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Ace G. Pilkington
Richard II: Shakespeare's
"Perfect" History
(originally published in
the Utah Shakespearean Festival Souvenir Program,
1993)
As the perfecter of the English history
play, Shakespeare has shaped the version of history that
many English speakers believe. In J. L. Kirby's words,
"From Shakespeare, of course, we can never escape
whether we wish to or not" (Henry IV of England,
London: Constable, 1970, 2).
There is then a distinct irony when
critics misinterpret Shakespeare's essentially accurate
Richard II because they don't know enough history to
understand it, because, in fact, they do not have the
background which Shakespeare's original audience
possessed and which he could safely take for granted. The
irony deepens when these same critics, having distorted
history through ignorance, accuse Shakespeare of
distorting it by design. The worst offender here is E. M.
W. Tillyard, who has unfortunately been influential as
well as wrongheaded. Tillyard says, "Shakespeare
knows that Richard's crimes never amounted to tyranny and
hence that outright rebellion against him was a
crime" (Shakespeare's History Plays, London:
Chatto & Windus, 1951, 261).
By this interpretation, Henry
Bolingbroke becomes a usurper and the Wars of the Roses a
divine punishment for Henry's flouting of God's will.
However, Shakespeare knew perfectly well (and showed for
those who pay attention) that Richard was a tyrant who
deserved to be deposed for his own evil and needed to be
deposed for England's good.
The clashes between Richard and his
nobles steadily escalated. The first--in 1386--involved
Arundel and Thomas Duke of Gloucester and left Richard
fuming under the rule of an executive commission for one
year. Compelled to accept by the threat of deposition,
Richard thought of asking the opposing lords to dinner
and murdering them, but gave up the idea as unworkable.
The second clash came in November of
1387, when Richard challenged the commission with a royal
army in Cheshire. Gloucester and Arundel joined with
Warwick, swiftly bringing their own troops to London and
"appealing" five of Richard's closest advisors
of treason. Caught without an army of his own, Richard
agreed to put the matter to Parliament.
However, when the three
"appellant" lords withdrew their army, Richard
let his favorites escape and summoned his Cheshire
archers. Then, in December 1387, Henry Bolingbroke and
Thomas Mowbray joined the appellants. The King's men were
defeated at Radcot Bridge, and again Richard found
himself pressured to agree to demands by the threat of
deposition.
It took Richard ten years to prepare
his revenge, building up his power to the point of
tyranny. He now had a formidable force of Cheshire
archers, and Parliament had, at his request, redefined
interference in the royal household as treason. In July
of 1397, the three original appellants were themselves
appealed of treason. Warwick confessed and was banished,
Arundel was executed, and Gloucester, imprisoned in
Calais, died mysteriously, almost certainly on Richard's
orders.
Parliament was forced to agree to what
Richard wanted by the presence of 4,000 archers with bent
bows and drawn arrows. The repeal of the general pardons
put most of the people of southeast England into a
position where Richard could exploit them. He sold
pardons, neglected to record the sales, and sold pardons
to the same men (and whole counties) again; and, finally,
he had blank charters (which gave complete power over the
lives and fortunes of the men forced to sign them) drawn,
signed, and stored for later use.
With Richard censoring all foreign mail
and ordering his sheriffs to jail anyone who criticized
him, Mowbray told Bolingbroke of Richard's intention to
punish them for their part in Radcot Bridge. Remembering
Mowbray's hand in the destruction of the three elder
appellants, Bolingbroke reported his words to John of
Gaunt, who, in turn, reported to the King. Then, it was
simple for Richard to force a quarrel and banish both
men.
This is the Richard and the situation
with which Shakespeare begins, and when John of Gaunt
condemns his nephew while praising his country, he is
separating Richard from that sacred Englishness which,
alone, made the King an object of veneration. He is also
following history more closely than many of Shakespeare's
critics have done. (For more about Shakespeare's
historical accuracy, see my Screening Shakespeare from
Richard II to Henry V and Marie Louise Bruce's The
Usurper King: Henry of Bolingbroke, 1366-99.)
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