Act 3 Scene 4
Olivia's Garden, Enter, Olivia and Maria
Act 3 Scene 4, Olivia's Garden, Enter, Olivia and Maria, summary and analysis,Twelfth Night,shakespeare twelfth night,twelfth night summary,twelfth night characters,
Summary
Olivia and Maria are in the garden, and Olivia is making
plans to entertain Cesario; she sent him an invitation, and he has promised to
come to visit her. She is very excited at the prospect and wonders how to treat
him, how to "feast him." She is afraid that he will think that she is
trying to "buy" him. Where is Malvolio, she wonders; he is usually
grave and polite and can be counted on to calm her nerves.
Smiling foolishly, Malvolio enters. His whole appearance
has changed since we last saw him; his dark clothes are gone, as is his dour
appearance. Maria's forged love note has changed him from being "sad and
civil" into being a merrily smiling fabrication of a courtier; he
complains a bit about the cross-gartering causing "some obstruction in the
blood," but he suffers gladly — if it will please Olivia. Smiling again
and again, he kisses his hand and blows his kisses toward Olivia. She is
dumbfounded by his unexplainable, incongruous dress and behavior, but Malvolio
doesn't seem to notice. He prances before her, quoting various lines of the
letter which he supposes that Olivia wrote to him, and in particular, he dwells
on the "greatness" passage. Olivia tries to interrupt what he is
saying, but to no avail; he rambles on and on until she is convinced that he
must be suffering from "midsummer madness."
A servant announces the arrival of Cesario, and Olivia
places the "mad" Malvolio in Maria's charge; in fact, she suggests
that the whole household staff should look after him. Meanwhile, Malvolio,
remembering the orders which Maria inserted into the letter, spurns Maria, is
hostile to Sir Toby, and is insulting to Fabian. He finally drives them all to
exasperation and fury, and when he leaves, they make plans to lock him up in a
dark room, a common solution for handling a lunatic in Elizabethan days. Olivia
won't mind, says Sir Toby: "My niece is already in the belief that he's
mad."
Sir Andrew enters, and he carries a copy of his challenge
to Cesario. He is exceedingly proud of the language, which, we discover as Sir
Toby reads it aloud, is exceedingly stilted and obtuse and, in short, is
exceedingly ridiculous. Sir Andrew's spirits are high, and Maria decides that
the time is ripe for more fun: she tells him that Cesario is inside with
Olivia. Sir Toby adds that now is the time to corner the lad and as soon as he
sees him, he should draw his sword and "swear horrible." According to
Sir Toby, "a terrible oath, with a swaggering accent sharply twanged off,
gives manhood." Offering his services, Sir Toby says that he will deliver
Sir Andrew's challenge "by word of mouth." He is sure that Cesario,
clever young man that he is, will instantly see the harmless humor in the
absurdly worded challenge; it couldn't possibly "breed . . . terror in the
youth." And thus the practical jokers exit — just as Olivia and Cesario
enter.
This scene-within-a-scene is very much like ones we have
already witnessed: Cesario pleads that his master, Duke Orsino, should be
considered a serious suitor, and Olivia changes the subject to Cesario himself,
as she gives him a diamond brooch containing a miniature portrait of herself.
Cesario accepts it politely and courteously, and Olivia exits.
Sir Toby and Fabian enter and stop Cesario before he can
leave for Orsino's palace. Sir Toby tells Cesario that Sir Andrew, his
"interceptor," is waiting for him and is ready to challenge him to a
sword fight. Cesario panics (remember that he is Viola, who knows nothing of
violence and dueling). Sir Toby continues: Sir Andrew is a "devil in a
private brawl," for he has killed three men already ("souls and
bodies hath he divorced three"). Cesario, says Sir Toby, can do only one
thing to defend himself against Sir Andrew: "strip your sword stark
naked." Such advice is alarming. Cesario begs Sir Toby to seek out this
knight and find out what offense he has committed, and so Sir Toby exits,
ostensibly to go on his assigned errand, leaving Cesario in the company of
Signior, a title Sir Toby impromptly bestowed on Fabian, all in the spirit of
their practical joking. These two exit then, just as Sir Toby and Sir Andrew
enter.
Sir Toby describes in vivid, violent language Cesario's
fierceness. Sir Andrew quakes: "I'll not meddle with him"; he is even
willing to give Cesario his horse, "grey Capilet," to avoid the duel.
Fabian and Cesario return, and Sir Toby taunts both Cesario and Sir Andrew into
drawing their swords, all the while assuring them that no real harm will come
to either of them.
At this point, a true swordsman enters. It is Antonio,
and mistaking young Cesario for Sebastian, he tells Sir Andrew to put up his
sword unless he wants to fight Antonio. Sir Toby draws his sword and is ready
to take on Antonio when a troop of officers enters. Antonio has been recognized
on the streets, and Orsino has sent out his men to arrest him. Dejectedly,
Antonio turns to Cesario (who he believes to be Sebastian). He asks him for his
purse back, and when Cesario naturally denies having ever received it, the sea
captain is both saddened and enraged by this apparent ingratitude. He denounces
this youth, "this god," whom he "snatched . . . out of the jaws
of death . . . [and offered the] sanctity of love." "Sebastian,"
he tells Cesario, "thou . . . virtue is beauty, but the beauteous-evil /
Are empty trunks o'erflourished by the devil."
As the officers lead
Antonio away, Viola is almost ready to believe what may be possible: Sebastian maybe alive! It is possible
that this man saved her twin brother, Sebastian, and Antonio may have just now
confused her with Sebastian because of her disguise. Breathlessly, she prays
that "imagination [should] prove true / That I, dear brother, be now ta'en
for you." Viola exits, and unwilling to miss their fun, Sir Toby and
Fabian easily convince old Sir Andrew that Cesario is a coward, and the three
of them set out after Orsino's page.
Analysis
This scene is not only the longest scene in the entire
play, it is also longer than the entirety of Act IV and the entirety of Act V.
Likewise, there are many divisions within this scene in terms of several
different groupings of characters on the stage and several uses of mistaken
identities. Malvolio is mistaken for a madman by Olivia, Olivia is mistaken for
a true love by Malvolio, Viola is mistaken for a man who allegedly insulted Sir
Andrew, Viola is mistaken for a man with a "heart of stone" by Lady
Olivia, and Viola is mistaken for her brother Sebastian by Antonio.
Before Malvolio
arrives, Maria warns Olivia (and the audience) that Malvolio is
"possessed," that he is out of his mind and that his sanity has been
taken over (possessed) by devils. When Malvolio does appear, we are not
disappointed. As in other scenes in Twelfth
Night, the staging is an extremely important part of the total effect. As
Maria goes out and returns, ushering in Malvolio, the change in the steward is
dramatic. Instead of being "sad and civil," he smiles broadly and
continually; he kisses his hand to the Lady Olivia, and instead of being
dressed in sober black, he is in yellow stockings with tight cross-garters in a
contrasting color. Malvolio keeps on referring to various lines of the letter
which he supposes that Olivia wrote to him, but since Olivia did not write the
letter, she has no idea what he is talking about. Furthermore, Olivia does not
realize that Malvolio is quoting;
she assumes his talk to be the ravings of a madman, and she wishes that he
would leave her sight and be treated for his madness.
Meanwhile, on the stage, the only one present who does
know what Malvolio is referring to is Maria, who is probably behind Malvolio
laughing uproariously. Knowing the contents of the letter (since she wrote it),
Maria very cunningly asks Malvolio some questions that cause him to continue
quoting from the letter; this, of course, heightens the impression that he is
raving.
As Malvolio insists on quoting line by line from the
letter, and as he returns time after time to the "greatness" passage,
Olivia becomes more and more confused, for she thinks that he is madly
rambling. Finally, feeling compassion for her steward, she thinks that "this
is very midsummer madness."
Sir Toby's delight in practical jokes is again
illustrated as he plans some good sport between Sir Andrew and Cesario (Viola).
He is, of course, working always under the assumption that no harm will come to
either party since the challenge and his arrangements will "so fright them
both that they will kill one another by the look, like cockatrices." Sir
Toby, of course, is right. The duel between Sir Andrew Aguecheek and Cesario
(Viola) is one of the high points of the comedy of this play. Equally absurd is
the fact that the pretended duel is fought over Lady Olivia, whom Cesario
(Viola) has rejected and who is not even aware of the foolish Sir Andrew's
intentions. In fact, part of the high comedy involves the egotistical absurdity
of Malvolio's thinking that the high-born Lady Olivia would stoop to love him
and, in addition, the foolishness of Sir Andrew's thinking that he has enough
of a romantic chance with this lady to enter into a duel upon her behalf. The
absurdity of Sir Andrew's and Cesario's dueling for the love of Olivia is one
of the most ludicrous duels in the history of the stage. Then to add to the
absurdity, Antonio comes on stage to defend "Sebastian" (Viola
disguised as Cesario) and finds himself dueling with the fat, belching Sir
Toby.
The various elements of the plot are slowly being brought
together. Viola now realizes that she has been mistaken for her brother,
thereby preparing the way for Sebastian to be mistaken for her by the Lady
Olivia.
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