Today’s Totally Random
Line(s)
That hath beside well in his person wrought
To be set high in place, we did commend
To your remembrances; but you have found,
Scaling his present bearing with his past,
That he’s your fixed enemy, and revoke
Your sudden approbation.
-Sicinius Velutus
Coriolnaus Act II, Scene iii, Line 265
Scaling, as used above, means weighing.
Approbation is approval or praise.Almost every time I open up Coriolanus, I read
something that reminds me of so many of the politicians these days that talk
out of both sides of their mouth. And I’m also reminded of the gullibility of
the masses.
Come to think of it… no wait, that can’t be right.
I was gonna say that’s why they don’t teach this play: because the powers that
be don’t want to teach about how corrupt the politicians are. But that would
assume that the politicians know this play. Hah! That’s a hot one.
So what looks like a pretty tough few lines, isn’t
really that bad. The politicians are talking to the masses about Coriolanus.
They want to turn the crowd against him. In the lines previous to these, they had
noted that he is descended from a noble family. The first part of today’s
lines is a little tough. Sicinius is just saying that Coriolanus is descended
from noble blood, his actions have earned him a high place, and we (the politicians)
commended him. But now they’re telling the masses that he’s their enemy. And,
of course, they will listen to and believe that. And this, of course, brings us back to the dangers of democracy. Oy!
1 comment:
Roasted!!
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