6 - Fairy flight in A Midsummer Night's Dream
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2011
Summary
This is the new Arden edition of A Midsummer Night's Dream, and it is splendid to have the old series still coming out. Full information, and a proper apparatus at the foot of the page: where else would you find that? It has got a bit stiff in the joints; the Introduction is so long and so full of standard doctrine that it is hard to pick out the plums; but the sobriety itself is a comfort. One major new emendation is proposed – that Theseus said: “Now is the mure rased between the two neighbours.” Harold Brooks admits that this is bad, and agrees that Shakespeare may have agreed to have it changed on the prompt-book, but is certain he wrote it at first, because of the rules invented by Dover Wilson for the misinterpretation of his handwriting. Surely anyone used to correcting proofs knows that all kinds of mistakes may occur, whereas this bit of pedantry would be quite out of key for Theseus. “Mural down” (Pope) goes quite far enough.
As part of a general process of soothing, he speaks warmly of the merits of Bottom, but adds that “he is quite unsusceptible to the romance of fairyland”, and will soon have forgotten his meeting with Titania. What on earth can the weasel-word “romance” be doing here? As a Greek of the age of myth, he simply worships the goddess. As a man who is driven by his vanity, he finds her love for him immensely gratifying, but not really surprising, so that he can keep his cool.
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- Information
- William Empson: Essays on Shakespeare , pp. 223 - 230Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986