Cornelia Flashcards
Cornelia when she interrupts Vittoria and Bracciano’s consummation
Garden is metaphor for society (corresponds with Vittoria’s dream), and witchcraft is less sinful and evil than their actions
Thessaly - special home of witches and poisonous herbs - presents witchcraft as more natural than their actions
Critique of JI’s court as promiscuous and appealing to J’s belief in damnable nature of wc - sexuality is even worse
‘O that this fair garden had with all the poisonous herbs of Thessaly at first been planted, made a nursery for witchcraft; rather than a burial plot for both your honours’
Cornelia when she has gone mad, mourning over Marcello’s corpse
Irony - rosemary is symbolic of remembrance of the dead but that it is ‘withered’ suggests bc of Cornelia’s grief and subsequent madness she will not remember Marcello
‘this rosemary is withered, pray get fresh’
Cornelia when she has gone mad, mourning over Marcello’s corpse
Antithesis of white and red - Flam’s hand is white literally, but metaphorically he has blood on his hands - parallels dualism between appearance and reality
‘here’s a white hand: can blood so soon be washed out?’
Cornelia when she has gone mad, mourning over Marcello’s corpse
Yellow is symbolic of corruption and madness - perhaps also a refenrece to STDs and poison - Cornelia’s living children have passed disease of madness onto her - this reverses natural sequence of nature - just like her children seek to better themselves - goes against God’s natural order
‘when yellow spots do on your hands appear’
Cornelia when she has gone mad, mourning over Marcello’s corpse
Humans mainly compared to wolves so the wolf here represents humans metaphorically digging up the bodies of dead humans - presents how living corrupt society so much that when ppl die they cannot reach heaven - sacrilege to dig up bodies - cannot RIP - humans as worse than animals
‘the ant, the field mouse and the mole’
‘but keep the wolf far thence that’s foe to men, for with his nails, he’ll dig them up again’
Cornelia when she has gone mad, mourning over Marcello’s corpse
Rhyming couplet presents a morally didactic function to Cornelia’s speech - abc she’s mad she can talk freely of corruption of church - ppl only get to heaven if they pay indulgences - doesn’t matter if they are immoral as long as they pay -reinforces Protestant idea of predestination
‘let holy church receive him duly since he paid the church tithes truly’