Home > Shakespearean Criticism > The Merry Wives of Windsor (Vol. 83) - Philip D. Collington (essay date spring 2000)

The Merry Wives of Windsor (Vol. 83) - Philip D. Collington (essay date spring 2000)

Philip D. Collington (essay date spring 2000)

SOURCE: Collington, Philip D. “‘I Would Thy Husband Were Dead’: The Merry Wives of Windsor as Mock Domestic Tragedy.” English Literary Renaissance 30, no. 2 (spring 2000): 184-212.

[In the following essay, Collington argues that The Merry Wives of Windsor is a parody of the genre of domestic tragedy.]

Fond woman which would'st have thy husband die,
And yet complain'st of his great jealousie;
If swolne with poyson, hee lay in 'his last bed,
His body with a sere-barke covered,
.....Thou would'st not weepe, but jolly, 'and frolicke bee,
As a slave, which to morrow should be free

When John Donne wrote these lines in his “Elegie: Jealosie” in the mid-1590s, he was invoking a crime that loomed large in the popular imagination of his time.1 Petty treason—the murder of a husband by his wife, or of a household master by a servant or apprentice—was...

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