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Friday, February 17, 2017

Measure for Measure Summary of Act I, Scenes i-iii


Summary
The Duke calls Lord Angelo to grant him the temporary leadership of Vienna. Angelo modestly
refuses, asking the Duke to test his skill in some smaller way first. The Duke tells him that his
mind is already made up, and that he must leave right away.
Meanwhile, on a  street, Lucio  talks with  two other gentlemen about  recent events. They  joke
about the Duke's trip to meet with the King of Hungary and the war being carried out between
Hungary and  the Viennese city-state. The gentlemen, as soldiers, do not approve of  the peace
accord  being  proposed.  Lucio  compares  them  to  a  pirate  going  "out  to  sea  with  the  Ten
Commandments" having "scraped one out of the table" (I.ii.8-10): "Thou Shalt not Steal." The
First Gentleman responds that it is against the pirates' nature to obey such a rule, and likewise
it against the soldiers' nature to wish for peace.
The  three  men  are  still  joking  about  venereal  disease  when,  quite  appropriately,  Mistress
Overdone  approaches.  She  tells  them  that  Claudio  has  been  carried  off  to  prison  for
impregnating Juliet. Lucio and  the Gentlemen go off  to find out more, and Pompey  the clown
enters.
Pompey tells Mistress Overdone that Claudio has been taken to prison for sexual involvement
outside of marriage. Pompey  also  tells her  that  a proclamation  shutting  down  all  brothels  in
Vienna's equivalent  to a "red-light district" has been  issued. Brothels  in  the city proper are  to
remain operational,  thanks  to  the political  influence of a wealthy  investor. Mistress Overdone
worries  about  her  business,  but Pompey  tells  her  that  she will  always  have  customers. They
decide to leave just as Claudio approaches, led by the provost.
Claudio asks the provost why he is being taken to prison, and the provost replies that he is only
following the orders of Lord Angelo. Lucio asks Claudio what he has done; Claudio replies that
he has taken too many liberties and is being punished. Lucio asks for the specific offense, and
Claudio hesitates.
Lucio  guesses  the  crime,  starting  with  murder  and  then  moving  to  lechery. When  Claudio
replies that he is correct, Lucio asks, "Is lechery so looked after?" (I.ii.147), surprised that the
penalty should be so high.

Claudio responds that his intentions were honorable, and that he hoped to marry Juliet, but they
were waiting  for  a better  time  to  announce  their  engagement, because  Juliet's  family did not
approve.  However,  their  "most  mutual  entertainment,"  (I.ii.157)  or  consensual  sexual
intercourse,  has  led  to  Juliet's  pregnancy,  clueing  the  city  authorities  in  to  the  now-illegal
premarital sexual activity between the two lovers.
Claudio ponders the reasons for these new strict laws, guessing that Angelo may be governing
brutally  in order  to declare his rule. Lucio encourages him  to appeal  to  the Duke, but Claudio
tells  him  that  the  Duke's  whereabouts  are  unknown.  Claudio  asks  Lucio  to  find  his  sister,
Isabella, who has just joined a convent, in order to ask her to appeal to Angelo on his behalf.
Commentary
The major  characters  and  situations  are  laid  out.  The  plot  revolves  around  the  new  leader's
treatment of sexual offenses, particularly fornication, which is considered a sin. The characters
also fit into groups depending on their opinions about sexual behavior. Claudio is the middle-
of-the-road  thinker,  not  involved  in  prostitution  and  possessing  only  noble  beliefs  about  his
relationship with Juliet, but unable to prevent himself from desiring her sexually and therefore
culpable. His  sister  Isabella presents one extreme, abstaining  from  sexual activity entirely  in
order  to become a nun. Mistress Overdone  is at  the other end of  the  spectrum, managing  the
prostitution business in Vienna.
The  only mobile  character  on  the  spectrum  is Angelo, who  is  here  presented  as  a  strict  but
virtuous  leader who  is given  free  reign  in  the Duke's absence. Angelo begins  to enforce  laws
that have been dormant  for some  time. He hopes  to clean up  the city, shutting down brothels
and requiring abstinence before marriage. This will make illegitimate births a thing of the past
and  protect  the  city's women,  so  it  is  not  harmful  in  itself. He  oversteps  the  framework  of
justice,  however, when  he  sentences Claudio  to  death  for  having  sexual  intercourse with  his
lover before marriage. This  is, of course, a very strict punishment considering  the crime, and
Angelo appears as an unwavering, unmerciful leader at this point.
The  general  atmosphere  in Vienna  seems  to  be  one  of merriment  and  disregard  for  the  law.
Claudio is to serve as an example in order to change this. It is perhaps this environment which
prompts Isabella to join the nunnery, since she does not approve of fornication or prostitution
and wants  to  be  close  to God  and  safe  from male  attention.  The major  conflict  of  the  play
already  emerges  at  this  point;  it  lies  between  Isabella  and  the  other  characters,  religion  and
hedonism.

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