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In Preface to Shakespeare, Johnson has shown the  merits and demerits of Shakespeare based on the plays he has edited.  Here he gives the readers some sound ideas  about the virtues and faults of Shakespeare. That Shakespeare's characters have  am interaction with nature and that his works have a universal appeal are the  major assertions of Johnson in favour of  Shakespeare's merits and what he says about the demerit of Shakespeare is that  Shakespeare tries more to please his audience than to instruct them which is a  serious fault because it is always a writer's duty to make the world morally  better. However, what Johnson has seen as the merits and demerits of  Shakespeare are given below:
Merits of  Shakespeare:  
At first Johnson explicates Shakespeare's virtues  after explaining what merit can be determined by the Shakespeare's enduring  popularity.
He proceeds thence to elevate Shakespeare as the  poet of nature. "Nothing can please many, and please long, but just  representations of general nature" (7). He says,   "Shakespeare  is above all writers, at least above all modern writers, the poet of nature;  the poet that holds up to his readers a faithful mirror of manners and of life".(  8).  Again he says that Shakespeare's  characters "are the genuine progeny of common humanity " In the  writings of other writers , a character is too often an individual but a  character of Shakespeare has a universal appeal, and his characters are the  representatives of the common people. 
Moreover Shakespeare is a prophet figure and  from his writings we find the ideas of worldly wisdom and the principles which  are of value in society and at home. He says, "from his works may be  collected a system of civil and economical prudence." (9)
Again he says that by writings Shakespeare brings  out the whole sphere of life. Moreover his heroes are like common human beings.  And the qualities that are found in Shakespearean heroes can be found in every  human being. As he says , "Shakespeare has no heroes; his scenes are  occupied only by men, who act and speak as the reader thinks that he should  himself have spoken or acted on the same occasion" (13)
In his characterization and dialogue,  Shakespeare "overlooks the casual distinction of country and  condition," striking at the center of humanity (15). The nature  captured by Shakespeare's characters is exhibited in the "ease and  simplicity" of their dialogues (10)
Indeed, Johnson points out, the distinctions of  character stressed by such critics as Voltaire and Rymer  impose only artificial burdens on the natural genius of Shakespeare. He lays an  enormous stress on Shakespeare's adherence to general nature. He states: "Shakespeare always makes nature predominate over accident; and if he  preserves the essential character, is not very careful of distinctions  superinduced and adventitious. His story requires Romans or kings, but he  thinks only on men."(15)
Johnson goes further in his defense of the  Bard's merit, extending his argument from the characters within his plays to  the genre of the plays themselves.  In  the strictest, classical sense of the terms, Johnson admits, Shakespeare's  works cannot be fairly called comedies or tragedies. For this too, his plays  earned harsh criticism from Johnson's contemporaries. Johnson, though, sees in  the mixture of sorrow and joy a style which "approaches nearer than  either to the appearance of life" (20). 
Demerits  of Shakespeare: 
His praise for Shakespeare, which centers on the  Bard's sublunary approach to character, dialogue, and plot, does not blind him  to the poet of nature's weaknesses. Johnson airs Shakespeare's imperfections  without hesitance. In doing so, though, he does not weaken his arguments; he  simply establishes his credentials as a critic. As Edward Tomarken  points out, "for Johnson, criticism requires, not intrusive sententiae, but evaluative interpretations, decisions about  how literature applies to the human dilemma" (Tomarken  2).
Johnson is not hesitant to admit Shakespeare's  faults: his earlier praise serves to keep those flaws in perspective. Even  without that perspective, however, Johnson's censure of Shakespeare is not  particularly harsh. For the most part, Johnson highlights surface- level  defects in the Bard's works: his "loosely formed" plots, his "commonly  gross" jests, and- most ironically-his "disproportionate pomp  of diction and a wearisome train of circumlocution" (Johnson 34, 35). 
The most egregious fault Johnson finds in  Shakespeare, though, is thematic. Unsurprisingly, Johnson exhibits emphatic  distaste for Shakespeare's lack of moral purpose. Johnson argues that he " He sacrifices virtue to convenience, and is so much more careful to please  than to instruct, that he seems to write without any moral purpose " (33). In leading "his  persons indifferently through right and wrong" and  leaving "their examples to operate by chance," Shakespeare has  abandoned his duty as an author as the righteous Johnson would have that duty  defined (33). This is, in his eyes, Shakespeare's greatest flaw, though it does  not supercede his other merits.
Shakespeare's plots, he says, are often very  loosely formed and carelessly pursued. He neglects opportunities of giving  instruction or pleasure which the development of the plot provides to him. He  says, "The plots are often so loosely formed, that a very slight  consideration may improve them, and so carelessly pursued, that he seems not  always fully to comprehend his own design."  (34).  Again he says that in many of his plays,  the latter part does not receive much of his attention. This charge is  certainly true. The play of Julius Caesar clearly shows a decline of dramatic  interest in its second half. He says, "It  may be observed, that in many of his plays the latter part is evidently  neglected. When he found himself near the end of his work, and, in view of his  reward, he shortened the labour, to snatch the profit."(35)
Next, Johnson considers Shakespeare's style and  expression. According to him there are many passages in the tragedies over  which Shakespeare seems to have laboured hard, only  to ruin his own performance. The moment Shakespeare strains his faculties, or  strains his inventive powers unnecessarily, the result is tediousness and  obscurity.
However, Johnson adopts purely a neo-classical  point of view which emphasizes the didactic purpose of literature as much as  its pleasing quality. In this respect we can't agree with Johnson's  condemnation of Shakespeare. Because all that we can expect from an artist is  that he should give us a picture of life as he sees it.
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8 comments:
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