The Tempest,
written in 1611, was one of William Shakespeare's last plays. It has a
combination of superb characters, interesting settings, and a good plot
line-all held together by the running theme of magic, and its ever-present
importance. A closer examination of the magic in The Tempest, and the public's
view of magic at the time, will give insight as to Shakespeare's choice of
magic as a theme, and why it has made the play so successful and timeless.
Magic presented
itself to Shakespeare as a controversial topic, as it had been the persecution
of those believed to perform "black magic," (witches) that had been
at the forefront of societal concerns since 1050. However, after 500 years of
witch-hunts, a turning point occurred in 1584, at the publication of Reginald
Scot's The Discouerie of Witchcrafte (The Discovery of Witchcraft). This book
was the first major book to denounce witch-hunts and their ringleaders, and
unquestionable the first book in English to actually hypothesize about the methods
of these so-called witches. It contained one chapter of approximately twenty
pages describing what we might view as unsophisticated, old-time magic tricks.
One would assume that it was this text, and
texts succeeding this (The Art of Juggling, written by Samuel Ridd in 1610 also
presented a few how-to's of magic) were probably not only what suggested the
idea of using magic as a them to Shakespeare, but in addition, provided methods
as to how the magic in the play might be accomplished.
Despite the fact that in retrospective analysis
it is fairly clear that witches were nothing more that magicians with a
slightly different presentation, audiences were not always aware of -and those
that were, were rarely convinced by-the two aforementioned texts. Witches were
still persecuted and witch-hunts did not actually stop until the end of the
seventeenth century. Therefore, Shakespeare's use of magic was controversial,
compounded by the fact that Prospero was presented in a largely good light-a
move probably made as a political statement, as it is known that Shakespeare's
plays were sometimes written to include political suggestions to King James.
However, when Prospero relinquished his powers at the end of the play, those
that did believe in the witch-hunts were satisfied. Everyone was happy.
After considering the contention that the
masque scene was added for the purposes of compliment to Elizabeth and
Frederick's marriage, one could conclude that Shakespeare learned more about
magic after he wrote The Tempest. The reasoning follows. One could only assume
that Shakespeare would have tried to make the magic in the play as fooling and
magical as possible. Although there were two magic effects in the play, one of
them -the spirit music-would not have fooled even the most unsophisticated and
naïve audiences. Even before the era of Harry Houdini, or even the wandering
street magicians of the 1700's, audiences were not fooled by music being played
offstage. It is the other effect, that of the banquet disappearance that, well
executed, would have fooled Shakespeare's audiences, and would even have a shot
of passing muster today.
However, this banquet sequence was in the
masque scene, theoretically added two years after the original writing of the
play. The question that begs to be answered therefore, is why didn't
Shakespeare fund some other way of including a more sophisticated magic effect
into the play? The most logical answer would be that he learned more about
magic and witch techniques after he wrote the play. Maybe at first he was
unable to grasp the explanations in the Scot text, or maybe he didn't even read
it before the original writing-possibly it was just called to his attention,
and he was unable to lay his hands on a copy until after he wrote the play
Whether or not Shakespeare ever read the Scot
text in its entirety, or whether or not the banquet disappearance was added
before or after the original writing, neither is relevant to magic's central
importance to the play. Obviously, magic could grab audiences of Shakespeare's
time. As it happens, magic had been grabbing audiences since 2500 BC (according
to a depiction of a magician on the Beni Hassan tomb in Egypt) and magic
continues to grab audiences today. It caught Shakespeare's eye, and has made
the play timeless, and theatrically entertaining.
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