The Merry Wives of Windsor is a comedy by William Shakespeare featuring the fat knight Falstaff.
The Garter theory is only speculation, but it is corroborated by a story first recorded by John Dennis in 1702: that Shakespeare was commanded to write the play by Queen Elizabeth, who wanted to see Falstaff in love.
The play anachronistically places Sir John Falstaff, companion of the medieval King Henry V, in the contemporary setting of the Elizabethan era.
Falstaff arrives in Windsor very short on money. He decides, to obtain financial advantage, that he will court two wealthy married women, Mistress Ford and Mistress Page. Falstaff decides to send the women identical love letters, and asks his servants - Pistol and Nym - to deliver them to the wives. When they refuse Falstaff sacks them, and in revenge the men tell Ford and Page (the Husbands) of Falstaff's intentions. Page is not concerned, but the jealous Ford persuades the Host of the Garter to introduce him to Falstaff as Master Brook so that he can find out Falstaff's plans.
Meanwhile, three different men are trying to win the hand of Page's daughter, Mistress Anne Page. Mistress Page would like her daughter to marry Doctor Caius, a french physician, whereas her father would like her to marry Master Slender. Anne herself is in love with Master Fenton, but Page had previously rejected Fenton as a suitor due to his having squandered his considerable fortune on high-class living. Hugh Evans, the Welsh parson, tries to enlist the help of Mistress Quickly (servant to Doctor Caius) in wooing Anne for Slender, however, the doctor discovers this and challenges Evans to a duel. The Host of the Garter prevents this duel by telling both men a different meeting place, causing much amusement for himself, Justice Shallow, Page, and others. Evans & Caius decide to work together to be revenged on the Host.
When the women receive the letters each goes to tell the other, and they quickly find that the letters are almost identical. The "merry wives" are not interested in the aging, overweight Falstaff as a suitor; however, for the sake of their own amusement, and to gain revenge for his indecent assumptions towards them both, they pretend to respond to his advances.
This all results in great embarrassment for Falstaff. 'Brook' says he is in love with Mistress Ford but cannot woo her as she is too virtuous. He offers to pay Falstaff to court her, saying that once she has lost her honour he will be able to tempt her himself. Falstaff cannot believe his luck, and tells 'Brook' he has already arranged to meet Mistress Ford while her husband is out. Falstaff leaves to keep his appointment and Ford soliloquies that he is right to suspect his wife and that the trusting Page is a fool.
When Falstaff arrives to meet Mistress Ford, the merry wives trick him into hiding in a laundry basket ('buck basket') full of filthy clothes. When the jealous Ford returns to try and catch his wife with the knight, the wives have the basket taken away and the contents (including Falstaff) dumped into the river. Although this affects Falstaff's pride, his ego is surprisingly resilient. He is convinced that the wives are just 'playing hard to get' with him, so he continues his pursuit of sexual advancement, with its attendant capital and opportunities for blackmail.
Again Falstaff goes to meet the women, and again he is tricked - this time into disguising himself as the Wise Woman of Brentford, a local fortune teller. Ford tries once again to catch his wife out, but ends up beating the 'old woman', who he despises, and throwing her out of his house. Black and blue, Falstaff laments his bad luck.
Eventually, the wives tell their husbands about the series of jokes they have played on Falstaff, and together they devise one last trick which ends up with the Knight being humiliated in front of the whole town. They tell Falstaff to dress as 'Herne, the Hunter' and meet them by an old oak tree in Windsor Forest. They then dress several of the local children, including Anne and William Page, as fairies and get them to pinch and burn Falstaff to punish him. Page plots to dress Anne in white and tells Slenders to steal her away and marry her during the revels. Mistress Page and Doctor Caius arrange to do the same, but they arrange Anne shall de dressed in green. Anne tells Fenton this, and he and the Host arrange for Anne and Fenton to be married instead.
The wives meet Falstaff, and almost immediately the 'faries' attack! Slender, Caius, and Fenton steal away their brides-to-be during the chaos, and the rest of the characters reveal their true identities to Falstaff.
Although he is embarrassed, Falstaff takes the joke surprisingly well, as he sees it was what he deserved. Ford says he must pay back the 20 pounds 'Brook' gave him and takes the Knight's horses as recompense. Slender suddenly appears as says he has been deceived - the 'girl' he took away to marry was not Anne, but a young boy. Caius arrives with similar news - however, he has actually married his boy! Fenton and Anne arrive and admit that they love each other and have been married. Fenton chides the parents for trying to force Anne to marry men she did not love and the parents accept the marriage and congratulate the young pair. Eventually they all leave together, and Mistress Page even invites Falstaff to come with them. "let us every one go home, and laugh at this sport o'er by a country fire; Sir john and all".
The play is centered around the class prejudices of middle-class England. The lower class is represented by characters such as Bardolph, Pistol and Nim (Falstaff's followers), and the upper class is represented by Sir John Falstaff and Master Fenton. Shakespeare uses both Latin and misused English to represent the attitudes and differences of the people of this era. Much of the comedic effect of the play is derived from misunderstandings between characters.
Another prominent Elizabethan trope that runs through the play is the idea of the cuckold. Elizabethans found the idea of a woman cheating on her husband absolutely hilarious and seem to have assumed that if a man was married, his wife was cheating on him. Because a cuckolded husband was said to "wear horns," any reference, no matter how oblique, to horns or a horned animal (for example, the "buck" basket where Falstaff finds himself) probably brought down the house.
Merry Wives is Shakespeare's only play to deal exclusively with contemporary English life.
Tradition says that it was written at the behest of Elizabeth I, who wanted to see "Falstaff in love." This idea seems convincing due to the weird festival toward the end that refers to a queen who will not countenance sluts or sluttishness, although the word "slut" had a slightly different definition then than it does now (then it signified general dirtiness (i.e. a poor housekeeper might be a "slut") rather than sexual promiscuity specifically).
Unlike other, better Shakespeare plays, this one isn't very satisfying to read; however, "Merry Wives" is good to watch because what seems like herky-jerky pacing on the page disappears during its performance.
1597 plays | Shakespearean comedies | English Renaissance plays | Windsor, Berkshire
Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor (Schauspiel) | Les Joyeuses Commères de Windsor | Le allegre comari di Windsor (Shakespeare) | Uxores Alacres Vindesorienses
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"The Merry Wives of Windsor".
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