Sunday, April 19, 2020
Why Bassanio Deserves To Win The Casket Essays - Orientalism
  Why Bassanio Deserves To Win The Casket    Why Bassanio Deserves to Win the Casket Test  does he love her for herself or for the opportunity she offers him to  renew his wasted estate? The other main characters are tried by  events; Bassanio only passes a multiple-choice test. Nerissa, making the best of Portia's predicament, observes that the right casket will no doubt never be chosen by any rightly but one you shall rightly  love. And as Bassanio hastens to his choice, Portia remarks,  If you do love me, you will find me out. We may assume the  test's validity as given.  But for hostile critics some extratextual evidence of  Bassanio's worthiness may be necessary. First let us admit that  in the fairy-tale world to which Belmont is often said to belong,  the fair lady's fortune is always a given, having no other  signification than a reward for virtue. Let us further  acknowledge that in the real world of Elizabeth, an impecunious  young lord had no choice but to choose his partner from the  available heiresses. We will entirely miss the point if we  approach this marriage with our post-Romantic notions of  individual free choice and true love; these are not the ways of  this world. Among availabe heiresses, Portia is obviously a  precious treasure: high mettled like Brutus's Portia, virtu-  ous, beautiful, _and_ rich. Bassanio is no mean catch either:  he is a peer of the realm (some thirty times he is Lord  Bassanio, my lord, your lordship, your worship, and your  honor). But he requires wealth to do justice to his title.  Magnificence  At a time when relationships were everything and money  nothing, Bassanio's reckless expenditures, so painful to modern  sensibilities, would have been seen as a virtue. He is what  Aristotle calls a Great Soul, one who has no attachment to  worldly goods, who is fond of conferring benefits on others, for  whom spending money is an art (Magnificence), and who spends  gladly and lavishly, since nice calculation is shabby. _De  Officiis_ declares that There is nothing more honorable and  noble than to be indifferent to money. For him, money is a  non-thing, a drudge for moving goods from one person to another,  but never an end in itself. It has no more value than the water  that carries the merchant's cargo, and we should deny no one the  water that flows by.  Bassanio is introduced as one who has disabled [his]  estate/By something showing a more swelling port/Than [his] faint  means would grant continuance. In dire financial straits, he  expensively feasts his friends and plans to entertain them with a  masque. He undertakes to hold a rival place with Portia's  other suitors, both princes, and he therefore brings gifts of  rich value to Belmont. He does not apologize for the noble  rate of his expenditures; he trusts his luck.   Later on, in another part of _The Merchant_, Jessica echoes  Bassanio's prodigality, when she wastes away her little casket of  gold and jewels at a rate of fourscore ducats a night and trades  her father's wedding ring for a monkey, just to celebrate her  marriage.  And Portia knows precisely what kind of a man she is  getting. Bassanio freely told her, on his first visit to  Belmont, that all the wealth he had ran in [his] veins, that  his state was nothing, but that didn't stop her from issuing a  second invitation. She knows that he is a scholar and a  soldier. He has had a good education. His military service is  an even better recommendation, for, according to the leading  authority on the subject, the principal and true profession of a  Courtier ought to be in feats of arms. And he is well-  connected, too, for he first came to Belmont in the company of  the Marquis of Montferrat. The Marquisate of Montferrat  belonged to the illustrious princely house of Gonzaga. Three  Gonzagas participated in the dialogue of which _The Courtier_  consisted, The Lady Elizabeth Gonzaga in the chair. Thus Nerissa  can say without reservation, He, of all men that ever my foolish  eyes looked upon, was the best deserving a fair lady. On this  topic Cicero quotes Themistocles' wishes for his daughter: For  my part, I prefer a man without money to money without a man.  When wealth is subject to fortune, a good man is a better bet.  Portia has plenty of money; what she lacks is a man. In truth,  if Bassanio passes her father's test, he is as big a catch for  her as she is for him.  Fortune  To understand the casket test one must imagine some of the  consequences of a living in a highly entropic    
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