Dive,
thoughts, down to my soul:-- here Clarence comes.
-Richard
Richard III Act I Scene 1, Line 41
So, it’s the
second day in a row that we’re in the first scene of the play. Today we’re in
the first speech of the play, albeit at the end of the speech. It’s Richard’s well
known Now is the winter of our discontent/Made glorious summer by this sun
of York; soliloquy. We’ve spent some time here before. So much so that
I considered picking an alternate line today. But I didn’t. However, since I
didn’t, let’s just stick to today’s line.
Richard has spent the speech talking about how lowly he is and some of the rotten things he’s going to be doing, and now he’s ending with today’s line: Dive, thoughts, down to my soul:-- here Clarence comes. It seems to me that the thoughts he’s just finished expressing are pretty low. So, is he saying that his soul is even lower, or what? Clarence, by the way, is his brother whom he is already plotting against. You don’t see too many people named Clarence these days, do you?