I already have a selection of plays by Thomas Middleton that I am working through. It contains five of the plays considered his best works, and The Witch is not one of them.
This is probably correct. While The Witch is certainly a fun play, it is also a bit of a mess. It contains too many storylines, thrown together in a convoluted and illogical manner, and the final resolution….fails to resolve anything.
There are in fact four main storylines here. Antonio has deceived Isabella into marrying him by convincing her that her lover Sebastian is dead. In fact Sebastian has returned, and now wishes to avenge himself on Antonio with a drug that leaves him impotent (though mysteriously Antonio can still perform with his mistress). Sebastian also disguises himself as a servant so he can seduce Isabella and undermine Sebastian further.
Isabella has a sister, Francisca who has foolishly got herself pregnant. She must find a ruse to leave the area long enough to have a baby but also distract attention away from her pregnancy by inciting Antonia against her sister.
Then there is a Duchess who is married to the man who murdered her father. She might not have minded this so much if he did not tactlessly drink out of her father’s skull. So she plots her husband’s murder with a man who is attracted to her servant (who shares the same name as the Duchess for no reason whatsoever).
He thinks he is sleeping with the servant, but he is blindfolded, and sleeping with the Duchess, or maybe it is not the Duchess either. In any case this is cause for blackmail.
The fourth plot strand is perhaps not really a storyline so much as a device to move the other three plots along. Or perhaps the other three plots only exist so that these scenes can be added. They centre on the witch Hecate and her followers.
Middleton clearly wants as many witch scenes as possible, so he is always finding excuses to bring them in. Want a potion to render a man impotent? Ask the witches. Or to persuade a woman to fall in love with you? What about some poison? The witches have it all.
Some elements of Middleton’s neglected play found their way into Macbeth, but Shakespeare shows himself to be the better dramatist. Middleton is only concerned with salacious details – Hecate having sex with her own son, the witches taking incubus form so they can sleep with handsome men, a dead child’s body stuffed with herbs, or the murder of a red-haired girl.
While Shakespeare certainly uses his witches for entertainment value, he tones down the more hideous elements. He is not aiming for Middleton’s sensationalism; he is writing art. Middleton just wants the witches in his play.
There is of course a serious side to these scenes. While Middleton is having fun with the idea, he is also perpetuating images of witches performing evil rites that many of his contemporaries seriously believed. Such stories helped to spread the misogyny and superstitious bigotry that would bring about the deaths of many women.
Notably Middleton is ambiguous in the title of the play. The witch might be Hecate, but maybe a few of the other scheming women in the story might earn the title. Indeed while the witches are irredeemably foul, they are only expressing the same evil instincts that the other characters possess in hidden form.
Certainly the witches never have to worry about being lonely. No matter how murderous or malicious their practices, none of this concerns the respectable characters in the play, four of whom visit the witches to ask for a favour. Who cares if the person from whom you seek help is in league with Satan, and is using materials obtained from the body of a dead child?
After all the characters are themselves constantly intriguing against one another. Many of them are quite willing to kill anyone who gets in their way, and it is only a stroke of luck that the play finally ends with very few murderers and very few murders.
Instead the play extraordinarily works it way round to offer a happy ending to almost all the characters, many of whom we would normally expect to be forced to accept the moral consequences of their actions. Is Middleton mocking the traditional tragedy?
Whatever the case, The Witch does not really work as either tragedy or tragicomedy. Nonetheless it is an amusing and intriguing little work that is well worth a look.