A soliloquy (from Latin solo "to oneself" + loquor "I talk") is a device often used in drama when a character speaks to himself or herself, relating thoughts and feelings, thereby also sharing them with the audience, giving off the illusion of being a series of unspoken reflections. If other characters are present, they keep silent and/or are disregarded by the speaker.
The term soliloquy is distinct from a monologue or an aside: a monologue is a speech where one character addresses other characters; an aside is a (usually short) comment by one character towards the audience, though during the play it may seem like the character is addressing him or herself.
Soliloquies were frequently used in dramas but went out of fashion when drama shifted towards realism in the late 18th century.
Soliloquies in Shakespeare
Shakespeareâs soliloquies contain some of his most original and powerful writing. Possibly prompted by the essays of Montaigne, he explores in his greatest tragedies the way someone wrestles with their private thoughts under pressure, often failing to perceive the flaws in their own thinking, as in the great galloping I-vii soliloquy (âif âtwere done when âtis doneâ¦â) in which Macbeth unconsciously reveals through his imagery his fear of damnation but fails to realise what really holds him back from murdering his king: simply the fact that it is wrong.
The earliest of the mature soliloquies occur in Julius Caesar where Shakespeare develops Brutus as a forerunner of Hamlet: the self-critical and honest man struggling to do whatâs right in unpropitious circumstances. Hamletâs seven soliloquies, and the single major soliloquy of Claudius in Hamlet can all be described as âa search for a difficult sincerityâ, and represent Shakespeareâs most extended study of the workings of the human mind; it is not until the novels of Dostoyevsky that a characterâs inner self is examined with such power, discrimination and technical skill.
Shakespeareâs soliloquies are written in blank verse of unparalleled variety, invention and rhythmic flexibility, suggestive of the rapidly changing moods of their speakers. Often, it is through vivid and memorable imagery that an individual registers his unique take on the world: Hamletâs perception of Elsinore as âan unweeded garden that grows to seedâ, the frantically deluded Leontes who feels he has âdrunk and seen the spiderâ, the self-dramatising murderer, Othello âMethinks it should be now a huge eclipseâ or Antonyâs transcendent vision of his afterlife with Cleopatra: âWhere souls do couch on flowers, weâll hand in hand, And with our sprightly port make the ghosts gazeâ.
References
- ^ http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/soliloquy
- ^ http://global.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/553410/soliloquy
- ^ http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/soliloquy