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Friday, February 17, 2017

Measure for measure Act III, Scene i




Act III, Scene i

Summary

The Duke  asks Claudio  if he hopes  to be pardoned by Angelo,  and Claudio  says  that he  still
hopes  he will  be,  but  is  ready  to  die. The Duke  tries  to  resign  him  to  death,  saying  that  he
should  think  of  it  as  better  than  life. He  describes  how  life  is more  frightening  than  death,
because  it  has  so many  complications,  and  says  that  it  is  strange  that we  fear  death more.
Claudio thanks him and says that he is prepared to face death.
Isabella enters and says she wants  to speak  to her brother. The Duke asks  the Provost  to  take
him  somewhere where he  can hear  their  conversation without being  seen. Claudio  asks what
happened, and  Isabella  tells him  that  there  is no way  for him  to avoid death. Claudio asks  if
there is any way to change the sentence, and Isabella says that the only solution would require
heartbreak. Claudio  asks  for more  information,  and  Isabella  tells  him  that Angelo  has  given
him a way out of death which will  imprison him  for  life. Claudio asks  if  the new sentence  is
life imprisonment, and Isabella says yes, only an imprisonment outside of jail.


Claudio asks for an explanation, and Isabella tells him that the punishment would be the loss of
his honor. Claudio wants to know exactly what she means. Isabella evades the question, saying
that she is afraid he would choose life. She tells him that death is more fearsome than painful,
and  that he should not  think of  it as a  terrible  thing. Claudio says  that she  thinks  too  little of
him,  and  that  he would  embrace  death  if  he  had  to.  Isabella  expresses  her  approval  of  this,
saying that he is acting as their dead father would. She tells him that he must die because he is
too noble to accept a shameful alternative.
Claudio curses Angelo, and Isabella agrees, finally telling him about Angelo's request. Claudio
expresses his disgust, and then says, "Thou shalt not do't" (III.i.103). Isabella tells him that she
would gladly give her life, but not her virginity. Claudio thanks her, and Isabella tells him to be
ready to die tomorrow.
Claudio thinks about Angelo, wondering how he can have such desires and still enforce the law
against them. He says that lechery is not a sin, or at least the mildest of the seven deadly sins.
Isabella  is  surprised,  and Claudio  says,  "Death  is  a  fearful  thing"  (III.i.117).  Isabella  replies,
"And shamed life a hateful" (III.i.118). Claudio describes a terrible view of death, and Isabella
only says, "Alas, alas" (III.i.133).


Claudio changes his mind and asks his sister to give up her virginity for him, saying that a sin
to save her brother's life would become a virtue. Isabella immediately grows angry, calling him
a coward. She  tells him  that  it  is a kind of  incest  to  require her  to have sexual  intercourse  in
order to save his life. Claudio tries to protest, but Isabella says that his sin was no accident, but
a reflection of his general nature.
The Duke  comes  forward  and  says  that  he would  like  to  speak with  Isabella.  First  he  takes
Claudio aside and tells him that he has overheard their conversation, and that he knows Angelo
well. He  tells  him  that Angelo was  not  actually  propositioning  Isabella,  but  only  testing  her
virtue. He was pleased with her response, but he would have killed Claudio either way. Claudio
asks to forgive his sister, and the Duke sends him to do so.
The Duke asks the Provost if he can be alone with Isabella, saying that he is honorable because
of his profession. The Duke tells Isabella that she is good and asks how she plans to convince
Angelo  to  save her brother. She  tells him  that  she would  rather her brother die  lawfully  than
give birth to an illegitimate child. The Duke says that Angelo was only testing her, and that he
has a plan which will save Claudio without tarnishing her honor.
The Duke  asks  her  if  she  has  heard  of Mariana,  and  Isabella  says  she  knows  the  name. The
Duke claims that Mariana was engaged to Angelo, but that he broke off the engagement when
her dowry was lost in a shipwreck. The Duke's plan is for Isabella to tell Angelo she will agree
to  his  request,  but  to  send Mariana  in  her  place. Angelo  will  be  forced  to marry Mariana,
having had sexual relations with her, and Claudio will be freed.

Commentary

Isabella has no real reason to tell Claudio about Angelo's proposition if she has truly made up
her mind. She either seeks approval from him, or she is unsure and wants to be convinced that
she is wrong. Considering Claudio's reaction and Isabella's response, it seems that the former is
more likely; her mind is set, but she wants his approval for her decision. She is reassured when
he  seems  to  agree, but  she  clearly does not have  enough  faith  in him  to  think  that he would
agree  with  her  no  matter  what.  If  that  were  the  case,  she  could  simply  have  stated  the
proposition immediately, knowing that he would agree with her. However, she sidles around it,
first ensuring that they agree on moral grounds and then mentioning the specific circumstance.
Isabella  should  not  be  too  surprised  by  his  reaction,  given  that  he  obviously  considers
fornication  to be  less of a  sin  than  she does, having committed  it himself. He begins  to  look
upon her as a selfish, naive figure as he tries to convince her to sacrifice virtue for the sake of
pragmatism. However, he does  realize  the  repulsiveness of  the  suggestion and  feels ashamed
for having tried to convince her otherwise.

Isabella's response  to Claudio's willingness  to  let her accept  the proposition  is  to criticize  the
act  of  sexual  intercourse  itself.  She  says,  "Heaven  shield my mother  played my  father  fair"
(III.i.141),  suggesting  that  there was  some  sexual deviance  in  their own parents'  relationship
which caused him  to become so cowardly and given  to sinful behavior. At  this point, Isabella
wavers between virtue and  foolishness. The play  is sexually explicit  in  its plot and  language,
and Isabella emerges as a frigid, prudish figure for her willingness to sacrifice her brother's life
to  save her own honor. She will not be  a martyr  for him,  and he does not wish  to become  a
martyr for her.
The Duke's  solution  is  an  easy way  out,  and  it  ends  the  great moment  of  conflict  between
brother and sister with a pat and unlikely solution. Perhaps Shakespeare  thought  the question
too  large  to  answer  in  five  acts,  and  so  he  discards  it  as  open-ended,  replacing  it  with  an
unlikely and somewhat illogical scheme instead of examining it in more detail.

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