Jo Beverley/Incidental Shakespeare
In Jo Beverley's The Stanforth Secrets, Shakespeare appears
as cultural shorthand for the hero's perceptions of his own feelings of
jealousy. Of course, when Justin, Lord Stanforth, alludes to
Othello he also encodes the innocence of his beloved Chloe, who
falls under suspicion when they search her room and find a steamy love
letter and a handerkerchief:
In a moment the madness passed, leaving a sour miasma to disgust
him. It was only a handkerchief. Anyone could have put it there. Anyone
could have written the letter. He would have to trust them both. It was
that or go mad. It occurred to him that the next time he saw
Othello performed, he would have much more sympathy for the
vengeful Moor (206).
This reference is fleeting and truly incidental to the plot and the
characters more generally. Here Shakespeare functions almost as a
cultural touchstone, a reference to the greatest extreme of jealousy and
its consequences. Justin almost immediately mediates and reunderstands
his own consuming passion with reference to Shakespeare's play--a play
which incidentally also reveals the innocence of the beloved.
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