Thus
in the cruel real world of court life,
Shakespeare brings some glimpses of
romance. Here Rosalind and Orlando fall in love at the first sight. Here
exists an immortal relationship between Celia
and Rosalind. They are as if one soul. These are nothing but the parody of the
enmity, selfishness, and barbarity of the court.
Again the dreamland of the “Forest of Arden’’ is not without the touch o realism. Having transported us t the “Forest of Arden’’, Shakespeare does not altogether forget real life. He says in the person of Touchstone
‘’ Aye now I am in Arden; the more foot I, when I
was at home I was in bitter place......’’ All the characters—Touchstone, Celia, Rosalind, Orlando, Adam get tired at their first step to the “Forest of Arden’’, this is perhaps for their past
attachment to real life. Corin’s
master in churlish and Sir Oliver
Martext is hardly sweet-natured. William is a dull fellow, and Audrey and Phebe graceless. It is an uncouth forest
and a desert where the air is bleak.
Though in this forest Orlando and Rosalind, Phebe and Silvius, pastoral
incarnations of life, wander in the dream-land of life and we see nothing but
love, here live romantic land Jaques serves as
the symbol of realism. He is not content with this pastoral life in Arden. Here
he finds exploitation and cruelty. If I the court Duke Frederick has
usurped on Duke Senior, Duke
Senior has in his turn usurped upon deer, the native inhabitants of the forest-
life preys of life. Thus Shakespeare’s depiction
of life in the Forest of Arden is realistic and this realism serves as the
criticism of the pastoral.
The romance of “AS you like it’’ largely revolves round the love
between Rosalind and Orlando. They fall
in love at first sight. Orlando falls a victim to his brother’s evil motive and
flees to the “Forest of Arden’’. He roams
about in the forest and writes on the leaves of trees love song in praise of Rosalind. On the other hand, Rosalind is banished by Duke Frederick goes to this
same forest. There they meet. Rosalind in the
guise of Ganymede, a shepherd, teaches Orlando love-making. She pretends to be Rosalind but Orlando cannot recognize that this is
his real beloved. Shakespeare
creates the wood believable when everything trembles.
real more about summary or character of Shakespeare drama or plays
But Shakespeare is not without
realism here. He criticizes this fanciful love through the love of Touchstone and
Audrey. Touchstone
reveals the folly of such love when he says, “I remember when I
was in love, I broke my sword upon a stone and bid him take that for coming a –
night to Jane smile and I remember the kissing of her bat let and the cow’s
dugs that her pretty chopped hands had milked.’’ Touchstone’s
skeptical humour lets the east wind o reality blow into their idealized world.
Not only Touchstone
but also Rosalind
herself, a romantic lover, sheds the cool light of reason on the romantic nonsense
of lovers. when
Orlando says that he would love his Rosalind forever and a day, she
brings him down to earth by her reply, “No, Orlando; men are April when
they woo, December when they wed; maids are May when they are maids, but the
sky changes when they are wives.’’ When Orlando tells her that he would die if she would not have him- “she plays upon
this notion the same jest of refreshing reality, “ The poor world is almost six
thousand years old and in all this time there was not any man died in his own
person, videlicet, in a love cause.”
So although the play, we find realism
side by side with romance, each contribution to the other. At the
end of the play, there is reconciliation between the two (those who are the
representatives of realism and those who are romantic make up their mutual quarrel. Oliver
goes to kill his brother but he is about to be killed by a lioness. Orlando
kills the lioness and saves him. Oliver begs his brother’s pardon. Duke Frederick
comes in contact with a saint and becomes quite changed and gives the throne
back to his brother, Duke Senior. On the other hand, in place of Ganymede
comes out the real Rosalind and she is married to Orlando.
Oliver
falls in love with Celia and gets himself married to her. Then
they all leave the dreamy land of the Forest of Arden and return to the real world.
The mixture of realism and romance is the
symbol of the mixture of sorrow and pleasure, darkness and sunshine of real
life may be seen to be the central position of the play but the return of the banished Duke
along with his companions finally, gees to show that realism and romance are an integral
part of human life they exist side by side, life is like that.