Feste-Significance and Role

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FESTE-SIGNIFICANCE AND ROLE In the play “Twelfth Night”, by William Shakespeare, Feste the jester plays a significant role. The fool, who Olivia’s father “took much delight in”, acts as a choric commentator, rather than an actual participant in the plot. Feste’s strength comes from his sharp observations, an accomplished professional making insightful commentary and radiating charm form his witty response and humorous answers. On the other hand, the opposition of festivity energy and Puritanistic rigidity is shown in the hostility between Feste and Malvolio, which ends with Feste’s cruel taunt of Malvolio. Lastly, the numerous poetic songs sung are tinged with melancholic nature, reverberating with ageing, death and winter weather. The main role of Feste throughout the play is the role of commentator. Feste is the only sane person in the whole play, with all others influenced to a degree with madness induced by love. The unique position Feste holds in Olivia’s household as an “allowed fool” gives him the freedom to speak his own enigmatic thoughts of wisdom. Overall, Feste embodies the disinterested clarity denied to the other characters who are too wrapped up in the unfolding plot. The first sign of his wisdom is shown when he employs a common device of Shakespearian jesters – a question followed by a circuitous line of reasoning to not only show Olivia that she herself is the fool, but also point out to her the truth that she does not want to hear – her brother is in heaven and therefore beyond mourning. Welcomed at Duke Orsino’s court, Feste recognizes Orsino’s mood straightaway and comments with precision the on melancholic feeling of rejection that Orsino feels – “Now the melancholic god protect thee”. He also foresees that Orsino, although boasting male constancy, has a mind as changeable as the opal “for thy mind is a very opal.” In Feste’s first encounter
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