The horrors of act IV, i are less important that the characters' reaction to them

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Jonathan Hobbs        -  -        5/3/2007

The horrors of act IV, i are less important that the characters' reaction to them

"The first necessity of baroque is that the audience should be gripped, excited, moved"  - so says Ralph Berry.  The fourth act of The Duchess of Malfi certainly succeeds under all these criteria, being the dramatic crux of the play.  The events that occur in the first scene are undoubtedly crucial, but it is the characters' vastly varied reactions to them that are vitally important.  Rich imagery is deeply interwoven with the fabric of play - indeed, it is an essential part of its function - and the scene's proceedings are completely overshadowed by the telling relationship between Ferdinand, Bosola and the Duchess that is explored throughout act IV, scene i.

Often, it is in the most trying times that the true nature of people is allowed to shine through their veiled everyday existence.  In this scene, the Duchess is subjected to imprisonment and cruel tortures by her malevolent twin brother who is still unable to come to terms with his sister's independence and intimate relationship with Antonio.  Bosola is beginning to experience emotions he had previously repressed or never had the capacity to experience in court life.  He is forced to astatically struggle with inner turmoil and design for himself a new system of morality.  Because of these simultaneous occurrences, the three major characters' rôles are brought out to the front of the stage for punctilious analysis.  "The whole of Act IV is a protracted dying as, step by step, 'by degrees', the Duchess is made to face the utmost pain, misery and evil" .  As this happens, the very best and most deplorable characteristics are teased out and, as their relationship develops, the tensions between these three persons cause them to bounce off each other and candidly display their true ideals and priorities.  Scene four is both a climax and a trigger point in the play - a pivot that defines the main individuals and determines the outcome of the tragedy.

At the beginning, Bosola sums up the Duchess' conduct in response to her brother's callous deeds in one word; "nobly" (l. 2).  This is his first sincerely genial and positive description of someone else in the entire play.  By adding to his sentiments with generous wordage such as "majesty" (l. 6), "loveliness" (l. 7) and "perfect" (l. 8), Bosola demonstrates how much he has changed.  No longer is his sole purpose the furthering of his own position by any means, with a complete disregard of the consequences toward others, but now, an awakening of conscience and ethics has happened, and Bosola is capable of telling the truth and not using every opportunity for manipulation.  This is a seemingly effortless personality shift, yet one is left to wonder as to the extent of the unseen torment and wrestling as Bosola's compassion starts to shine through.  Still ambivalence and ambiguity remain and, when the false corpses of the Duchess' family are revealed, it is possible to speculate as to whether there is any degree of divided loyalty.  Bosola may be torn between his commitment to himself in his contract to Ferdinand and the altruistic approach of telling the Duchess, who has helped him learn to feel empathy, the truth.  This time, he defies his emotions to do what he has been ordered, and allows his common sense to lead to familiar self-preservation.  However, it is all in vain and "the play constantly reminds us by its poetry that, apart form what men do to one another, it is man's natural lot to endure disease, decay and death"

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In turn, Bosola's change has a measurable effect upon the Duchess.  Although she perceptively understands exactly why he is present, the Duchess, eloquent as ever, begins to adopt his typically malcontent trait of erudite melancholy and even mirrors his words from act I, scene ii, line 200 with the cynical interruption, "why dost thou wrap thy poison'd pills / In gold and sugar?" (l. 19-20)  Similarly, Ferdinand being driven toward madness allows the Duchess true qualities to shine through both through contrast and by her response to his action.  Ferdinand's twisted perception depicts him in numerous rôles, as he ...

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