The Country Wife Essays

  • William Wycherley's The Country Wife

    1901 Words  | 4 Pages

    William Wycherley’s The Country Wife, distinguishes the distinction of innocent Country folks and the city wit as characters react to crises they encounter differently. Margery’s naivety acknowledges her as a country wife as she mistakes Horner’s cuckoldry of her husband to be Horner’s love for her. As the truth behind Horner’s secret is revealed, Margery is forced to lie in order to protect the reputations of the city men and women. Mr. Pintchwife’s control over Margery around Horner in comparison

  • William Wycherley’s The Country Wife

    1735 Words  | 4 Pages

    Wycherley’s “The Country Wife” “A Restoration comedy is like an eighteenth-century sitcom; it’s entertaining” (MacKenzie, “Behn”). However, the similarities between the two genres are more far-reaching than their equal entertainment value. For example, the cast of William Wycherley’s Restoration comedy, “The Country Wife,” consists of some central characters that are strikingly similar to those in the cast of the modern situation comedy, Seinfeld. Harry Horner from “The Country Wife” and George

  • The Country Wife by William Wycherley

    962 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Virtuous Woman In William Wycherley’s The Country Wife, William Wycherley enlightens the audience to capture several different ironical statements and questionable behaviors. The play fits perfectly into Greenwald’s definition of a comedy of manners: “[Critics] assert that a comedy of manners and the people who inhabit it represent the ostentatiously idle upper-class” (“Social Heirarchy” web). Wycherley also distinguishes several oddities in his characters not typically used to describe the

  • The Representation of Marriage in The Country Wife

    819 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Representation of Marriage in The Country Wife William Wycherly represents marriage in a peculiar way in The Country Wife. The classic marital values of love, trust, and becoming one with your partner in a bond of love are distorted by intense emotion. The appropriately named Mr. Pinchwife is a jealous husband who moves his new wife Margery to the country with hopes keep her from the outside world, namely the city of London, and the inevitable infidelity that lies there in his mind. However

  • Reconsidering Harcourt in Wycherley’s The Country Wife

    5632 Words  | 12 Pages

    Reconsidering Harcourt in Wycherley’s The Country Wife Wycherley’s The Country Wife opens on Horner, the lead, telling his physician about his plan to change his reputation from that of a rake (promiscuous man-about-town) to that of a eunuch in order to gain access to women without anyone knowing. He withholds this plan from everyone but the doctor, who becomes his accomplice by spreading the rumor of Horner’s impotence to the gossipiest women in London. Horner’s sex life constitutes two of

  • Moral Virtue in William Wycherley’s The Country Wife

    1005 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Country Wife – written by William Wycherley in 1675 – is a Restoration comedy based upon the life of the aristocracy. Restoration comedy is a style of drama that was made popular in the late seventeenth century. It refers to the period in England when King Charles II was returned as the head of the English empire. Life under King Charles II was seen as hedonistic: people were motivated by pleasure. These moral virtues represented the degradation of society, rampant with sexual explicitness and

  • The Restoration Drama In The Country Wife, By William Wycherley

    610 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Restoration comedy The Country Wife, by William Wycherley, published in 1675 demonstrates types of plays in the restoration period that were bawdy and sexual. It is in this play that certain characters are used to represent the genre of comedy of manners. Through the characters in the play such as Horner, Mrs. Pinch-wife and Lady Fidget and the constant reference to the comedy of manners, it is evident that there are many links between the playwright and restoration period. As the play originated

  • Characterization of Women as Empowering Figures in The Country Wife and Pygmalion

    1697 Words  | 4 Pages

    In The Country Wife, women are treated as mere objects and are viewed by the men of the play as being inferior. Sparkish views Alethea as an object that should be flaunted around and is only interested in marrying her for her wealth. Sparkish revels in the idea that he be envied for his wife because he believes that allowing more men to love her and envy him for owning her will increase her worth. In viewing her as something that gains value, Sparkish likens her to a treasure at an auction, whose

  • Wycherley's The Country Wife

    663 Words  | 2 Pages

    Wycherley’s The Country Wife gives the audience a very clear-cut representation of gender roles in the late seventeenth century. It reminds the audience of the constructed nature of gender roles and it shows them a way a way to succeed in a society dominated by such roles. It is as simple as understanding the social constructions and creating new constructions within these roles. For instance, The Country Wife equates femaleness with power rather than pious passivity, especially in the characters

  • Criticism of Goldsmith’s, She Stoops to Conquer

    803 Words  | 2 Pages

    repression or other factors involved in its creation. It's just on general principal then, having read Goldsmith's play and enjoyed it for itself while noting possibilities for his commenting on social/class order or the differences between city and country life, that I set aside Nelson's criticism of the play and leave it as it stands, untouched by Freudian ideology. Works Cited Goldsrnith, Oliver. She Stoops to Conquer. Dover Publications, NY: 1991 Nelson, T.G.A. "Stooping to Conquer in Goldsmith

  • The Rake Figure in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre

    1736 Words  | 4 Pages

    marriage and family in pursuit of personal gratification. While a common characteristic of the rake is his pursuit of personal gratification there are a number of different types of rakes: the Hobbesian libertine, best explained by Horner in The Country Wife; the philosophical libertine, seen through th... ... middle of paper ... ...rake was so strong that he continues to influence the perception of masculinity well in the twentieth century. Charlotte Bronte was attracted to rake model of masculinity

  • Compare And Contrast Women In The Country Wife

    1502 Words  | 4 Pages

    two women in The Country Wife that have strong feelings as to what they want, but they don’t always agree on the reason or way to go about fulfilling those feelings. . Alithea Pinchwife and Margery Pinchwife both are honest and truthful to their spouses in the beginning of the story, but ones ignorance and naivety leads them each down a different path. Both of these Women respect their husbands (fiancé in Alithea’s cases) very much. Margery is more of an ignorant obedient wife who eventually sees

  • Women in restoration theatre: stages of liberation

    1637 Words  | 4 Pages

    taste for bawdy comedy, an eye for beauty and a willingness to take risks and invite public disapproval. Perhaps one of the most controversial, and certainly the most obvious change in the theater was the introduction of actresses. Although other countries, such as France, had already integrated women into performances, when England’s theaters were closed, boys still played the female roles. (Ironically, though, while this was meant to enforce notions of female modesty it also offended those who thought

  • Death And The Maiden Play And Loyalty

    987 Words  | 2 Pages

    Roberto. Gerardo shows his loyalty to his wife because he allows her to conduct this trial. If Gerardo prioritized his responsibilities to the country ahead of his wife, he would have never let the trial occur. The situation is not nearly that simple because if he were completely loyal to Paulina, he would support her in her decisions to torture and kill Roberto. Due to his arbitration to allow the trial to occur, the potential for his job and the country to suffer detrimental ramifications are

  • James Alan Mcpherson's 'Why I Like Country Music'

    546 Words  | 2 Pages

    James Alan McPherson short story “Why I Like Country Music” deals with the cultural differences separating the North and the South in the United States throughout the mid-1900’s. The couple in the story are both black but are still segregated by culture. The narrator was born in the South while his wife Gloria was born in the North. This short story summarizes how even people who are ethnically similar can be culturally different. Furthermore, the best thing to do is look past cultural differences

  • Therapeutic Wives Essay

    1519 Words  | 4 Pages

    Diplomats have very important duties to fulfill, the most important being to advocate for their country to representatives from other nations. These diplomats and their families help to facilitate and ensure that the country they represent has a positive relationship among other nations. The life of a diplomat and their family is not as great as it seems at face value (“Life through the Eyes of a Diplomat’s Wife”). On the surface, it seems to be a very glamorous life style accompanied by expensive cars

  • Humorous Wedding Speech

    534 Words  | 2 Pages

    I stand here today, full of grief and guilt, that my beautiful wife, the daughter of Scotland, died here a cálend ago because of my erroneous doing. Today we have assembled here at, Dunkland cemetery to honour and pay our respects to this adoring wife, nurturing mother and daughter of Scotland. My wife was the epitome of loyalty, faithfulness and kindness but because of my selfishness and cunningness my beautiful wife tragically died. She was and still is my queen, filled with warmth, kindness

  • Essay On African Beauty

    1219 Words  | 3 Pages

    Marriage and beauty concepts are complicated procedure in the West, namely the United States and Canada, where humans are responsible for deciding who they want to marry and build a life with and keeping their bodies in a form that is appeasing to the opposite sex. In the Western societies a couple must “love” each other in order for a marriage to work; yet, the West has a much higher divorced rate than in eastern societies. According to Frank Sinatra, love and marriage is like a horse and carriage—cannot

  • My Unforgettable Experience

    1090 Words  | 3 Pages

    It is fantastic to establish independence in a foreign country. However, most of my relatives believed that living in a foreign country would definitely be difficult. Fortunately, I did not agree with them. I thought I had to have some guts and confront my life matters. Subsequently, I became a twenty-two-year-old international student who has been living in the United States with full independence for five years. This will always be my unforgettable experience since I am having the opportunity to

  • The Epiphany of Love When Faced With Death

    1657 Words  | 4 Pages

    have held throughout their lives. Many of these people do find fault and question their marriage, especially in Hemingway's historically sullen and bleak works. "The Snows of Kilimanjaro," "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber," and "In Another Country" are all prime examples of this trend. In this collection of short stories, Ernest Hemingway shows that in the face of death, people take more time to reexamine their marital affairs, finding faults and often questioning their choices. Considered