Enter Montague – alone (5.3.208-215)

                        Enter MONTAGUE.

PRINCE           Come, Montague, for thou art early up

                        To see thy son and heir now early down.

MONTAGUE   Alas, my liege, my wife is dead tonight;

                        Grief of my son’s exile hath stopped her breath.

                        What further woe conspires against mine age?

PRINCE           Look and thou shalt see.

                        [Montague enters the tomb and returns.]

MONTAGUE   O thou untaught! what manners is in this,

                        To press before thy father to a grave? (5.3.208-215)

Connections. The first time we encountered Montague, back in 1.1, he was talking with Benvolio, early in the day, about how Romeo was getting up even earlier and mooching around feeling sorry for himself, coming home and shutting himself away in his room, because of Rosaline. Now Montague is up early too, as the Prince comments, but Romeo has again been earlier, early down, eluding his father, slipping away, not into his sulky teenage room, but this time where his father cannot follow him. Montague – unsurprisingly, given what he subsequently says – doesn’t seem to grasp what the Prince is (perhaps too obliquely, but very gently) telling him. That Romeo, his son, is dead. He is preoccupied with another tragedy: his wife has died of a broken heart, unable to cope even with Romeo’s banishment. (Lady Montague has apparently done exactly what Lady Capulet says she herself is going to do.) As editors point out, there will be straightforward reasons for this: the actor playing Lady Montague clearly has to double another part. But it gives Montague that noted of stunned pathos: just as the Capulets were mourning Tybalt, and then Juliet, and now Juliet again and are almost too overloaded with grief to be able to process it, so Montague is having to confront the almost simultaneous deaths of his wife and his son (and he thought that Romeo was safely out of the way, in Mantua). In the first quarto there is an additional line, spoken by Montague, saying that Benvolio is dead too. This might also be for doubling reasons; his absence is odd. I’ve suggested earlier on that the effective replacement of Benvolio with Balthasar as Romeo’s sidekick means that there’s no one to talk Romeo out of his desperate plan, because Balthasar is servant, not friend; it isolates Romeo, too. But there’s no reason why Benvolio can’t be a shattered, silent presence in the tomb scene, as in the current RSC production, where it’s poignantly effective. (Benvolio, as I observed absolutely ages ago, is a first sketch for Hamlet’s Horatio, the loving friend – perhaps in love with his friend, as again is the case in the current RSC version – who is left behind.) When Montague sees Romeo’s body – perhaps going into the tomb – or simply registering what he’s being told and looking more closely – his response is so gentle, and quietly devastating: what manners is in this, to press before thy father to a grave? Why have you died before me? And in fact it echoes Juliet, lovingly berating Romeo for not leaving her a friendly drop of the poison. In this moment, Montague is the most lonely character on the stage.

View 9 comments on “Enter Montague – alone (5.3.208-215)

    1. No? it’s the name of the family – Shakespeare’s anglicised version of the name in the Italian/French sources. Clan might be a word for it, rather than tribe? but I don’t think ‘tribe’ has helpful associations here.

  1. This is very helpful to myself as i have an exam in the morning and the analysis is great. Thanks whoever decided to go through with this for whatever reason god bless your soul. Bye now.

  2. hi hester!
    a bit random but are you looking into doing this for other shakespeare texts? i would love to hear what you thought about othello!

    1. Hi Ishwa, not doing Othello, sorry… You can find all of my blogs on my department webpage – currently in the middle of Hamlet! – but no plans to read Othello anytime soon (not because I don’t think it’s a great play! it is!) (Do I infer you’re doing A-level?? good luck if so!)

      1. nice to hear from you! i’ve just noticed that you covered richard II, and i think i’ll check it out! i’ve recently watched hamlet in the rsc which was honestly so mind-blowing and was definitely a bold concept for the play- on my to read list! yep i’ve been studying my a-levels currently and i really enjoy othello, even more than romeo and juliet which everyone in my class disagrees with! i really love the context behind the play and honestly i think thats why it really stands out to me. a-level is honestly really demanding (i wish i had listened to the year 12s prior) but the in-depth analysis really brings out more for the text! i was wondering if you had any pieces on othello because honestly i think engaging with other people perspectives on the text makes the process really enjoyable and i love how you break scenes up bit by bit. do you have any wider reading recommendations based on critics views of othello? also just in general- i would love to use a play for my nea but im not really sure as what could be deemed well for a critical essay, especially post 19th century.

        1. Hamlet’s an amazing play… (So is Othello.) Both so INTENSE. The RSC production was high concept but kind of spectacular! I haven’t got much in print on Othello… You might like Farah Karim-Cooper’s recent book The Great White Bard – which isn’t just on Othello but is a really thoughtful introduction to approaching issues to do with Shakespeare and race. Emma Smith’s This is Shakespeare is also a brilliant intro to lots of the plays, and she has lots of podcasts as well. You could ask your teachers if they’ve got the updated Arden Third Series edition of Othello; it’s been republished with a new introduction by Ayanna Thompson, and that’d be a really good way in to the play’s critical heritage, as well as more recent critical approaches. And, just for interest, seeing as you like plays… Toni Morrison (author of Beloved, etc) wrote a play called Desdemona… Good luck! (My top tip for Othello: think about it as a broken comedy, rather than as a tragedy – it’s a bit like R&J in that respect!)

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