Artifice
As Orlando runs through the forest
decorating every tree with love poems for Rosalind, and as Silvius pines for
Phoebe and compares her cruel eyes to a murderer, we cannot help but notice the
importance of artifice to life in Ardenne. Phoebe decries such artificiality
when she laments that her eyes lack the power to do the devoted shepherd any
real harm, and Rosalind similarly puts a stop to Orlando’s romantic fussing
when she reminds him that “[m]en have died from time to time, and worms have
eaten them, but not for love” (IV.i.91–92). Although Rosalind is susceptible to
the contrivances of romantic love, as when her composure crumbles when Orlando
is only minutes late for their appointment, she does her best to move herself
and the others toward a more realistic understanding of love. Knowing that the
excitement of the first days of courtship will flag, she warns Orlando that
“[m]aids are May when they are maids, but the sky changes when they are wives”
(IV.i.125–127). Here, Rosalind cautions against any love that sustains itself
on artifice alone. She advocates a love that, while delightful, can survive in
the real world. During the Epilogue, Rosalind returns the audience to reality
by stripping away not only the artifice of Ardenne, but of her character as
well. As the Elizabethan actor stands on the stage and reflects on this
temporary foray into the unreal, the audience’s experience comes to mirror the
experience of the characters. The theater becomes Ardenne, the artful means of
edifying us for our journey into the world in which we live.
Homoeroticism
Like many of Shakespeare’s plays and
poems, As You Like It explores different kinds of love between members
of the same sex. Celia and Rosalind, for instance, are extremely close
friends—almost sisters—and the profound intimacy of their relationship seems at
times more intense than that of ordinary friends. Indeed, Celia’s words in Act
I, scenes ii and iii echo the protestations of lovers. But to assume that Celia
or Rosalind possesses a sexual identity as clearly defined as our modern
understandings of heterosexual or homosexual would be to work
against the play’s celebration of a range of intimacies and sexual
possibilities.
The other kind of homoeroticism
within the play arises from Rosalind’s cross-dressing. Everybody, male and
female, seems to love Ganymede, the beautiful boy who looks like a woman
because he is really Rosalind in disguise. The name Rosalind chooses for her
alter ego, Ganymede, traditionally belonged to a beautiful boy who became one
of Jove’s lovers, and the name carries strong homosexual connotations. Even
though Orlando is supposed to be in love with Rosalind, he seems to enjoy the
idea of acting out his romance with the beautiful, young boy Ganymede—almost as
if a boy who looks like the woman he loves is even more appealing than the
woman herself. Phoebe, too, is more attracted to the feminine Ganymede than to
the real male, Silvius.
In drawing on the motif of
homoeroticism, As You Like It is influenced by the pastoral tradition,
which typically contains elements of same-sex love. In the Forest of Ardenne,
as in pastoral literature, homoerotic relationships are not necessarily
antithetical to heterosexual couplings, as modern readers tend to assume.
Instead, homosexual and heterosexual love exist on a continuum across which, as
the title of the play suggests, one can move as one likes.
Exile
As You Like It abounds in banishment. Some characters have been forcibly
removed or threatened from their homes, such as Duke Senior, Rosalind, and
Orlando. Some have voluntarily abandoned their positions out of a sense of
rightness, such as Senior’s loyal band of lords, Celia, and the noble servant
Adam. It is, then, rather remarkable that the play ends with four marriages—a
ceremony that unites individuals into couples and ushers these couples into the
community. The community that sings and dances its way through Ardenne at the
close of Act V, scene iv, is the same community that will return to the dukedom
in order to rule and be ruled. This event, where the poor dance in the company
of royalty, suggests a utopian world in which wrongs can be righted and hurts
healed. The sense of restoration with which the play ends depends upon the
formation of a community of exiles in politics and love coming together to
soothe their various wounds.
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