THE MERCHANT OF VENICE
Choosing the Casket
THE MERCHANT OF VENICE
Antonio was a rich and prosperous merchant of Venice. His ships
were on nearly every sea, and he traded with Portugal, with Mexico, with
England, and with India. Although proud of his riches, he was very generous
with them, and delighted to use them in relieving the wants of his friends,
among whom his relation, Bassanio, held the first place.
Now Bassanio, like many another gay and gallant gentleman,
was reckless and extravagant, and finding that he had not only come to the end
of his fortune, but was also unable to pay his creditors, he went to Antonio
for further help.
"To you, Antonio," he said, "I owe the most
in money and in love: and I have thought of a plan to pay everything I owe if
you will but help me."
"Say what I can do, and it shall be done,"
answered his friend.
Then said Bassanio, "In Belmont is a lady richly left,
and from all quarters of the globe renowned suitors come to woo her, not only
because she is rich, but because she is beautiful and good as well. She looked
on me with such favor when last we met, that I feel sure that I should win her
away from all rivals for her love had I but the means to go to Belmont, where
she lives."
"All my fortunes," said Antonio, "are at sea,
and so I have no ready money; but luckily my credit is good in Venice, and I
will borrow for you what you need."
There was living in Venice at this time a rich money-lender,
named Shylock. Antonio despised and disliked this man very much, and treated
him with the greatest harshness and scorn. He would thrust him, like a cur,
over his threshold, and would even spit on him. Shylock submitted to all these
indignities with a patient shrug; but deep in his heart he cherished a desire
for revenge on the rich, smug merchant. For Antonio both hurt his pride and
injured his business. "But for him," thought Shylock, "I should
be richer by half a million ducats. On the market place, and wherever he can,
he denounces the rate of interest I charge, and--worse than that--he lends out
money freely."
So when Bassanio came to him to ask for a loan of three
thousand ducats to Antonio for three months, Shylock hid his hatred, and
turning to Antonio, said--"Harshly as you have treated me, I would be
friends with you and have your love. So I will lend you the money and charge
you no interest. But, just for fun, you shall sign a bond in which it shall be
agreed that if you do not repay me in three months' time, then I shall have the
right to a pound of your flesh, to be cut from what part of your body I
choose."
"No," cried Bassanio to his friend, "you
shall run no such risk for me."
"Why, fear not," said Antonio, "my ships will
be home a month before the time. I will sign the bond."
Thus Bassanio was furnished with the means to go to Belmont,
there to woo the lovely Portia. The very night he started, the money-lender's
pretty daughter, Jessica, ran away from her father's house with her lover, and
she took with her from her father's hoards some bags of ducats and precious
stones. Shylock's grief and anger were terrible to see. His love for her
changed to hate. "I would she were dead at my feet and the jewels in her
ear," he cried. His only comfort now was in hearing of the serious losses
which had befallen Antonio, some of whose ships were wrecked. "Let him
look to his bond," said Shylock, "let him look to his bond."
Meanwhile Bassanio had reached Belmont, and had visited the
fair Portia. He found, as he had told Antonio, that the rumor of her wealth and
beauty had drawn to her suitors from far and near. But to all of them Portia
had but one reply. She would only accept that suitor who would pledge himself
to abide by the terms of her father's will. These were conditions that
frightened away many an ardent wooer. For he who would win Portia's heart and
hand, had to guess which of three caskets held her portrait. If he guessed
aright, then Portia would be his bride; if wrong, then he was bound by oath
never to reveal which casket he chose, never to marry, and to go away at once.
The caskets were of gold, silver, and lead. The gold one
bore this inscription:--"Who chooseth me shall gain what many men
desire;" the silver one had this:--"Who chooseth me shall get as much
as he deserves;" while on the lead one were these words:--"Who
chooseth me must give and hazard all he hath." The Prince of Morocco, as
brave as he was black, was among the first to submit to this test. He chose the
gold casket, for he said neither base lead nor silver could contain her
picture. So be chose the gold casket, and found inside the likeness of what
many men desire--death.
After him came the haughty Prince of Arragon, and saying,
"Let me have what I deserve--surely I deserve the lady," he chose the
silver one, and found inside a fool's head. "Did I deserve no more than a
fool's head?" he cried.
Then at last came Bassanio, and Portia would have delayed
him from making his choice from very fear of his choosing wrong. For she loved
him dearly, even as he loved her. "But," said Bassanio, "let me
choose at once, for, as I am, I live upon the rack."
Then Portia bade her servants to bring music and play while
her gallant lover made his choice. And Bassanio took the oath and walked up to
the caskets--the musicians playing softly the while. "Mere outward
show," he said, "is to be despised. The world is still deceived with
ornament, and so no gaudy gold or shining silver for me. I choose the lead
casket; joy be the consequence!" And opening it, he found fair Portia's
portrait inside, and he turned to her and asked if it were true that she was
his.
"Yes," said Portia, "I am yours, and this
house is yours, and with them I give you this ring, from which you must never
part."
And Bassanio, saying that he could hardly speak for joy,
found words to swear that he would never part with the ring while he lived.
Then suddenly all his happiness was dashed with sorrow, for
messengers came from Venice to tell him that Antonio was ruined, and that
Shylock demanded from the Duke the fulfilment of the bond, under which he was
entitled to a pound of the merchant's flesh. Portia was as grieved as Bassanio
to hear of the danger which threatened his friend.
"First," she said, "take me to church and
make me your wife, and then go to Venice at once to help your friend. You shall
take with you money enough to pay his debt twenty times over."
But when her newly-made husband had gone, Portia went after
him, and arrived in Venice disguised as a lawyer, and with an introduction from
a celebrated lawyer Bellario, whom the Duke of Venice had called in to decide
the legal questions raised by Shylock's claim to a pound of Antonio's flesh.
When the Court met, Bassanio offered Shylock twice the money borrowed, if he
would withdraw his claim. But the money-lender's only answer was--
"If every ducat in six thousand ducats,
Were in six parts, and every part a ducat,
I would not draw them,--I would have my bond."
It was then that Portia arrived in her disguise, and not
even her own husband knew her. The Duke gave her welcome on account of the
great Bellario's introduction, and left the settlement of the case to her. Then
in noble words she bade Shylock have mercy. But he was deaf to her entreaties.
"I will have the pound of flesh," was his reply.
"What have you to say?" asked Portia of the
merchant.
"But little," he answered; "I am armed and
well prepared."
"The Court awards you a pound of Antonio's flesh,"
said Portia to the money-lender.
"Most righteous judge!" cried Shylock. "A
sentence: come, prepare."
"Tarry a little. This bond gives you no right to
Antonio's blood, only to his flesh. If, then, you spill a drop of his blood,
all your property will be forfeited to the State. Such is the Law."
And Shylock, in his fear, said, "Then I will take
Bassanio's offer."
"No," said Portia sternly, "you shall have
nothing but your bond. Take your pound of flesh, but remember, that if you take
more or less, even by the weight of a hair, you will lose your property and
your life."
Shylock now grew very much frightened. "Give me my
three thousand ducats that I lent him, and let him go."
Bassanio would have paid it to him, but said Portia,
"No! He shall have nothing but his bond."
"You, a foreigner," she added, "have sought
to take the life of a Venetian citizen, and thus by the Venetian law, your life
and goods are forfeited. Down, therefore, and beg mercy of the Duke."
Thus were the tables turned, and no mercy would have been
shown to Shylock had it not been for Antonio. As it was, the money-lender
forfeited half his fortune to the State, and he had to settle the other half on
his daughter's husband, and with this he had to be content.
Bassanio, in his gratitude to the clever lawyer, was induced
to part with the ring his wife had given him, and with which he had promised
never to part, and when on his return to Belmont he confessed as much to
Portia, she seemed very angry, and vowed she would not be friends with him until
she had her ring again. But at last she told him that it was she who, in the
disguise of the lawyer, had saved his friend's life, and got the ring from him.
So Bassanio was forgiven, and made happier than ever, to know how rich a prize
he had drawn in the lottery of the caskets.