Comment on the significance of Julia-Faulkland Episode in Sheridan’s The Rivals
Comment
on the significance of Julia-Faulkland Episode in Sheridan’s The Rivals
Ans: The
dramatic work of Sheridan marks at once the height of the reaction against
sentimental drama. The attack against sentimental excesses in the main plot is
unambiguous and straightforward. But the Julia-Faulkland plot in The
Rivals has elicited different responses. Therefore it is contended
that Sheridan in this plot intends to appease the sentimentalists, and it
expresses his compromise with sentiment.
The Rivals was basically written as a pure and simple
comedy, but there are certainly a few sentimental scenes in this play. And,
these scenes occur between Faulkland and Julia. The right approach to these
scenes could be to regard them not as sentimental in a serious sense but to
regard them as a parody of sentimentality.
In The
Rivals, love lives in many humorous forms. Cupid’s strange way is
remarkably displayed in the love story of Julia and Faulkland in the play.
Julia, the ward of Sir Anthony Absolute, is betrothed to Faulkland, who once
saved her life. Their marriage is settled. But Faulkland, is thoroughly
sentimental fool, is often haunted with a sense of uncertainty and suspicion.
Very often a doubt about Julia‘s fidelity to him rules his mind, makes him
woeful end wan, and turns him into a hopeless lover. Julia, however, is sober and tolerant enough
to bear calmly the whimsicality of her lover. Faulkland tests her sincerity and
faith every now and then in order to assure himself that she entirely belongs
to him. At last Julia gets tired and feels sadly humiliated by her lover’s
conduct. She sends off Faulkland with the words that as he seems to be an incorrigible
lover, she will remain a maid all through her life.
A brief
examination of these sentimental scenes would hence clearly reveal that
Sheridan‘s real intention was to poke fun at the sentimental comedy of the
time. We find both Faulkland and Julia talking in a manner which is manifestly
absurd. Sheridan ridicules the sentimental husband’s jealousy for imaginary
lovers of his mistress in the character of Faulkland. The true character of
Faulkland is indicated to us by Absolute’s description of him as the most “teasing, captious, incorrigible lover”,
who carries in his head “a confounded
farrago of doubts, fears, hopes, wishes.”
When Faulkland is
described in such a manner, the audience is bound to feel amused at the
absurdity of Faulkland‘s sentimentality. Sheridan ridicules the excessive
solicitude and concern which an over-sentimental lover like Faulkland
experiences when separated from his sweetheart. Evidently, Sheridan‘s purpose
is to remind us that, even where the passion of love is concerned, a man should
exercise a certain degree of self-restraint and self-control, unlike Faulkland.
The propriety of
the Julia-Faulkland episode is questioned in many quarters. It is contended
that this episode is a superficial addition, and has unhappily lengthened the
play. As a matter of fact, the love-scenes between Julia and Faulkland seem
rather drab and dull among the sparkling situations of the play. Moreover, the
love-affair of Faulkland and Julia has had a little material link with the main
plot of the play. The story of wooing and wedding of Captain Absolute and Lydia
could have been easily managed without it. In that case the play would be much
shorter, and the charge against its undue length could not arise at all
Nevertheless, the
importance of this episode cannot be altogether left out. The love of Julia and
Faulkland acts as a foil to that of Lydia and Absolute. In this respect, the
former is complementary to the latter. Lydia offers a striking contrast to
Julia, just as Faulkland does to Captain Absolute, The ‘singular taste’ of Lydia is better revealed when it is placed by
the side of Julia‘s sober and considerate temperament.
Lastly, the
episode is Sheridan‘s satire on the prevalent distemper of his ago. Through the
scenes between Faulkland and Julia, surcharged with the clouds of sentiments,
Sheridan seems to caricature the capricious and sentimental love of the youths
of his time.
Although Sheridan
was a stalwart of anti-sentimental comedy, he could not completely keep of the
shackles of the prevailing air of sentimentalism. In The Rivals,
Julia-Faulkland episode is a glaring example of the imperceptible influence of
the sentimental vein on this advocate of anti-sentimentalism. But the play
taken as a whole is certainly anti-sentimental.
“The story and characters of Julia and
Faulkland – have an inherent tendency to satirize or undercut the
hyper-sentimentalist”.
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