Shakespeare and the Fire of Love

Front Cover
Shepheard-Walwyn, 2004 - Drama - 180 pages
'From women’s eyes this doctrine I derive:They are the ground, the books, the academes, From whence doth spring the true Promethean fire'These lines, spoken by Berowne in Love’s Labour’s Lost, embody all the passions of the early stages of love but, as so often with Shakespeare, he seems to be hinting at something more. What is the doctrine he derives from women’s eyes? What is it women’s eyes convey? What is the true Promethean fire?The answers to these questions lie in the Christian-Platonic philosophy of love which permeates all Shakespeare’s plays and poems. Although Christian-Platonism, or the new learning as it was known in his time, has long been associated with the poetry of many of his contemporaries, its relationship to Shakespeare’s work is not so well known. This perennial philosophy has come down through a long line of teachers, including Hermes Trismegistus, Pythagoras, Plato and Plotinus. The philosopher of this tradition, whom Shakespeare most clearly reflects, was the scholar-priest Marsilio Ficino, who lived in Florence a hundred years before him. It was he who drew together the strands of many teachings and, having found the same truths in Christianity, formulated a philosophy that is generally referred to today as Christian-Platonism.Most of the comedies and some of the sonnets are explained in the light of this philosophy as they show most clearly the concepts of Platonic love. The tragedies, some of the Roman plays and Shakespeare’s last plays are used to show how he expanded on these ideas throughout his life, but only passing reference is made to the histories.Most Shakespearean criticism of recent years has been set firmly in the historical, social and political context of our contemporary world. This book reveals the philosophy which enabled Shakespeare to write of such universal themes as the harmony and disharmony between nations and princes, and the inner conflicts of mind and soul in men and women whose natures and desires are not confined to any particular age. It will appeal to theatregoers and students, especially those seeking to understand inner meaning of his plays and poems.

Other editions - View all

About the author (2004)

\Jill Line has an M.A. in Shakespeare from the Shakespeare Institute at the University of Birmingham and has lectured and written on Shakespeare, Ficino, and Christian-Platonism. A former lecturer specializing in Shakespearean drama at the University of Surrey, she has also lectured at the Temenos Academy and with the Royal Shakespeare Company at the Prince of Wales summer school for teachers. She has contributed to the Temenos Review and to Friend to Mankind, as well as to a series of booklets on the Roman plays for the Globe Theater.

Bibliographic information