Wednesday, August 14, 2019
Character of Touchstone in Shakespeares As You Like It Shakespeare As You Like It Essays
  The Character ofà   Touchstone in As You Like It     à       As You Like It features, like so many of Shakespeare's plays, a professional  clown, Touchstone, and it's worth paying some attention to his role for what it  contributes towards establishing and maintaining the upbeat comic spirit of the  play. For the jester is the constant commentator on what is going on. His  humour, pointed or otherwise, thus inevitably contributes to the audience's  awareness of what is happening, and the way in which other characters treat him  is often a key indicator of their sensibilities.     Touchstone is one of the gentlest and happiest clowns in all of Shakespeare.  He comments on the action, makes jokes at other people's expense, and offers  ironic insights about their situation. But throughout As You Like It, such  traditional roles of the fool are offered and taken with a generosity of spirit  so that his remarks never shake the firm comic energies of the play. When he  ridicules Orlando's verses, Rosalind laughs along with him. When he points out  to Corin (in 3.2) that the shepherd must be damned for never having lived at  court, Corin takes it as good natured jesting (which it is). When Touchstone  takes Audrey away from her rural swain, William, there are apparently no hard  feelings (although much here depends on the staging). In this play, the  professional jester participates in and contributes to a style of social  interaction which is unqualified by any more sober and serious reflections. This  makes Touchstone very different from the bitter fool of King Le   ar or from the  most complex fool of all, the sad Feste of Twelfth Night , both of whom offer  comments that cast either a shrewd, melancholy, or bitter irony on the  proceedings.     à       Touchstone himself becomes the target of much humour by his immediate  attraction to Audrey, the "foul" country lass. There is something richly comic  here, seeing the staunch apologist for the sophisticated life of the court fall  so quickly to his animal lust. But the satire here is very good humoured.  Touchstone himself acknowledges the frailty of his vows and does not attempt to  deceive anyone about his intentions.    
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