| NUMBER 1453. - February 7, 2001 |
ISSN
0882-3731
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By Eli Siegel The person who had the greatest desire to be educated, apparently, in the world was English. And whether he went much to school or not (as far as we know he only went to the Stratford school, which was a grammar school and something like a high school), the person who was bent on educating himself is William Shakespeare. You get to many passages and say, How did he come to get interested in this? Why is he so interested in law? Why is he so interested in flowers? Why is he so interested in how a ship is run? Why is he so interested in what can happen to monarchy? Why is he so interested in the teaching of a language, as happens in Henry V, where Henry V teaches Catherine English quite interestingly? This feeling that the world is to be known and liked, from the common viewpoint of man, Shakespeare was best at. He saw the world as his academy-oyster or oyster-academy. We can feel that in Balzac too, who went into a lawyer's office and a notary's office interested in seeing what he could see. And if he went to church, he was interested in seeing what he could see. In other words, to live is to have an education. Occasionally, your living becomes more conscious and directed and then you're really trying to learn - as, say, a person gets a treatise on "How to Fix the Wiring in Your Home"; it's conscious then. One of the earliest criticisms of Shakespeare is in Dryden's Essay of Dramatic Poesy. You get the feeling that there was a hell-bent, heaven-sent desire to be educated on the part of Shakespeare. And you feel, even if he had gone to Cambridge the desire would not have been less. So this is Dryden on Shakespeare: He was the man who of all modern, and perhaps ancient poets, had the largest and most comprehensive soul. To Be ComprehensiveAnd it is surprising how many subjects Rabelais mentions. Both Rabelais and Montaigne wrote on education. The education of Gargantua is a notable part of Rabelais' Gargantua. Then, Montaigne wrote an essay on education. Locke wrote "The Conduct of the Understanding." There are other educationists, one of whom is Comenius. There is Horace Mann in America, who has a high school named after him. So in education there is a desire to grasp, to include, and a desire to take unto oneself. It's a little bit like seeing a town from a mountaintop, then being interested in the petals near the grass where you're standing. And those, again, are poetic opposites. All the images of nature were still present to him, and he drew them, not laboriously, but luckily ....Many objects are mentioned by Shakespeare. Take, for example, Hamlet. Shakespeare got interested, for whatever reason, in the "porpentine," or porcupine, and he writes about it. There Were Books... when he describes anything, you more than see it, you feel it too. Those who accuse him to have wanted learning, give him the greater commendation: he was naturally learned.Dryden makes Shakespeare too much a wonder boy. It happens he read a good deal and, meantime, he looked. He felt that everything about him - and that's the first thing in feeling educated: that everything about you, not only your mind but your toes, is interested in education; your wrist is. We do have the phrase, "Are you on your toes? Then we'll read another passage from Thucydides." ... he was naturally learned; he needed not the spectacles of books to read nature; he looked inwards, and found her there.Yes, we can look inwards and learn. We can look outwards and learn. We can look to the side and learn. We can even have the upward look, as James says, and learn. Just gaze reverently into space and you can learn something. Dryden wrote this in the 1660s. And it is about education, because the purpose of education is to learn as much as you can, including whatever you can learn from yourself and by yourself. All education is legitimate, including self-education. But if you can learn from a tortoise, do. Some people have. "The Greatest of Mankind"I cannot say he is everywhere alike; were he so, I should do him injury to compare him with the greatest of mankind.Well, since Dryden, such a statement is looked upon as to be expected. Even now, if anybody said that Tolstoy or Sholokov was greater than Shakespeare, there would be scandal on the collective farm. We know his famous mistakes: the giving of clocks to Roman times, and so on. He is many times flat, insipid .... But he is always great, when some great occasion is presented to him;... others are now generally preferred before him ....So persons have bought, slowly. They did buy the four editions of Shakespeare's folio in the 17th century, and they learned from them. They learned in the two ways: they had large emotion; and they also learned about how man could be. ... yet ... in the last king's court, when Ben [Jonson]'s reputation was at highest, Sir John Suckling, and with him the greater part of the courtiers, set our Shakespeare far above him.John Suckling was proud of his learning. He has a book called Fragmenta Aurea, Golden Fragments. - That's Dryden on the insistently educated Shakespeare. He is so insistent on seeing things. |
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