Complete article at: 
http://www.theage.com.au/news/arts/playing-with-our-minds/2006/11/23/1163871548321.html
 
Playing with our minds
The Age, Australia - 24 minutes ago
 

Illustration: Jo Gay 
 
David Malouf
November 25, 2006
 

Faced with a theatre-going public not yet ready for his work, Shakespeare set about remaking the Elizabethan mind. In David Malouf's remarkable perspective on the great man's legacy, he explores how we became the beneficiaries of an extraordinary gift.

 

 

[ ... ]
 

Nabokov, in praising the novel, speaks of the room its large form allows to the gratuitous, to "lovely irrelevancy". "What some readers suppose to be trifles not worth stooping to," he tells us, "is what literature actually consists of . . . A great writer's world is a magic democracy where . . . even the most incidental character . . . has the right to live and breed."

Consider this exchange, after some talk about corns and dancing, between the two Capulets in Romeo and Juliet:

Cap: Nay, sit, nay, sit, good cousin Capulet,

For you and I are past our dancing days. How long is't now since last yourself and I Were at a mask?

Cap 2: By'r Lady, thirty years.

Cap: What man? 'tis not so much, 'tis not so much. 'Tis since the nuptial of Lucentio, Come Pentecost as quickly as it will, Some five and twenty years, and then we masked.

Cap 2: 'Tis more, 'tis more: his son is elder, sir; His son is thirty.

Cap: Will you tell me that?

His son was a ward two years ago.

 
[ ... ]
 
 
This is an edited version of David Malouf's speech to the World Shakespeare 2006 Congress, which is reprinted in full in The Best Australian Essays 2006, edited by Drusilla Modjeska, Black Inc, $27.95.
 
 

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