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Mr. Malone informs the public, that the
king from whom this play takes its title, began his reign, according to Holinshed, in the nineteenth year of
the reign of Augustus Cæsar; and the
play commences in, or about, the twenty-fourth of Cymbeline's reign, which was the
forty-second year of Augustus, and the
sixteenth of the Christian era.2 —Cymbeline is said to have reigned
thirty-five years, leaving at his death two sons, Guiderius, and Arviragus.3
Notwithstanding an English king and his children furnish some names in this tragedy,
it is supposed, that its fable is taken from an Italian novel, which the dramatist
has blended with many incidents, the produce of his own fancy.4
Variety of events form the peculiar character of this play; attention is kept awake
by sudden changes of time, place, and circumstances; but the mind obtains little
reward for its watchfulness. Among the many amusing things, both seen and heard, at
the representation of "Cymbeline," that part in which the great author is concerned,
generally makes so b 2[Page 4]slight an impression upon an audience, that, when the curtain is dropped, they
immediately discourse upon the splendour of Imogen's5 bed-chamber, the becoming
dress she wore as a boy, and the dexterity with which Iachimo6 crept out, and
crept into his coffer; without bestowing equal observation upon any of those sorrows
or joys, which they have just seen exhibited.
Still the impossibility, that half the events in this play could ever occur, cannot
be the sole cause of its weak effect. Shakspeare's scenes are frequently such, as could not take place in real
life; and yet the sensations which they excite are so forcible, that improbability
is
overpowered by the author's art, and his auditors are made to feel, though they
cannot believe.
No such magic presides over the play of "Cymbeline," as to transform reason into imagination—the
spectator may be pleased, but cannot be impassioned. The only scene which approaches
the pathetic, is that where Imogen is informed by Pisanio, of her husband's command,
that she should be murdered;—and this is a vengeance so unlike the forgiving
temper of an English courtier, upon similar occasions, that it appears, as if the
air
of Italy had, as she suspects, infected the loving Posthumus with that nation's
predominant crimes, and no one heart is deeply affected by so extraordinary an
occurrence.
The young mountaineers, the brothers of Imogen, are pleasing figures, among the large
group of personages here collected: but still their forest dresses, more than their
business in the scene, amuse the spec-[Page 5]tator. Or, if he be moved by any
concern about them, it is with hatred, at the inhuman boasting of Guiderius, that
he
has—"cut off one Cloten's head, son to the queen, and sent it down the river,
to tell his mother,"7 &c. Whoever Cloten was, or whatever ill he might
threaten,—yet, for the author to make this youthful forester lay his foolish
enemy dead at his feet, and then be facetious over the horrid act, was sinking him
beneath the common bravo, who is ever portrayed grim and gloomy, as the good sign
that he is still a man, and has a conscience capable of remorse.
Johnson concludes his commentaries on
the tragedy of "Cymbeline"
(in which he bestows little praise, except on the soliloquy of Posthumus, when he
supposes Imogen has been put to death) with this general criticism. This play
has many just sentiments, some natural dialogues, and some pleasing scenes; but
they are obtained at the expense of much incongruity. To remark the folly of the
fiction, the absurdity of the conduct, the confusion of the names, and manners of
different times, and the impossibility of the events, in any system of life, were
to waste criticism upon unresisting imbecility, upon faults too evident for
detection, and too gross for aggravation.8
How would a modern author writhe under a critique that should accuse his drama, of
only one half of these failings!—Yet "Cymbeline" survives this just
attack—and will live admired, and esteemed, to the end of time.
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