The Character of Portia

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    Portia

    Portia is the heroine of William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice. A rich, beautiful, very intelligent

    heiress, she is bound by the lottery set forth in her father's will, which gives potential suitors the chance

    to choose between three caskets composed of gold, silver and lead. If they choose the right casketthe

    casket containing Portia's portraitthey win Portia's hand in marriage. If they choose the wrong casket,they must leave and never seek another woman in marriage. Portia favours Bassanio, but is not allowed

    to give him any clues to assist in his choice. Later in the play, she disguises herself as a man, then

    assumes the role of a lawyer's apprentice whereby she saves the life of Bassanio's friend, Antonio, in

    court. She disguises herself as Balthasar, a young doctor of law.

    Portia is one of the most prominent of Shakespeare's heroines in his mature romantic comedies. She is

    beautiful, gracious, rich, intelligent, quick witted and with high standards in men. She obeys her father's

    will while having a determination to obtain Bassanio while being tactful to the Princes of Morocco and

    Arragon who unsuccessfully seek her hand. In the court scenes, Portia finds a technicality in the bond,

    thereby outwitting Shylock and saving Antonio's life when everyone else fails. Yet she also shows

    immense injustice and cruelty towards the Job-like figure of Shylock and those who are sympathetic with

    Shylock see her as the epitome of blunt, barbaric, Christian primitivism. It is Portia who delivers one of

    the most famous speeches in The Merchant of Venice:

    The quality of mercy is not strain'd.

    It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven

    Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest:

    It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.

    The strength of Portia as a role has made it attractive to many notable actresses. Frances Abington,

    Sarah Siddons and Elizabeth Whitlock all played the role in the 18th century when actresses first started

    appearing on stage. More recently, the role has been played in the cinema and on television by a

    number of notable actresses such as Maggie Smith, Claire Bloom, Sybil Thorndike and Joan Plowright,

    regardless of her ruthlessness.

    Portia does not only have positive reviews of her nature. The famous Jewish writer Wolf Mankowitz

    dubbed her a "cold, snobbish little bitch" in a video he made about anti-Semitism against Shylock the

    moneylender[citation needed].

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    Such as I am But the full sum of me / Is an unlesson'd girl, unschool'd, unpractic'd, / Happy in this, she

    is not yet so old / But she may learn; happier than this, / She is not bred so dull but she can learn

    (III.ii.149-164). After saying this to her husband, she later dresses up as a man and finds a way to release

    Antonio from his bond with Shylock, when no one else is able to. She proves to the audience and to her

    friends that even though she might have been perceived as an unlesson'd, unschool'd, unpractic'd girl,

    her inner self, posses the strength, intelligence and experience that enables her to do what she did.

    When Shakespeare created Portia's character, he contributed the likeness of Beatrice and added the

    elements of a perfect Renaissance woman. Even though Portia is a woman, she still posses the

    intelligence to use and manipulate words, the beauty to woo men, and the soul that stands above many

    others. Her appearance adds to her angelic reputation and her wisdom allows the audience of the play

    to acknowledge the theme of deceptive appearances.

    It is very difficult for a modern audience to see the Merchant of Venice as the Elizabethans did. We see

    this as a play about Shylock. And in fact, Shylock is without question the most powerful role in the play,

    and in fact one of Shakespeare's most compelling characters. Like Falstaff in Henry IV, this is a case

    where Shakespeare let himself get obsessively interested in what was intended to be a minor character(Shylock in fact appears in only five scenes and has only 360 lines in the play and in Shakespeare's source

    story was nothing but a cartoon villain) and let that character steal the play. But what it makes it worse

    for us is that the main substance of the play, all the stuff about ships and commerce, seems devoid of

    interest, whereas for Shakespeare's audience, made up in large part of merchants and other small

    businessmen, it was of very real interest. (I am indebted to Martin Holmes's book Shakespeare's Public

    for this insight.)

    It is especially difficult for us to come to terms with the character of Portia, because we tend to forget

    her real story and think of her as someone whose whole function in the play is to appear in the Duke's

    chambers disguised as a legal expert. For one thing, the courtroom scene is the only scene in the play

    where Portia becomes involved with the Shylock story, which today we see as the whole point of the

    play. Secondly, for this scene Shakespeare has given Portia one of his most famous set speeches, the one

    beginning, "The quality of mercy is not strained."

    Sinead Cusak says the following about her experience playing Portia.

    I finally worked out that the great problem for the actress playing Portia is to reconcile the girl at home

    in Belmont early in the play with the one who plays a Daniel come to judgement in the Venetian court. I

    couldn't understand why Shakespeare makes her so unsympathetic in those early scenes --- the spoilt

    little rich girl dismissing suitor after suitor in a very derisory fashion. The girl who does that, I thought, is

    not the woman to deliver the "quality of mercy" speech.

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    I don't want to discuss the way in which Sinead Cusak resolved this problem, except to say that I think it

    was very different from the way Shakespeare himself intended the play to be performed, and yet at the

    same time was undoubtedly a very good choice for someone playing to a modern audience.

    Portia and the Suitors

    I do not agree with Cusak that Portia is unsympathetic in the early Belmont scenes. I don't think it ever

    occurred to Shakespeare that his audience might empathize with the unfortunate men who come as

    suitors to Portia. Shakespeare was in the entertainment business. These man are standard comedy

    characters, analogous to what one finds in many contemporary sitcoms about single women, and the

    audience would laugh at them and find Portia's comments on them delightfully funny.

    (In what follows, from Act 1 Scene 2, I have occasionally modernized the language slightly.)

    Nerissa. First, there is the Neapolitan prince.

    Portia. Ay, that's a colt indeed, for he does nothing but talk of his horse, and counts it as one of his chief

    virtues that he can shoe him himself. I am much afeared his mother played around with a smith.

    Nerissa. Then there is the Count Palatine.

    Portia. He does nothing but frown. He hears merry tales and does not smile. I fear he will prove to be the

    weeping philosopher in his old age, being so full of uncalled for sadness in his youth. I would rather be

    married to a death's head with a bone in his mouth than to either of these.

    Nerissa. How say you by the French lord, Monsieur le Bon?

    Portia. God made him, so therefore let him pass for a man. In truth, I know it is a sin to be a mocker, but

    this one! Why he hath a horse better than the Neapolitan's, a better bad habit of frowning than Count

    Palatine. He is every man in no man. If he hears a song thrush sing, he immediately breaks into dance. He

    will fence with his own shadow. To marry him would be to marry twenty husbands. If he were to despise

    me, I'd readily forgive him, for even if he loved me to madness I'd never reciprocate.

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    Nerissa. What say you then to Falconbridge, the young baron of England?

    Portia. You know I say nothing to him, because neither of us can understand the other. Not only can't hespeak Italian, but not French or Latin either. And you know full well that I speak barely a word of English.

    He is a fine picture of a man, but alas, who can converse with a picture? And how oddly he dresses! I

    think he bought his doublet in Italy, his hose in France, his hat in Germany, and his behavior everywhere.

    Etc.

    It is certainly possible to read these lines (or listen to them spoken on stage) and empathize with thesepoor suitors and feel that Portia is being cruel in making fun of them. This is a personal reaction, and

    depending on one's own temperament and personal experience, there will always be people who feel

    hurt when things happen that most people find funny, as well as people who laugh at things that most

    people find horrible. But what I do not find credible is to think that sympathy for the suitors is the

    response Shakespeare was hoping to elicit from his audience. Shakespeare was in the entertainment

    business.

    In his characterizations, Shakespeare is in a way a very impressionistic writer. He does not delineate his

    characters carefully, but throws out all sorts of little snippets of information which we then assemble to

    create a character in our imaginations. (Or which an actor uses to create a character on stage.) Most

    important of all, he distiguishes characters by the cadences of their speeches, their vocabularies, and the

    rest of their verbal personalities. And, perhaps precisely because of this impressionistic approach, the

    resulting characters seem very vivid to us, very alive. And because they seem so vivid and alive, we tend

    to assume that the way we see a Shakespearean character is the way that character "really" is, forgetting

    the fact that nowhere in the text does it actually confirm our impressions in so many words.

    Centuries of criticism confirm the fact that even for the most careful thoughtful readers (and actors),

    who a Shakespearean character is is very much a function of the particular reader. A critic tells us his

    particular impression of a character, and supports his view with very careful reasoning and citations from

    the text, and yet his arguments are most often simply not convincing to other critics.

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    From Sinead Cusak's comments (which I think are very worth reading, although I have not quoted much

    of them here), one can see that she is unwilling or unable to accept The Merchant of Venice as a real

    comedy. And this is understandable. I think that presenting it as the comedy I believe Shakespeare

    intended would be unacceptable to almost any modern post-Holocaust audience.

    I will quote here Harold Bloom's comments on Portia:

    Portia, in play's center, is far more complex and shadowed than ever I have seen her portrayed as being.

    Herself a sophisticated ironist, she settles happily for the glittering gold digger Bassanio, contemptuously

    sentences poor Morocco and Aragon to celibate existences, and is delighted with her Belmont and her

    Venice alike. More ever than the vicious Gratiano, she incarnates the "anything goes" spirit of Venice,

    and her "quality of mercy" cheerfully tricks Shylock out of his life saving's in order to enrich her friends.

    We would see her better as something out of Noel Coward or Cole Porter. I do suggest that Portia, who

    knows better, is delighted to fail all her own finely wrought self-awareness. Her moral fiber is out of

    Henry James, but her sense of the high life wryly allows her to settle for Bassanio and tricksterism. Yes,

    she has the wit to flatten Shylock, Jew and alien, but her city, Venice, is completely on her side.

    Although it's really irrelevant to the focus of my article here, I can't resist commenting that here Harold

    Bloom is practicing that form of criticism which he himself most vociferously objects to --- namely,

    criticism based on what he calls the Politics of Resentment.

    Shakespeare does provide the actor the opportunity to play Shylock as a sympathetic character

    (although I doubt that it ever occurred to Shakespeare that anyone would want to, and certainly such a

    portrayal would have been unacceptable to Shakespeare's audience). But if one looks at the whole play

    through Shylock's eyes and takes the point of view that he is a totally innocent businessman who is

    cruelly mistreated, then it logically follows that all the other main characters in the play are a villains.

    And to play the Merchant in this way requires that one ignores almost everything in the play about these

    characters except for the end of the courtroom scene.

    Certainly it makes sense to condemn the anti-semitism of Elizabethan society, but to condemn individual

    characters in a play because they act in accord with the generally accepted attitudes of the society the

    play is set in makes it impossible to ever understand the play for what it is. The fact is that Shakespeare's

    play was written as and perceived by its Elizabethan audience (and for audiences for at least two

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    centuries afterwards) as an entertaining comedy, not a piece of social protest in which a bunch of vicious

    bullies torment an innocent victim.

    To Shakespeare's audience, which consisted in large part of merchants, craftsmen, and businessmen (c.f.

    Shakespeare's Public by Martin Holmes), usury was an evil. Not just because it was condemned in the

    Bible, but because usurers lent money at high interested rates to desperate businessmen and then

    ruined them by foreclosing on their assets when they were unable to pay. (In the same way, bankers

    were acceptable villains in nineteenth century American melodrama.) Today, when usury has become a

    fact of life and one's mailbox is constantly filled with junk mail offering credit cards, it's hard to look at

    the play through Elizabethan eyes. One would have to rewrite it and make Shylock into a villain who it's

    socially acceptable to condemn, such as a Mafia loan shark or a drug dealer to see that Shakespeare's

    audience saw Portia's swindling of Shylock (and certainly she did swindle him, coming into court

    disguised as an impartial expert witness) as nothing less than simple justice. And certainly they saw

    Portia as a heroine, not a persecutor of an innocent victim.

    But Harold Bloom's personal impressions (as always, very personal) are always interesting, since he is a

    very imaginative critic. I wish though that I could interrogate him and ask him specifically to point to

    those passages in the play that his impressions of Portia are based on. Because I certainly do not find

    lines in the text that show her as complex and shadowed, or in that in any way reminds me of Henry

    James. Portia is one of Shakespeare's most memorable and most admired characters, and yet when one

    looks through her lines in the play, it is hard to figure why. Except of the Quality of Mercy speech.

    Although Portia is not primarily a comedian (not one who entertains us by telling jokes, in any case),

    Portia's role is a comic role. This is clear from the tone of the text in the beginning of the play and from

    the business with the rings.

    But then the problem arises, as Sinead Cusak and so many others have pointed out, of what to do about

    the courtroom scene in Act 4.

    I am going to suggest the that even in the courtroom scene, Portia is a lot more like Lucille Ball than Joan

    Plowright or Helen Mirren (or, for that matter, Sinead Cusak).

    Portia in Disguise

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    There are a number of ways of trying to avoid confronting the apparent inconsistency in Portia's

    character. We might recall that Portia has borrowed her courtroom garb from her cousin Bellario in

    Padua, who is in fact a learned legal scholar. And at the end of Act 3 Scene 4, we see that she has also

    asked Bellario for some notes, which presumably are her guide in the subsequent courtroom scene. Onecan then try to reconcile the difference between Portia as we earlier saw her and as we see her in the

    courtroom by arguing that the mercy speech was written for Portia by Bellario and she is merely reading

    it, and that the same is pretty much true for the rest of her courtroom performance.

    In my opinion, to accept this explanation is to destroy the dramatic integrity of the play. For one thing, to

    make the logic of the story depend this sort of explanation, which is not even stated anywhere in the

    text, is to basically invent a new play which is a substitute for the one that is written down. And if one of

    the play's leading characters, in the play's climactic scene, is functioning as a mere mouthpiece, speaking

    the words of a character who never even appears, then the whole play becomes meaningless and

    certainly Portia's role in the courtroom (i.e. the Duke's chambers) becomes completely meaningless.

    To understand the play, I think we need to ask the question why does Portia appear in the courtroom

    disguised as a man? Why not have a true legal expert in the courtroom scene? Or have the Duke himself

    deliver the arguments that Portia makes?

    Well, to have the crucial arguments delivered by the Duke or by some true legal expert would mean thatthe crucial plot point in the whole play would essentially come from a deus ex machina. In this case, the

    story would somehow lose its point.

    And for somewhat the same reason, I think it's essential that the audience recognize from the very first

    moment that this supposed distinguished doctor of law is in fact Portia. I've seen it suggested that the

    scene be played in such a way that Portia is not recognizable by the audience, and then the truth as an

    amusing surprise in Act 5. In my opinion, this just won't work.

    If we don't see through Portia's disguise, then in Act 4 Antonio's savior is still a deus ex machina. The play

    loses its power, and it's too late to say in Act 5, "Oh, it was really Portia." In fact, if the audience really

    didn't know the play and didn't know that the playwright was a god to be worshipped, and if the

    courtroom scene were won by an unknown character, much of the audience would leave at the end of

    Act 4 --- there would be nothing to stay for.

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    But moreover, we need to be able to recognize Portia while she gives the Mercy Speech because the

    Mercy Speech is the defining moment in the play for Portia. It is the moment when we realize that she is

    noble and courageous (and much more intelligent than anyone else in the courtroom). Portia loses her

    whole impact in the play if we don't see who she is while she's giving this speech.

    And we are surprised. We'd taken Portia for a bit of a bubble head, and now we suddenly realize how

    intelligent she is. (Or if not intelligent, at the very least clever.) More intelligent than she realizes herself,

    I believe.

    But why should it be Portia who defeats Shylock? Why not have Bassanio or one of Antonio's other

    friends, or even Antonio himself, present the crucial legal reasoning?

    One can see that it wouldn't quite work. Although Portia herself is almost a deus ex machina in the

    courtroom, since she has not been previously involved in the Shylock plot at all and we have had no

    previous reason to even suspect that she had any legal expertise (which to me does seem like a genuine

    flaw in the plot), I think that there is no other character available who could present the winning

    arguments in the courtroom without having the story fall flat. Because if Antonio or any of the other

    characters is capable of coming up with the arguments Portia uses, then basically this says that Shylock

    simply underestimated his opponents and is not a worthy antagonist.

    Now let me suggest a thought experiment. Let us suppose that we can ignore the Elizabethan social

    values and put on a very modern version of the Merchant of Venice, where Portia doesn't bother to

    disguise herself but is in fact a female law student (or, in fact, a distinguished jurist; why not?) and

    appears in the courtroom as such. This is actually much more plausible than the way Shakespeare has

    things. (Of course plausibility seemed to be the very last thing Shakespeare was ever striving for.)

    Rewriting and performing the play this way would certainly be an interesting experiment. At the very

    least, one would need a completely new Act 5. But I don't believe the play would really work without

    Portia being in disguise. And the reason, in my opinion, is that Portia that would then completely

    overpower the play.

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    As it is, at the end of the play, Antonio and Bassanio remain the heroes of the play. Antonio had been

    within a few moments of losing his life, and Portia pulled off an incredible feat of legal legerdemain to

    save him, and now they're all back in Belmont and, astonishingly enough, after having seen Portia's true

    abilities in the Duke's chambers in Venice, now in Act 5 Antonio and Bassanio and the audience go back

    to treating her as just another silly dame. A very lovely one, to be sure, and one who Bassanio is quite in

    love with (although originally he said he only wanted her for her money), but still. Just a woman!

    The trick with the rings is what brings the play back down from near tragedy (although I will argue that

    the courtroom scene is also very comic) to almost slapstick. This is the classic pattern for male-female

    comedies, continued in many modern sitcoms and movies. Portia, a woman, has managed to save

    Antonio's life by outsmarting an opponent that he himself was not able to get the better of. This delights

    the audience. But at the same time, we don't want to end the play with the message that a woman can

    be smarter than a man. Certainly not if the play is to be a comedy!

    So the trick with the rings is Portia's way of showing at the end that, after all, she and Nerissa are just

    silly chicks. (Although in a different way, it also shows that they are not only smarter than Shylock, but

    smarter than their husbands.)

    In the conclusion to her book, As She Likes it: Shakespeare's Unruly's Women, Penny Gay writes,

    The uniqueness of Shakespearean comedy is that it operates powerfully on us through the play of a

    paradox: a conventional (patriarchal) community is revitalized by the incorporation, through theinstitution of marriage, of the remarkable energies of a charismatic female presence; yet she has spent

    most of the play flouting patriarchal protocols.

    In fact, from all the comedies, I think that this is really only an accurate description of As You Like It, and

    possibly also Much Ado About Nothing. Viola, in Twelfth Night, is certainly charming, and one might

    conceivably describe her as charismatic, but her role in the plot is not really that of an active character

    who makes things happen. And, except for her cross-dressing, which she does out of desperation and

    with a complete lack of confidence, she certainly doesn't challenge the patriarchal conventions of

    society. And Katherina, in The Taming of the Shrew, certainly doesn't revitalize her community.

    But for the most part Shakespeare's comedies, like many of television's pre-feminist sitcoms, do contain

    the subversive message that women are actually smarter than men, but wise enough to keep this a

    secret. Portia does not go through the Merchant blatantly flaunting patriarchal conventions, nor does

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    she revitalize her community, and yet when the silly games of men manage to get matters thoroughly

    bolloxed up, it is she, a woman, who is the only one capable of fixing what has gone wrong.

    On the other hand, there's also a much easier answer to the question of why Portia appears in Act 4 in

    disguise. Namely, Shakespeare did things the way he did because that's the way it was done in his source

    story. And apparently, as so often, Shakespeare was combining two different source stories and didn't

    bother to work out of how to combine them in a logical way. (The story logic would have been quite

    correct if it had been her husband's father Portia was saving from death, as in the original story, rather

    than someone who she didn't even know.)

    And yet one can't really stop there. Even if all these explanations do explain why Shakespeare made the

    choices he did, we still are left with the question: How did he manage to make it work? And it does work,

    more or less, except that somehow there seem to be two very different Portias in the play.

    If we believe in Act 1 that Portia is a shallow airhead who is cruel to her suitors, a "spoiled little rich girl,"

    in Sinead Cusak's words, then we will not believe her credible in the courtroom. But I believe that in fact

    that it is Cusak's judgement (along with that of many respected critics) that is shallow. Portia is like most

    people in the real world, in that she's capable of being flippant and caustic and even cruel in a lot of

    circumstances (she would in fact have to be almost a saint to treat her suitors other than she does), but

    that doesn't mean she's not capable of serious thought when it's needed. The one thing we see for sure

    from her comments in Act 1 is that she is definitely intelligent (or, at the very least, clever).

    And the fact that Portia surprises us in the courtroom scene and shows an unexpected depth is, in my

    opinion, an essential part of what makes the play comic. If the preceding acts had shown Portia as wise

    and super-competent, then as I see it, the courtroom scene would fall flat. In this case, watching Portia

    defeat Shylock would be like watching a professional boxer beat up a twelve-year-old boy.

    Here I have to surprise myself by suggesting a feminist interpretation: Portia, like so many women, has

    always been the victim of the belief that it's not a good thing for women to be intelligent. She's alwaysdownplayed her intelligence, hidden it even from herself, allowed herself to express it only in socially

    acceptable forms, such as sarcastic banter. And now there is the moment when she really needs that

    intelligence, and she has a license to use it because she is masquerading as a man!

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    Well, I have to apologize to Shakespeare for suggesting such an interpretation. He was certainly no Ibsen

    or Shaw who used his plays as way of giving the audience a message. But it does seem to me that, if we

    see the play as a comedy, that's the way it has to work. And to be acceptable to an Elizabethan audience,

    and even, I believe, to a modern one, we need the comedy to disguise the feminism. (Well, no, that's not

    really quite correct, from Shakespeare's point of view. Shakespeare needed comedy in order to amuse

    his audience. But comedy somehow often becomes all the funnier when it is used to make a point that

    the audience agrees with. And I think it has always been acceptable, in Shakespeare and in sitcoms, to

    present women as being smarter than men, as long as it's done in an amusing way.)

    Why Have Portia Disguised as a Male?

    And yet I don't think that any of that is the real reason for having Portia disguised as a man. I believe that

    the ultimate reason is that having Portia in the courtroom in disguise worked for Shakespeare was notbecause of plot logic, but simply because it made the courtroom scene funny. It's not merely funny, of

    course. It's deadly serious, because Antonio's life is at stake. But I believe that to an Elizabethan

    audience, the idea of a woman masquerading as a man and pretending to be the crucial attorney in a

    courtroom scene was extremely comic. And like Buster Keaton or Harold Lloyd balancing on a ledge

    many stories above the sidewalk, the peril involved only made the comedy that much more intense.

    We read Shakespeare's comedies in which women impersonate men and tend to think, "How could she

    get away with this disguise?" But the point it, she's not really supposed to, at least not as far as the

    audience is concerned. Modern directors, and especially filmmakers, completely ruin the comedy by

    finding ways of making Portia's disguise credible. But what's funny is that it's not credible, and yet the

    other characters don't quite see through it. This is not Eugene O'Neill, this is the stuff of sitcoms.

    One can watch Hillary Swank play Brandon Teena in the movie Boys Don't Cry, and think, "Yes, I can see

    how people could have been fooled." But it is more useful to think of Dustin Hoffman in Tootsie. Portia is

    a woman in an Elizabethan society (nominally Venetian, but all Shakespeare's characters are really

    Elizabethans in funny clothes) where gender roles were sharply differentiated. Her masquerade would

    be more difficult for her than it is for a man to impersonate a woman in our society. As I see her, she

    tries to swagger and act like a man, but she keeps making mistakes. It constantly seems like she won't

    pull it off, and yet she always manages to.

    Remember that Shakespeare was not playing to an audience who had paid a lot of money to sit in a

    darkened theatre and watch performers lit by spotlights. Shakespeare was an entertainer who had to

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    constantly work to hold his audience's attention. Every moment in a play by Shakespeare had to be

    interesting. And Shakespeare, I believe, knew that a woman trying to pass for a man would always hold

    his audience's attention.

    Shylock as a Comic Villain

    But before we can understand how Portia functions in the courtroom, we have to understand Shylock.

    Because Portia's main role is almost that of a straight man to Shylock. (Once she has given the Mercy

    Speech, she has almost no good lines in the whole scene, although I claim that her nonverbal

    contribution is crucial.)

    There are many legitimate ways of playing the courtroom scene, pretty much corresponding to the

    different ways of portraying Shylock.

    The text of the play gives the actor considerable leeway in deciding how to play Shylock. However in

    choosing to play Shylock either as merely an evil villain or an innocent victim, one has to ignore certain

    pieces of the text, for the text contains certain lines that unmistakably show that him as a villain, and

    others which clearly show that he was a victim of unjustified discrimination.

    But it seems to me (although I haven't seen very many performances of the play) that one is pretty much

    forced to either play the courtroom scene as comic or to downplay the comedy in the rest of the play,

    especially the business of the rings. And I can't believe that the latter would have been Shakespeare's

    choice.

    And to see the courtroom scene as comic, we first have to be able to see Shylock as a comic villain --- as

    he was played throughout the seventeen and eighteenth centuries, until Edmund Kean's performance in

    1814. Not comic in the sense of a comedian who makes us laugh, but rather a ridiculous figure who is

    that butt of our laughter.

    And I believe that if we look at the language of the text rather than starting from our own attitudes

    about Jews and arguing about the story line or the various circumstances, we will see that Shylock was

    written to be comic.

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    I am indebted especially to John Palmer's book Comic Characters of Shakespeare (1946). In particular,

    Palmer draws attention to the following passage from Act 3 Scene 3 (prior to the courtroom scene):

    Antonio is in the street, escorted by his jailer.

    Antonio. Hear me yet, good Shylock.

    Shylock. I'll have my bond! Speak not against my bond!

    I have sworn an oath that I will have my bond.

    Thou call'dst me dog before thou have a cause,

    But since I am a dog, beware my fangs.

    The Duke shall grant me justice. I do wonder,

    Thou wicked jailer, that you foolishly

    Come abroad with him at his request.

    Antonio. I pray thee, hear me speak.

    Shylock. I'll have my bond. I will not hear thee speak.

    I'll have my bond, and therefore speak no more.

    I'll not be made a soft and dull-eyed fool,

    To shake the head, relent, and sigh, and yield

    To Christian intercessors. Follow not.

    I'll have no speaking. I'll have my bond. [Exits.]

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    I've followed John Palmer's example in emphasizing the constant repetitions of the word bond. There's

    an almost childish petulance here in Shylock's anger which puts us in the realm of sitcoms. (And yet

    Shakespeare doesn't make things completely one-sided. He still reminds us that Shylock's grievances are

    indeed real.)

    Because my focus here is on Portia, I don't want to devote too much space to discussing Shylock. But I

    believe that if one looks primarily at Shylock's language rather than arguing about situations, everything

    about Shylock is most naturally seen as comic as well as sinister, including the fact that his daughter runs

    away from him.

    Certainly this is only one choice for the performers, but it is the choice sets the stage for the

    interpretation of the courtroom scene that makes the most sense to me.

    I Love Lucy.

    Since our impression of Portia as someone intelligent and courageous seems to be completely

    determined by the courtroom scene, I want to look at how she actually functions in this scene and what

    is required of her.

    Put aside for a moment the Quality-of-Mercy speech, which is a whole topic to itself, and look at the rest

    of the scene.

    Imagine seeing this play for the first time. And imagine that it has been billed not as a serious thought-

    provoking study of anti-Semitism, but as an entertainment.

    Now we're in Act 4, Antonio standing there about to lose his life, with his chest bared and Shylock with

    his knife sharpened, ready to cut. (Actually, I'm taking things out of sequence a little.)

    This is insanity. As yet, it doesn't seem funny, and yet it is the stuff of farce. It could be out of Molire.

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    Now the judge (i.e. the Duke of Venice) announces that a learned jurist has arrived to give his advice on

    this dispute. And the jurist walks in, and the audience quickly sees that it is in fact Bassanio's girlfriend

    (actually his new bride) in disguise. A apparently frivolous woman who, when we saw her earlier, seemed

    if anything to be a bit of a birdbrain.

    We are now in I-Love-Lucy land. Lucy and Ethel have arrived in drag to try and convince the court to

    spare Antonio's life. Lucy (Portia) and Ethel (Nerissa) swagger around, camping it up in the process of

    pretending to be this learned jurist and his clerk. They seem to be two clowns who can only make the

    situation worse. But then, to the surprise and delight of the studio audience, Lucy (i.e. Portia) stands

    straight and gives the Mercy Speech, impressing the audience and everyone else. Except Shylock.

    The Mercy Speech accomplishes nothing. Shylock says, "I crave the law. I ask for the penalty and the

    forfeiture of the bond."

    And the duel continues. And Portia fails. And fails over and over again. She's smart, and she makes all the

    right moves, but she can't outsmart Shylock. Because in the first place she doesn't have any real

    ammunition, but I think that the audience should also be constantly suspecting that she can't win

    because she's a woman and because she doesn't really belong in that courtroom. And beyond this, I

    think there are constantly moments when her disguise slips a little bit and she's in danger that some of

    the other characters will realize that she's not who she claims to be.

    For the scene to work now, at least as I see it, we have to see Shylock as not only an evil villain, but also

    as a comic villain. I myself see a touch of Danny DeVito at his most sinister in Shylock, especially in the

    courtroom scene, although Shylock does not have DeVito's signature tendency to make wisecracks. (I

    also find it interesting to wonder how Peter Sellers would have played Shylock.)

    Consider in particular the following passage. Obviously Danny DeVito is not a Shakespearean actor and

    could not speak these lines as written, and yet one can almost hear his voice in them. (At the cost of

    destroying the meter, I have altered a few of the lines slightly to make them a little closer to modernEnglish.) I continue to invite the reader to see this scene as an I-Love-Lucy episode. Portia can overplay

    the mock solemnity of the young but extremely learned jurist she is masquerading as. But she can't

    clown it up. The scene has to be comic and yet at the same time very serious.

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    Portia begins by establishing her credibility as an impartial judge. After making a few comments

    recommending that Shylock be merciful, she looks at the bond signed by Antonio and pretends that up

    to now she has been completely uninformed about the case.

    Portia. Why this bond is forfeit;

    And lawfully by this the Jew may claim

    A pound of flesh, to be by him cut off

    Nearest the merchant's heart. Be merciful.

    Take thrice the money. Let me tear up the bond.

    Shylock. When it has been paid, according to the tenure.

    It doth appear you are a worthy judge;

    You know the law, your exposition

    Hath been most sound. I charge you by the law,

    Whereof you are a well deserving pillar,

    Proceed to judgement. By my soul, I swear

    There is no power in the tongue of man

    To sway me. I stand here on my bond.

    Antonio. Most heartily I do beseech the court

    To give the judgement.

    Portia. Why then, thus it is;

    You must prepare your bosom for his knife.

    Shylock. Oh noble judge! Oh excellent young man!

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    Shylock. I cannot find it here; 'tis not in the bond.

    Somehow it is exactly in the fake naivete of the last few lines that I can most clearly hear Danny DeVito's

    voice and see his facial expression. ("Gee, your honor, I just can't seem to find anywhere in this paper

    Antonio signed where it mentions having a doctor on hand.")

    At this point, just in case we were taking this scene too seriously, Shakespeare throws in a bit of comedy.

    Antonio makes a death speech and Bassanio and Gratiano, upset at Antonio's coming demise, both state

    that they would gladly sacrifice their beloved wives if doing so could save Antonio's life, not realizing, of

    course, that their wives are standing right there in disguise hearing their words.

    And Portia and Nerissa comment on this sarcastically. Although it's not marked as such, I would have

    these two comments spoken as asides, so that the women can speak in their own voice and in the same

    tone of voice they used in Belmont when mocking the unsuccessful suitors. (I'm going to paraphrase

    slightly.)

    Portia. Your wife would give little thanks for that

    If she were to hear you make the offer.

    Nerissa. It's a good thing you say this behind your wife's back. Otherwise you'd be in big trouble when

    you get home.

    All the males in the courtroom are extremely upset, but Portia and Nerissa are making jokes. This is the

    final tip-off to the audience that nothing bad is really going to happen (except to Shylock, of course).

    If the courtroom scene is played as deadly serious, almost realistically, as is so often done, then this

    comic interchange, along with the business of the rings at the end, is very hard to integrate with the rest

    of the scene.

    I think that anyone who has much experience with listening to stories knows that Shylock is going to lose

    as soon as he says the line

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    Shylock. Oh noble judge! Oh excellent young man!

    One reason why we know he is going to lose is that he is smug. And the logic of storytelling is thatanytime a villain is overly smug, he will wind up being defeated.

    But furthermore, this line shows that Portia has completely outfoxed Shylock, since he has now accepted

    Portia's authority as an impartial expert. This comment by Shylock is Portia's first moment of triumph in

    the courtroom scene, and I think the actress playing Portia should show this.

    From a logical point of view, the person in the courtroom whose judgement is decisive is the Duke. Butfor effective drama, the important person to convince is Shylock himself. For the drama to work, Shylock

    must be convinced that the court has given him a fair hearing and that the law is against him. (And oddly

    enough, the audience also mostly convinced of this, even though we are quite aware that the decision

    against Shylock was made by a judge, i.e. Portia, who is completely partisan.)

    As I see it, from this point on the courtroom scene becomes more overtly comic. I still see a hint of I-

    Love-Lucy.

    Lucy (Portia) does a Columbo. There is just one last point.

    Portia. Tarry a little; there is something else.

    This is a classic sitcom line. "Just a minute, please, before you start cutting. There's one more thing I'd

    like to mention."

    And with this one last point, she, this apparently frivolous woman in drag, manages to give an argument

    that proves her superior to all the males.

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    To me, the comedy of Shylock's language in the courtroom scene (and the rest of the play) is clear. But

    what is required of Portia in order to support this comedy?

    Putting aside the Mercy Speech, the demands made on Portia in the courtroom scene are not very great.

    She must be able to maintain her masquerade as a male and, most important, she must maintain an air

    of absolute authority. If the other characters ever start to suspect that she doesn't know what she is

    talking about, or suspect that what she is saying is merely an opinion, then the whole scene falls apart.

    On the other hand, her masquerade shouldn't be completely flawless. If there are no little slip ups at all,

    then the scene is not as interesting for the audience.

    It seems to me that there is no difficulty in believing that the Portia who who makes fun of her suitors in

    Act 1 will be able to spoof the men in the courtroom, and that she will derive an almost malicious

    enjoyment from pulling the wool over the eyes of all these males. If one excludes the Mercy Speech,

    then one can, as Harold Bloom says, imagine Portia being played as something out of Cole Porter.

    The Ring Trick.

    And the thing that made me suddenly realize that the courtroom scene is like something out of I Love

    Lucy, and realize how the whole play works as a comedy was the ring trick. It is extremely funny if played

    well although like a lot of comedy it lies rather flat on the written page. And it comes right at the end of

    the courtroom scene, right after Portia has finished her masterful job of saving Antonio's life.

    It was trying to figure out how Shakespeare could jump from the apparently sublime to the absolutely

    ridiculous that made me suddenly see that the whole courtroom scene had to be comedy. Either that, or,

    as it usually done, one downplays the comedy of the ring trick. And I cannot believe that Shakespeare,whose business was entertaining people, would write a comic interaction and not expect it to be played

    for all it was worth.

    Furthermore, here, at the end of the courtroom scene, the androgynous eroticism of a boy pretending to

    be a girl pretending to be a boy can come into this play.

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    First note Portia's comments when she first explains her plans to Nerissa in Act 3 Scene 4, before the

    courtroom scene.

    Portia: I'll hold thee any wager,

    When we are both accoutered like young men,

    I'll prove the prettier fellow of the two,

    And wear my dagger with the braver grace,

    And speak between the change of man and boy

    With a reed voice, and mincing steps

    Into a manly stride, and speak of frays

    Like a fine bragging youth, and tell quaint lies,

    How honorable ladies sought my love

    Which I denying, they fell sick and died ---

    I could not do withal.

    Now, at the end of the courtroom scene, Bassanio, I think, finds himself strangely attracted to this young

    doctor of laws who has just saved his friend's life. And then this young legal expert asks him for his ring in

    a way that seems oddly seductive.

    This is certainly not in the text. And yet I think that this way of playing the interchange is definitely

    consistent with the text. Here's the passage.

    Bassanio to the young jurist. Dear sir, of force I must attempt you further.

    Take some remembrance of us as a tribute,

    Not as fee. Grant me two things, I pray you ---

    Not to deny me and to pardon me.

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    Certainly Bassanio has every reason to be grateful to the young legal doctor. But is there something

    more to his rather strong impulse to give the expert a gift? I think it could be played this way.

    Now Portia's response:

    Legal Doctor [i.e. Portia]. You press me far, and therefore I'll yield.

    Give me your gloves, I'll wear them for your sake.

    And for your love, I'll take this ring from you.

    Do not draw back your hand; I'll take no more

    And you in love shall not deny me this.

    My edition of the play has a footnote that says that "you in love" should be translated as "in your good

    will to me." And undoubtedly this is correct. And yet surely the use of the word love can also have a

    more suggestive overtone. And the young legal expert's plan to wear Antonio's gloves seems even more

    suggestive.

    And Portia's line "Do not draw back your hand," (which I have italicized) certainly invites a coquettish

    playing.

    The interchange continues.

    Bassanio. This ring, good sir, alas it is a trifle!

    I will not shame myself to give you this.

    Legal Doctor. I will have nothing else but only this

    And now I think I have a mind to it.

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    Certainly at this point there's something very flirtatious going on. The Legal Doctor's tone has markedly

    changed from what it was in the courtroom.

    Bassanio. There's more depends on this than on the value.

    The dearest ring in Venice will I give you,

    And search it out by proclamation.

    But for this, I pray you pardon me.

    Portia. I see sir, you are liberal in offers.

    You teach me first how to beg, and now methinks

    You teach me how a beggar should be answered.

    This is very much the same woman we saw in Belmont making caustic comments about her suitors to

    Nerissa.

    Bassanio. Sir, that ring was given me by my wife,

    And when she put in on she made me vow

    That I should neither sell it nor lose it.

    Portia. That 'scuse serves many men to save their gifts.

    If your wife be not a madwoman,

    And know how well I have deserved this ring,

    She would not hold out enemy forever

    For giving it to me. Well, peace be with you! [Exits]

    The tone here is classic male-female flirtation. And at the same time, in her attempt to shame Bassanio,

    in the two speeches starting with, "I see, sir, that you are liberal in offers," Portia can once again cloak

    herself in all the impressive authority she used in the courtroom.

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    Of course we, and the audience, are very aware that this is Portia teasing her husband. But how is the

    actor playing Bassanio supposed to show him taking this? With a lot of confusion, certainly. But isn't

    there something more to his feeling toward this doctor of laws than mere gratitude? In fact, the little bit

    of flirtation here between the supposed legal doctor and Bassanio is actually more erotic than any

    interchange in the play between Bassanio and the undisguised Portia.

    Well, it's a choice for the actor, of course.

    But this homoerotic teasing seems to be one aspect of Shakespeare's game of women impersonating

    men.

    The Mercy Speech

    As Sinead Cusak points out, the biggest stumbling block to seeing the Portia in the Duke's chambers as

    the same as the Portia at the beginning of the play is the "quality of mercy" speech. It seems extremely

    difficult to imagine the woman who delivers this speech being the same one who was so witty and so

    caustic in commenting on her suitors.

    Portia. The quality of mercy is not strained;

    It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven

    Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest;

    It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.

    'Tis mighty in the mightiest;

    It becomes the thrond monarch better than his crown.

    His scepter shows the force of temporal power,

    The attribute to awe and majesty,

    Wherein sit the dread and fear of kings;

    But mercy is above this scepter'd sway;

    It is enthrond in the hearts of kings,

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    It is an attribute of God himself,

    And earthy power doth then show likest God's

    When mercy seasons justice. Therefore, Jew,

    Though justice be thy plea, consider this:

    That in the course of justice, none of us

    should see salvation. We do pray for mercy,

    And that same prayer doth teach us all to render

    The deeds of mercy. I have spoke thus much

    To mitigate the justice of thy plea;

    Which if thou follow, the strict court of Venice

    Must give sentence 'gainst the merchant there.

    This speech is, at least for audiences of the past couple of centuries, the high point of the play. It is one

    of the great Shakespearean arias, as it were.

    Portia is commonly considered one of Shakespeare's greatest women, a noble and heroic character. And

    the reason for this certainly has nothing to do with her scenes in Belmont in Act 1 and Act 5. Our overall

    impression of Portia is primarily determined by the courtroom scene in Act 4 --- a scene in which she is

    impersonating someone else! And above all, it is determined, for most people, by the Mercy Speech.

    In fact, aside from the Mercy Speech, Portia doesn't have a single memorable line in the whole play.

    My own opinion is that Shakespeare wasn't even thinking about Portia when he wrote this speech. He

    knew that he needed a speech praising mercy, and these are the words he came up with. He gave it to

    Portia, because she was the character who needed it.

    I referred to Portia's speech as an aria. Actually, I have to admit to not being much of an opera fan, so I

    find it more useful to compare Shakespeare's set speeches to the songs in a musical comedy. We know

    that in normal life, people don't suddenly start singing about what is happening. But we accept the

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    convention that this happens in musical comedies. The song, at least ideally, needs to be in character for

    the personality of the character singing it. And yet, even if the world were such that people did suddenly

    break into song, the song, a carefully crafted work by the composer and lyricist, is not usually something

    which this particular character would be capable of creating.

    I think that the actress playing Portia, when she delivers the Mercy Speech, has to be not embarrassed

    about the fact that she's grandstanding; she's meant to. She's standing in a courtroom and she's giving a

    carefully thought-out speech, playing to the audience as well as to the court, using every bit of energy

    she can muster to create an impression of charisma and stature that is a considerable achievement for

    the boy Portia is impersonating, much less for Portia herself. I'm sure that Shakespeare's own actresses

    (i.e. boy actors) played this for all it was worth.

    Obviously a speech like this would be something that Portia had thought about quite a bit in advance.Logically it makes sense that such a well constructed speech would be something that she had prepared

    ahead of time and memorized. But I think that dramatically it's always more effective if a speech is

    delivered as if the speaker were thinking the thoughts as she speaks them. So that at the first moment,

    the only thought in Portia's mind is, "The quality of mercy is not strained." But as soon as she says this,

    the simile occurs to her: "It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven on the place beneath." And then it

    seems natural to add, "It is twice blest; it blesseth him that gives and him that takes." And at that point

    she starts to hit her stride, and the words start coming faster. (Just as in a musical comedy, there are

    often two lines that are spoken before the character really begins to sing.)

    In his article "The Problem of Shylock" in The Merchant of Venice: Critical Essays, edited by Thomas

    Wheeler, Bill Overton writes,

    [The Mercy Speech] is very much a set piece in its careful rhetorical construction, developing through

    nice antitheses to an impressively built climax. In context, it is a public, forensic performance rather than

    a private appeal. Portia is laying down the moral law, and her tone is less that of compassionate

    persuasion than of the sermon or lecture.

    As many people have pointed out, neither in the courtroom scene nor in her treatment of her suitors

    does Portia seem like an especially merciful person. But I do think that she's intelligent enough so that,

    given the task of coming up in a few days with something persuasive to say on the subject of mercy, she

    could have come up with these thoughts. Like most speechwriters, her preaching is far better than her

    practice. The truth is that the Mercy Speech is not very profound, it's merely well expressed. And in

    truth, only the first four lines are all that great. The Mercy Speech doesn't show Portia as being deep

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    (much less complex and shadowed or having a moral fibre out of Henry James, as Bloom suggests), but it

    does, I believe, show her as more intelligent and competent than we had expected.

    For those who disparage Portia based on what we see of her in the first three acts at Belmont, and find it

    inconsistent that she should give the Mercy Speech, I would suggest still another experiment. I would

    invite the reader to wonder who else in the play Shakespeare could have given the Mercy Speech to. I

    think it would have been credible if spoken by the Duke, but then we know nothing about the Duke in

    any case, so almost anything is believable of him.

    But I can't believe this speech being believable in the mouth of Antonio or Bassanio or Gratiano or in fact

    anyone else in the play.

    And on the other hand, suppose we were to take the scenes in reverse order, so that we heard Portia

    give the Mercy Speech before we met her in Belmont. Would her sarcastic comments about her suitors

    seem unbelievable after we'd heard the in the courtroom? I don't think so, especially after the business

    with the rings.

    But on second thought, this is still not very satisfactory. It would be much better if the Mercy Speech

    were delivered out of deep-rooted convicion, rather than merely being a well prepared defense lawyer's

    address to the court. (It would also be better if it were a better speech.) I think that Portia can in fact do

    this without being glaringly inconsistent with what we see of her in the rest of the play. But it's a bit like

    the old maxim in creative writing classes: Show, don't tell. Where else in the play do we actually see

    Portia behaving like someone with a deep-rooted commitment to mercy?

    The fact is that we do accept the play. Critics may have their doubts, but when Portia stands in the

    courtroom and says, "The quality of mercy is not strained," she is credible to the audience.

    In my opinion, the reason why we admire Portia is not because we are impressed the actual words of the

    Mercy Speech (or anything else she says), but that fact that she, who we have previously seen as

    pampered and frivolous, when confronted with evil, stands tall and speaks her truth. Antonio and all his

    friends are willing to just stand by and allow an outrage to happen, but Portia is the one person who has

    the guts to actually take action against it.

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    But I think we try to take the play much too seriously. We see it as a play about a very serious issue, but

    for Shakespeare and his audience, the issue was a non-issue. As Harold Bloom says, the play is out of

    Cole Porter. Or I Love Lucy. Or as regards Portia and her Belmont friends, maybe Dynasty or Dallas or

    even Beverly Hills 90201 -- one of those nighttime soap operas.

    It is often said that the Merchant of Venice of William Shakespeare does not have any hero but it has a

    heroine, Portia. Portia is perhaps the strong character in the Merchant of Venice. She is a good

    counterpart of Shylock who is the evil. If we look at the other leading male characters like Bassanio and

    Antonio we can find that they were not as strong as Portia who could fight the villain Shylock. So, Portia

    is a very impressive and exceptional of character in English drama. She is one of the strongest characters

    made by William Shakespeare.

    The first impression we get of Portia is that she is a beautiful and wealthy women. She is the news of her

    beauty and wealth all over the world and people from different countries came to the hope of getting

    married with her. Thus, Portia was a very attractive woman to everyone. To get married to her, princes

    from Scotland and Morocco came. Bassanio even made Antonio take loan from his enemy Shylock just to

    go and test his fortune to get married with Portia. Thus, the beauty and wealth of Portia made her an

    exceptional figure. There was the rule that any man who could solve the mystery of the Cascade would

    be able to marry her and enjoy her wealth.

    Although Portia was very rich, at the same time she was very romantic. When sweeter from different

    countries came to seek her for marriage she gave interesting opinions about them. It is clear that she

    liked Bassanio who was a good man. Bassanio was not a rich or powerful man. He was not a prince or

    even he was not a big trader. He was only the friend of Antonio. This was his main identity in the society

    of Venice. Even Portia did not care for this and she thought that Bassanio was the perfect man for her

    and she was eager that Bassanio can solve the mystery of the Cascade and get married with her. This

    clearly shows that Portia gives more value to love and romance than wealth and power.

    Portia was a very smart and skilled person. She was educated and the same time she was clever person.

    She could out with Shylock in his own game. This is a lot of mental strength and also a lot of knowledge

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    and wisdom. Portia had all the wisdom that a woman can dream of. She knows what to say in which

    condition and this smartness in the end saved Antonio.

    Portia was a very brave woman. When she needed she could be soft, when she needed she could be

    brave. When she heard the news of Antonio then she decided that she must try to save Antonio because

    Antonio had fallen into danger only by helping Bassanio to come to Portia. So, she took the disguise of a

    man and went to Venice and then fought with Shylock head to head and toe to toe. Shylock was an evil

    character and he was a very powerful person. Antonio or Bassanio or even the duke could not convince

    him or could not even make him little bit softer towards Antonio. But Portia had the mental courage to

    fight against Shylock and in the end she successfully defeated Shylock.

    One of the qualities that attract the readers towards Portia is that she was an obedient daughter and at

    the same time she was a very loyal and obedient wife. She agreed with the wish of her father about the

    matter of cascade. She waited patiently to get married. If she wanted she could easily told Bassanio or

    another person what was the secret of the secret of the secret of three cascades and could get married

    but she waited patiently and even allow other princes to try for it. She was loyal and obedient but at the

    same time she had firmness, she had firm characteristics, she was brave and she was ready to fight with

    anyone. She was also ready to fight with injustice. This quality of her really makes her exception.

    Portia is one of the finest characters created by William Shakespeare. Normally, the characters of

    Shakespeare are strong. If we look at Lady Macbeth then we can see that she was a very strong

    character. On the other hand, the characters of the comedy are not that strong but I think that Portia is

    an exception to this matter. Portia was not only strong but Portia had many qualities that I have talked

    about. I have already said that she was beautiful, she was a romantic person, smart skill and educated

    and she was also brave. All these characteristics have made her into a very exceptional woman of

    Elizabethan time. I have no doubt that there were very few women in that time in England and Europe

    who possessed remarkable qualities like Portia.

    Portia is the rich daughter of Belmont and heiress to her dead fathers fortune. We first hear of her as a

    rich woman who could be the answer to all of Bassanios money troubles. But Portia turns out to be

    much more than a rich plot-device. This woman is one of Shakespeares deeper female characters shes

    a good girl, but she knows what she wants and how to get it, even if her methods are a bit

    unconventional.

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    To the play, its important that Portia is wealthy, but as the story develops, it becomes more important

    that shes clever. With her disguised defense of Antonio at court, and her silly-but-devious ring trick,

    Portia shows that shes mostly willing to play by the rules, but will have fun interpreting and twisting

    them to her own pleasure. She can out-think everyone, which helps her to win over the court, deceiveBassanio and Gratiano, and even back her husband into a corner at the end of the play. Her thinking also

    leads her to some deep thoughts on a variety of issuessome of the more philosophical speeches of the

    play belong to Portia. Most importantly, she operates within the bounds of the rules of social and legal

    norms, yet her quick and mischievous thinking allows her to be imaginative within those bounds instead

    of being oppressed by them.

    Though Portia is clearly strong-willed (she shows her disdain for her many wooing men), shes still an

    obedient girl. She sticks to her fathers plan for her and simply hopes that it will turn out right, though

    shes not above being snarky when it comes to dealing with each of the suitors. The lady is gracious, so

    shell do things as theyre supposed to be done, but shell be damned if she doesnt do things her way on

    top of that. The only time we ever really see Portia out of sorts is when shes faced with Bassanios

    choice. For the first time in the play, she doesnt seem to know what to say, or is unable to really

    communicate what she is feeling, which seems to be love for Bassanio. She gives herself over to him

    fully, but in everything that follows she does as she pleases, rendering her both obedient and rule-

    abiding (with regard to her husband and father), but not without a hint of her own mischief. Portias got

    her own touch, and shes smart enough to figure out how to get what she wants. She has a certain

    playfulness too, which means her machinations arent manipulations, but just part of a fun game she

    devises.

    Ultimately, this complexity still allows her to fit within the confines of being a woman in her times. And

    yet, her wit, intelligence, and generosity are all tools she uses to let others know that while shes

    definitely a woman, and seems to be accordingly limited, she isnt subordinate to anybody except

    when she chooses to be. Her cross-dressing endeavor, where she outwits all the men in both the law and

    their ability to define gender, is a perfect example of this kind of cleverness. Besides displaying her ability

    to exploit loopholes, the cross-dressing is a clear if complicated testament to Portias view of justice and

    of her own intelligence. She knows the rules (both of social and legal norms), but shes discerning

    enough to be able to decide which ones must be followed and which are just silly. Portia follows theformer doggedly while working her way around the others. Shed never disobey her fathers will, but she

    happily uses the law against Shylocks invocation of it. She expresses a desire to be Bassanios woman,

    but she directly flouts social rules by dressing as a man. Portia has clearly thought about justice, devised

    a code that suits her, and follows it to the letter.