Olivia’s Gifts
When Olivia wants to let Cesario
know that she loves him, she sends him a ring by way of Malvolio. Later, when
she mistakes Sebastian for Cesario, she gives him a precious pearl. In each
case, the jewel serves as a token of her love—a physical symbol of her romantic
attachment to a man who is really a woman. The gifts are more than symbols,
though. “Youth is bought more oft than begged or borrowed,” Olivia says at one
point, suggesting that the jewels are intended almost as bribes—that she means
to buy Cesario’s love if she cannot win it (III.iv.3).
The Darkness of Malvolio’s Prison
When Sir Toby and Maria pretend that
Malvolio is mad, they confine him in a pitch-black chamber. Darkness becomes a
symbol of his supposed insanity, as they tell him that the room is filled with
light and his inability to see is a sign of his madness. Malvolio reverses the
symbolism. “I say this house is as dark as ignorance, though ignorance were as
dark as hell; and I say there was never man thus abused” (IV.ii.40–42). In
other words, the darkness—meaning madness—is not in the room with him, but
outside, with Sir Toby and Feste and Maria, who have unjustly imprisoned him.
Changes of Clothing
Clothes are powerful in Twelfth
Night. They can symbolize changes in gender—Viola puts on male clothes to
be taken for a male— as well as class distinctions. When Malvolio fantasizes
about becoming a nobleman, he imagines the new clothes that he will have. When
Feste impersonates Sir Topas, he puts on a nobleman’s garb, even though
Malvolio, whom he is fooling, cannot see him, suggesting that clothes have a
power that transcends their physical function.
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