Sunday, 12 February 2012

Jack Gordon and Lydia Wilson did an especially good job to-night (2)

More views of - or after - Cambridge Film Festival 2011
(Click here to go directly to the Festival web-site)


12 February

Lost! I am lost! my fates have doom’d my death:
The more I strive, I love; the more I love,
The less I hope : I see my ruin certain.
What judgment or endeavours could apply
To my incurable and restless wounds,
I thoroughly have examined, but in vain.
O, that it were not in religion sin
To make our love a god, and worship it!
I have even wearied heaven with pray’rs, dried up
The spring of my continual tears, even starv’d
My veins with daily fasts: what wit or art
Could counsel, I have practised; but, alas!
I find all these but dreams, and old men’s tales,
To fright unsteady youth; I am still the same:
Or I must speak, or burst. [...]


Belatedly, an example of the verse (from the first Act) that Jack Gordon delivered so excellently.

A Literary History of England (ed. Baugh) speaks very interestingly of how Ford's four major plays were viewed in his time, and helps to explode the myth that the incest at the heart of 'Tis Pity She's a Whore proved problematic or controversial to that audience (irrespective of what the Commonwealth might have thought of it, and of plays in general).


1 comment:

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.