Tuesday, November 12, 2019
Shakespeare As You Like It: Effective Use Of Sound In Jaques Speech :: essays research papers fc
 Shakespeare' As You Like It: Effective Use of Sound In Jaques' Speech           As infamous as Shakespeare is, and as well known as his works are, some  prose are just simply more extraordinary than the rest. There are many ways to  look at Jaques speech, such as use of language or imagery yet, something we  often do not reflect on is the sound of the prose. When reading this particular  speech, the subject is directly related to the sounds Shakespeare has chosen.  We are guided gracefully through the stages of life in twenty-seven lines. As  it is read aloud, the reader hears the actual sounds that each stage exhibits,  and finds themselves part of the speech, experiencing it, as opposed to merely  reading it.       The introduction is like a drum-roll before the show starts. The  intonation at which the reader proceeds begins with a high sound due toâ⬠  ...(a)ll...â⬠ 1 being the first word. The ââ¬Ëaw' sound is repeated at the  beginning and three times during the next sentence, ââ¬Å"And all the men and women  merely players;â⬠ (2.7.140). The next sentence is lower in pitch, using a lower ââ¬Ë  e' sound ââ¬Å"..exit and their entrances,â⬠ (2.7.141). Reappearing in the final two  sentences, before the actual ages begin, is the ââ¬Ëaw' sound. The fluctuation  like that of a ring master, is striving to gain attention before the show starts.         The first three stages can be considered the childhood progressing into  adulthood stages. ââ¬Å"Mewling and puking...â⬠ (2.7.144), are two words, which when  said, they are slurred and unclear, much like that of the speech of an infant.  The ââ¬Ëew' in mewling and the ââ¬Ëyou' sound in puking are common noises from young  children. Next we reach the schoolboy stage. Young men are often reluctant to  attend school, and their protests take the form of ââ¬Å"...whining...â⬠ (2.7.145).  When the word whining is pronounced, it sounds like a whine. The word starts  with a dragged out ââ¬Ëwhy' sound, making the reader again feel like they are  making the sounds which are pertinent to that age. Words associated with lovers  are soft and flowing, much like those used by Shakespeare in the prose of this  age. ââ¬Å"Sighing like furnace, with woeful balladâ⬠ (2.7.148), depict more emotion  than seen within the prior two stages. When sighing is pronounced, it takes the  form of an actual sigh, causing the reader to actually act out the verb instead  of simply speaking it. The three initial stages are complete, leaving the  reader dangling on the edge of adulthood.       Soldiers are usually equated with fast wit and decisiveness. The use of  short words and short sounds emphasize these next five lines of prose in   
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