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400 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2023
So, in order to build my Rosaline, I decided to turn to Shakespeare’s other Rosalines.
There is a Rosaline(d) in As You Like It (the name is essentially the same, spellings varied during this period) and also Rosaline in Love’s Labours Lost, and I use both characters to create my version of Rosaline, to both give her a voice and imagine what she looks like. Rosaline(d) in As You Like It is strong willed, witty and is defined by her fierce love of her cousin, Celia. Rosaline is banished and the two girls retreat into the forest of Arden, a liminal wood at the edge of the city, which I’ve borrowed and placed at the edge of Verona. Like many Shakespearean women, Rosaline(d) dons breeches as a disguise.
The Rosaline from Love’s Labours Lost is one of Shakespeare’s most brilliant, powerful, and clever women. It’s an odd, sad play where life and art get muddled. Also, this Rosaline is definitely a woman of colour. She is as “beauteous as ink” and a “beauty dark” who is “born to make black fair / Labours Lost in both temperament—her delight in words—and in her physical appearance.
Romeo and Juliet has a sister play, the comedy A Midsummer’s Night’s Dream. The set-up is almost identical: a young woman refuses to marry the man her father chooses for her, and the punishment if she persists is either the nunnery or death. The shadow of each play is felt upon the other—the darkness in “Midsummer” and the echo Romeo and Juliet contained in the play-within-a-play of Ovid’s “Pyramus and Thisbe.” The lovers run mad within the wood. In Romeo and Juliet in the intense July heat—the play takes place over four days the end of the month—the wild heat stirs the blood, provoking “mad” temper, fighting, and passion.
Only, Romeo is no teenager, it’s just how he’s usually cast in modern versions. There is no evidence in Shakespeare that he is actually a boy. Shakespeare does not specify his age. Romeo could be in his twenties or even thirties (men courted and married much later than women)—he just likes young girls. The word “boy” in the play is frequeother. It doesn’t mean they necessarily are boys.
As a teenager, I believed it was the doomed love between Juliet and Romeo that made the story a tragedy. Rereading the play as an adult—alongside my sister who works in child protection—I understand it very differently. The real tragedy is that none of the adults protects the children. The Capulets are all culpable. Like all groomers, Romeo has a pattern, a predilection for young girls, and Juliet is the youngest of them all. He chooses girls who are vulnerable and desperate for an escape, and then fills their need with sex, empty promises, and ultimately violence.
