Friday, October 25, 2019
Cyrano de Bergerac: Cyranos Qualities :: Cyrano De Bergerac Essays
Throughout Edmond Rostandââ¬â¢s classic play, Cyrano de Bergerac, the title character, Cyrano, is a passionate writer whose complex and rich personal qualities are the foundation of his peerless eloquence. Cyranoââ¬â¢s unrivaled sense of humor is a defense against those who humiliate him for his outlandish appearance. For example, during the ââ¬Å"noseâ⬠speech, Cyrano challenges Valvert with twenty stunningly varied and complex alternative suggestions, one more stinging than the next, to replace Valvertââ¬â¢s banal attempt at insult. Cyrano's retaliation against Valvert's feeble attempt at embarrassment backfires as Cyrano destroys his opponent with a tirade of ingenious examples of how better to insult "the nose": ââ¬Å"Itââ¬â¢s a rock, a peak, a cape! No, more than a cape: a peninsula!â⬠(41). In addition to Cyranoââ¬â¢s wit, his language is deeply thought-out and rich with poetic imagination. Cyrano amplifies upon a single word by using concr ete words to spin a simple concept into a memorable poetic experience. Cyrano illustrates the value of Christianââ¬â¢s need for a kiss from Roxane: ââ¬Å"After all, what is a kiss? A vow made at closer range, a more precise promise, a confession that contains its own proof, a seal placed on a pact that has already been signed; itââ¬â¢s a secret told to the mouth rather than to the ear, a fleeting moment filled with the hush of eternityâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ (126). Furthermore, it is in compensation for Cyranoââ¬â¢s great suffering that his verbal style is so sensitive and brilliant. He will always love in vain: 2 ââ¬Å"Look at me and tell me what hope this protuberance might leave me!â⬠¦I go into a garden, smelling the fragrance of spring with my poor monstrous nose, and watch a man and a woman strolling together in the moonlight. I think how much I, too, would like to be walking arm in arm with a woman, under the moonâ⬠(51). Incorporating cleverness and eloquence into his language, Cyrano replies to Le Bretââ¬â¢s sympathy with the response that he would never let a ââ¬Å"sublimeâ⬠tear be lowered by having to run down such an ugly nose.
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