FANFARE July 2016 | Page 17

Joseph Fiennes plays the Bard in Shakespeare in Love, 1999 Immortal is an overcooked soubriquet, and one that perhaps few of us as schoolboys (and girls!) would have accorded the Bard of Stratford-upon-Avon. For, most of us have nightmarish memories of studying his words in class, those plays and sonnets our teachers invited us to analyse and revere, as if handed down on tablets of stone from on high. But, of course, Shakespeare’s words were meant to be spoken, declaimed with emotion, not repeated parrot fashion by a tedious English teacher, devoid of meaning and drama, as dead as the ghost at Banquo’s feast. Shakespeare’s immortal bequest is a world of words that is the stuff that dreams are made on. Through his innate command of language, he captured the spectrum of emotions that every human being feels – desire and fear, hope and regret, love, hate and despair. And he did it by dramatising these feelings in the spectacle of theatre, which at the turn of the 16th century had caught the popular zeitgeist as the tide of the times changed. Tens of thousands attended performances at theatres springing up all over London. In refining the power of words, Shakespeare enhanced the language in a way no writer had ever done before. Or has done since. According to broadcaster Melvyn Bragg, Shakespeare’s use of words was nothing less than an exploration of the human condition. In his English: Biography of a Language, Lord Bragg writes: “In Hamlet, for example, one phrase, ‘to thine own self be true’, began to explore the notion of personal identity, the study of which has intensified since his day to an extent that even he might not have been able to predict. “The great soliloquies express dynamic shifts in states of mind. Drama can be internal. He is saying no less than – this is how we think and how we think is itself dramatically rich.” Setara Pracha, Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Buckingham, wholeheartedly agrees. “Shakespeare’s theatrical lexicon is transfixing, transgressive, transformative. It’s this ability to vocalise abstract constructs – love, fear, hate, which defines our humanity, that is his true genius,” says Setara. “He used words to express the internal dynamic of our innermost thoughts, and used shifts in our emotions and desires to frame dramatic narratives in his plays, and made for theatrical spectacle that caught the popular imagination of his day.” The Royal Shakespeare Company’s performance of Othello, starring Hugh Quarshie and Lucian Msamati, 2015 The Bard’s array of Sonnets are no less compelling than his Drama. Many focus on the dark night of the tortured soul, lift the veil on the inner life of demons. Don’t believe it? Look up the lines in Sonnet 23, for example, that requires what Rufus Wainwright called “a quotient of insanity” to deal with. As he does, so compellingly in his new album, Take All My Loves. Shakespeare was instrumental in the development of the English language, as it evolved from its Anglo-Saxon and Norman French roots into the common argot that became the world’s first lingua franca. And he did it by introducing thousands of new words into common currency. So, it is Shakespeare we have to thank for such dictionary gems as auspicious, watchdog, sanctimonious, addiction, assassination, belongings and cold-blooded. And furthermore, for courtship, leapfrog, lack-lustre, barefaced, premeditated, obscene, accommodation, ill-tuned and even puppy-dog. Scholars credit Shakespeare with more than 2,000 new words which were to become the common currency in the English we know today. And in the 38 plays, 154 sonnets and other major poetry, his dramatic characters used these words for an introspective opening up of the mind that examines the human condition. Characters like Falstaff and Hamlet, Lear, and Richard III, Macbeth, Othello, Anthony, Cleopatra and King Lear helped open up new cultural horizons first in the Anglo-Saxon diaspora, then the whole world. It is no wonder that the most famous opening sentence on the planet is: To be or not to be, that is the question. Hamlet’s agonised opening words to the most famous soliloquy in drama is just one among a myriad of eternal lines 15