The Supernatural
For a play supposedly based on
actual history, Richard III involves an extraordinary number of
supernatural elements. Some of these elements are Margaret’s prophetic curses,
Clarence and Stanley’s prophetic dreams, the allegations of witchcraft Richard
levels at Elizabeth and mistress Shore, the continual association of Richard
with devils and demons (for example, he is often called a hellhound), Richard’s
comparison of himself to the shape-shifting Proteus, the Princes’ discussion of
the ghosts of their dead uncles, and—most significant—the parade of eleven ghosts
that visits Richard and Richmond the night before the battle. These
supernatural elements serve to create an atmosphere of intense dread and gloom
that matches the malice and evil of Richard’s inner self, and also serve to
heighten the sense that Richard’s reign is innately evil, transforming England
into a kind of Gothic netherworld.
Dreams
The motif of prophetic dreams is
part of the play’s larger preoccupation with the supernatural, but the idea of
dreams emerges as its own separate motif after Stanley’s dream about Hastings’s
death. Clarence and Stanley both have dreams that not only predict the future,
but that are also heavy with important symbolism. For example, Clarence’s dream
involves Richard causing his drowning at sea. Immediately after it, he is
drowned in a cask of wine by murderers hired by Richard. In addition, Stanley’s
dream involves Hastings being gored by a boar—Richard’s heraldic symbol.
Immediately after it, Richard orders Hastings’s execution.
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