The Two Gentlemen of Verona by William Shakespeare
The Two Gentlemen of Verona was one of Shakespeare’s first plays (THE first by some
reckoning), written between 1589 and 1593. It is generally regarded as not
among his best. It does however, set the stage (pardon the pun) for the Bard’s
playwriting career. It is a comedy regarding two friends from, you guessed it,
Verona, and a love quadrangle they become enmeshed in.
Valentine and Proteus By Henry Courtney Selous
Reading this play satisfied part two
of the Mini-March Reading Challenge: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, William Shakespeare, and J.R.R. Tolkien.
In short, the story goes like this: Proteus and Valentine are best friends.
Proteus loves Julia – who loves him in return; Valentine has no lover and is
leaving Verona for Milan where he meets Silvia and falls in love. She also
loves him, but Silvia is intended for a courtesan friend of her fathers.
Proteus joins Valentine in Milan, falls in love with Silvia, conveniently
forgets his love for Julia and his friendship for Valentine, and plots to win
Silvia for himself. Silvia will have none of it and is disgusted with Proteus
fickleness and unfaithfulness (rightly so, well judged Silvia, say I).
Proteus is kind of a scumbag, but
this is a comedy. There are numerous intricate complications, all set right in
the end – including Proteus remembering he loves Julia, and Julia being for too
forgiving IMO.
I concur – not one of the Bard’s
greater works.
I only caught one of those original
Shakespeare phrases that is now part of English vernacular:
As plain as the nose on his face.
Though, it was originally turned a bit differently – ironically: Oh jest unseen, inscrutable, invisible, As a
nose on a man’s face, or a weathercock on a steeple
.
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