Op lends a vernacular tone to the words and gets us away from the sound of a prestige or politically sanctioned orthodox dialect. So let's take a look through it and see meter at work, since that was my promise about Iambic pentameter. He will give you a couple of regular pentameters before surprising us which he does in the third line with what's called a nyambic inversion or a trochie. Then we've got another, an irregular line, actually a hexameter with a feminine ending. The curiosity and nation is to deprive me, feminine ending, unstraced syllable. Now God stand up for bastards. An amazing speech
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The July 2023 episode of In a Manner of Speaking is all about William Shakespeare. Paul dives deep into the Bard, from iambic pentameter, to scansion, to scoring, to metre, to Original Pronunciation. It’s a fun exercise for scholars and professionals but also actors just starting out on their Shakespeare journey.
Paul references his Voicing Shakespeare ebook, which is a great accompaniment to this month’s podcast. For details on how to purchase and download it, go here. (It’s available both in Windows and iTunes/Mac/iPhone formats.)
Below is Edmund’s speech from King Lear, Act 1, Scene 2. To hear Paul deliver the speech in Original Pronunciation (OP), click or tap the triangle-shaped play button. (To hear Paul’s reading of the speech in a modern dialect, go here. ) And for a more complete scansion and scoring of the speech, click here.
Thou, na│ture, art│ my god│dess; ││ to │thy law ENJ
My ser│vices│ are bound. │││Wherefore│ should I ENJ Stand in│ the plague│ of cus│tom, ││ and│ permit ENJ
The cu│rios│ity│ of na│tions││ to│ deprive│ me, HEX
For that│ I am│││ some twelve│ or four│teen moon-│shines ENJ Lag of│ a broth│er? │││Why bas│tard? where│fore base? HEX[1]
When my│ dimen│sions ││ are│ as well │compact,
My mind │as gen│’rous, ││and │my shape │as trueENJ
As hon│est ma│dam’s iss│ue? │││Why brand│ they us ENJHEX[2]
With base? │ with base│ness? ││ bas│tardy? │ base, base?
Who, [in │the lust│y stealth│ of nat│ure, ││] take ENJ
More com│posi│tion ││and│ fierce qua│lity ENJ
Than doth, [│within│ a dull, │││stale, tir│ed bed,] Go t’ the │crea│ting a│ whole tribe│ of fops,
Got ‘tween │asleep │and wake? │││Well, then, TETR
Legit│’mate Ed│gar, ││ I│ must have│ your land:
Our fa│ther’s love│││ is to│ the bas│tard Ed│mund ENJ
As to│ the le│git’mate: │││fine word, — │legit│imate! HEX Well, my │legit│’mate, ││if │this let│ter speed,
And my │inven│tion thrive, │││ Edmund │the base ENJ
Shall top │the leg│it’mate. │││ I grow; │ I pros│per:
Now, gods, │││ stand up│ for bas│tards!
[1] This line scans as a broken-backed hexameter with a silent extra beat, taking up metrical space, following brother. This is a very rare type of line. [2] And again, another broken-backed hexameter.
For a partial phonetic analysis of the speech in Original Pronunciation, see below. (For further analysis of OP, see Paul’s Original Pronunciation ebook.)
Thou, nature, art my goddess; to thy law
ðəʊ nɛːtʰə˞ a˞t mɪ gɑdɛs tʰə ðəɪ lɑː
My services are bound. Wherefore should I
mɪ sɐ˞vɪsɪz ə˞ bəʊnd ʍɛ˞fɔ˞ ʃʊd əi
Stand in the plague of custom, and permit
stand ɪ ðə pʰlɛːg ə kʰɤstəm an pʰɐ˞mɪtʰ
The curiosity of nations to deprive me,
ðə kʰju̹ɹiɑsɪtʰəɪ ə nɛːsjənz tʰə dɪpʰɹəɪv mɪ
For that I am some twelve or fourteen moon-shines
fə˞ ðatʰ əi am sɤm tʰʍɛɫv ə˞ fo˞tʰeːn mu̹nʃəɪnz
Lag of a brother? Why bastard? wherefore base?
lag əv ə bɹɤðə˞ ʍəɪ bastə˞d ʍɛ˞fɔ˞ bɛːs
When my dimensions are as well compact,
ʍɛn məɪ dəmɛnsjənz a˞ əz wɛɫ kʰəmpʰaktʰ
My mind as generous, and my shape as true,
mɪ məɪnd əz d͡ʒɛnɹəs and mɪ ʃɛːp əz tɹu̹ː
As honest madam’s issue? Why brand they us
az ɑnɪst madəmz ɪsjə ʍəɪ bɹand ðɛ ɤs
With base? with baseness? bastardy? base, base?
wɪ bɛːs wɪ bɛːsnəs bastʰɐ˞dəɪ bɛːs bɛːs