Wednesday, September 4, 2019
John Websters Play The Duchess of Malfi Essay -- Webster Duchess Malf
John Webster's Play The Duchess of Malfi    In the opening of The Duchess of Malfi takes place between Delio and  Antonio, a steward of the Duchess and his friend. Webster makes his  audience aware that Antonio has journeyed outside Malfi, to France.  The words "France, Frenchman, French" all appear within the first four  lines of the text, a blunt indicator to ensure that the audience,  however inattentive, grasps the point that Antonio has been absent  from Malfi. He supports this point by referring to the timespan since  Antonio last saw Delio, "You have been long in France." The word  "long" suggests that a considerable time has passed since he was last  resident in Malfi. Equally, Delio's description of Antonio, as a "very  formal frenchman in habit" infers that Antonio had been in France for  long enough to adopt French fashions, rather than his native Italian  dress.    Altogether, Webster, in the opening burst sets up Antonio as a  stranger to Malfi, but an adopted resident of the French court. Thus,  when Delio asks the open ended-question the audience appreciate  Antonio speaks from experience built from a lengthy duration in  France:    "How do you like the French court?"    Webster's question does not ask a specific question, rather it demands  a lengthy reply. Antonio's response is not the view of an outsider  whose short stay failed to unearth negative aspects of the foreign  reign. Instead he speaks from fact due to the time he spent in France.  The reply is informative, as expected from a character who is cast as  a "formal frenchman" with a straightforward answer then an extended  explanation. Antonio "admires" the French system, which he sets up as  the benchmark from which the audience must view the court of Mal...              ...tonio's admiration of the uncorrupt French court.  Equally, where Antonio favours the French court, he also favours the  Duchess, then gives a list of the reasons for doing so. It is  therefore assumed that they are the "silver drops" in the corrupt  state, set to contrast against the corruption of the brothers.    The final two characters of the act I feel are dramatic constructs.  Delio is used by the writer in this scene so that Antonio can speak  candidly about France. By speaking to a friend, the audience value his  comment more than were it to be made in public to a group of people.  Delio is also used later in the act to hold the plot together, when  Antonio points out the duke and describes him as a scoundrel. "This is  the Duke of Calabriaà ¢Ã¢â ¬Ã ¦. The devils speak (in him)." Bosola is crafted  in a similar way. The authorial mouthpiece of Antonio cannot intensely                      
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