The Winter's Tale Contents
- Social / political context
- Religious / philosophical context
- The Theatre
Disease and healing
Images of disease
In The Winter's Tale Shakespeare uses images of disease to suggest that spiritual corruption is like physical corruption, or disease; it needs treatment.
Images of disease are associated with Leontes' jealousy:
- Camillo enigmatically tells Polixenes (in I.ii) :
‘There is a sickness
Which puts some of us in distemper, but
I cannot name the disease, and it is caught
Of you, that yet are well.'
Which puts some of us in distemper, but
I cannot name the disease, and it is caught
Of you, that yet are well.'
- Paulina too sees Leontes' irrational behaviour as like a disease, telling his servants (in Act II, sc iii):
‘I do come with words as medicinal as true,
Honest, as either, to purge him of that humour
That presses him from sleep.'
Honest, as either, to purge him of that humour
That presses him from sleep.'
- She tells Leontes himself that she is ‘Your physician'.
- In his disordered state, Leontes does not realise that he himself is the disease which threatens his kingdom; in Act I, sc ii he bitterly comments on sexual immorality, especially of women, as the sickness which corrupts all mankind:
‘Physic for't there's none;
… many thousand's on's
have the disease, and feel't not.'
‘The gods themselves
Humbling their deities to love, have taken
The shapes of beast upon them: Jupiter
Became a bull, and bellow'd; the green Neptune
A ram, and bleated; and the fire-rob'd god,
Golden Apollo, a poor humble swain,
As I seem now.'
… many thousand's on's
have the disease, and feel't not.'
‘The gods themselves
Humbling their deities to love, have taken
The shapes of beast upon them: Jupiter
Became a bull, and bellow'd; the green Neptune
A ram, and bleated; and the fire-rob'd god,
Golden Apollo, a poor humble swain,
As I seem now.'
Images of healing
However, goodness, kindness and innocence are themselves seen as bringing healing:
- In Act I, sc i the childhood innocence of Mamillius is said to ‘physic the subject'
- Polixenes (in Iii.) describes how his own son's ‘childness cures in me / Thoughts that would thick my blood.'
- In Act IV, sc iv Florizel describes Camillo as ‘The medicine of our house'.
See also - The nature of humanity in The Winter's Tale: |
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The chain of being | The state as a body | Reason and passion | Disease and healing |
1. Consisting of or relating to (the) spirit(s), rather than material or bodily form.
2. Relating to matters of the soul, faith, religion, or the supernatural.
3. A type of religious song whose roots are in the slave communities of North America.
Chief of the Roman gods. (Greek name, Zeus.)
Roman god of the sea. (Greek name, Poseidon.)
God of prophecy, music, the arts, medicine and archery.
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