| The
Recording of an Ass: The Role of Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing
By: Mark Baumgartner
Knox College Common Room: Volume
3, Number 1
January 28, 2000
URL: http://www.knox.edu/engdept/commonroom/volume_two/mbaumgar/
It
would be all to easy to dismiss the character of Dogberry in William
Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing as so much comedic nonsense,
as just another excuse for a few laughs in a play that seems to
grow darker and darker as it rolls on towards the final act. Indeed,
Dogberry may be both of those things, but amidst his linguistic
foibles, his legal incompetance, and perhaps most importantly his
seeming complete lack of self-awareness, it is easy to miss the
fact that he's also quite a bit more complicated. An "officer,"
certainly; a "wise fellow," perhaps; "as pretty a piece of flesh
as any in Messina," well, probably not-but what Dogberry can certainly
claim bragging rights to is a key role in highlighting the action
of the rest of play (IV.ii.80-2). He becomes, at various points,
a kind of foil to several of the characters whose wit is fundamental
to the action of the play, a buttress against the lagging comedic
action of the middle acts, and a symbol of overarching stability,
of rightful order even, in a town that knows very little of potential
evil.
Much
has been made of Dogberry's linguistic incompetance; partially because
Shakespeare's knowing mutilation of the constable's lines demonstrates
a brilliant manipulation of language, but mostly because Dogberry
is just simply hilarious. So hilarious, in fact, that we have to
wonder if there isn't an element of tragedy in the character. There
seems to be echoes here of the Mel Brooks line, the one that goes
something like, "tragedy is when I stub my toe, comedy is when you
fall down a sewer and die." Certainly there can be said to be both
bits of the comedic and the tragic pent up in Dogberry. It would
be all to easy to delve into some psychoanalysis of Dogberry's assertion
that he is a man who "hath had losses" as a means of generating
sympathy for the guy, but, in all honesty, this is not really neccesary
(IV.ii.84). Because in a play where words represent a sort of ultimate
power-where Benedick's and Beatrice's love lives and dies by the
sword play of their wit, and Caudio nearly crushes Hero to death
with his misguided wrath-it is not too hard to imagine the impotence
of a character who cannot clearly convey the simplest of ideas.
The
play quite rightly is "much ado about nothing," the "ado" having
been created over the careless wielding of words. Dogberry's character
is essential in completing the other side of this dialectic; he
is a somewhat less than developed foil to characters like Don John
and Claudio, who destroy with words in counterpoint to the one person
who posesses the knowledge-just not the words-to set things right.
Throughout the play we see words brandished with incredible power.
Take Don John, and the effortless way he plants, with a few words,
seeds of doubt that will ultimately be Claudio's undoing. "Leonato's
Hero," he calls her, "your hero, every man's Hero"; sure, he sets
up an elaborate scheme to back up his artifice, but one wonders
if the effort wasn't wasted (III.ii.106-7). Claudio seems already
convinced by Don John's artful turns of phrase-such "mischief strangely
thwarting" needs little impetus to become buried in Claudio's brain
(III.ii.132). Shakespeare as well seems convinced that Claudio has
taken the Don's baited words, as he wastes no space in illustrating
the actual scene of Hero's supposed infidelity. The scene in which
Claudio is fooled takes on a new resonance, however, when considered
in terms of another: the scene in which Dogberry sets about what
should be a relatively simple task in revealing the treachery to
Leonato. Here Dogberry's conversational impotence contrasts sharply
with Don John-and nearly every other character in the play-for it
is in terms of Dogberry, the would be hero, that we understand the
semantical mess that drives much of the conflict in the play. In
this scene we find Dogberry and his equally mishappen sidekick,
Verges completely incapable of rousing Leonato's attention. Dogberry
drags out what he has to say in an annoying, self-important preface
in a matter that should "decern" (instead of concern) Leonato greatly
(III.v.3). He then exchanges a few quips with Verges in an attempt
to be witty which culminates in the classic muffed line, "Comparisons
are odorous," before losing Leonato's attention completely (16).
The end result is Hero's nearly tragic rebuff. Dogberry becomes
an essential reference point in a play about "nothing"-nothing,
that is, except the potential power in misused words.
Beyond
his relevence as a potential foil to reflect the excesses of other
characters, Dogberry also fulfills an important structural role
in the play. First and most obviously, he has to be there to bring
Don John's and Borachio's treachery out into the light of day. But
he also plays a more subtle role in that he helps to pick up some
of the comedic slack through the middle of the play, specifically
act IV. The extreme darkness that follows Hero's supposed death
threatens the autonomy of the play as a comedy. Throughout act IV,
the play seems more akin to Shakespeare's tragic side, as opposed
to anything humourous. Dogberry, however, doggedly upholds the comedic
principles upon which Much Ado was based, even in the play's darkest
moments. In scene 2 of act IV, his pedantic antics continue to delight,
even though Benedick, not moments before, has agreed to kill off
Claudio in one of the tensest scenes of the whole piece. His first
line, "Is our whole dissembly appear'd?" shocks the audience back
into a humourous mode (IV.ii.1). For the next eighty-seven lines,
he misuses the words eftest, burglery, redemption, and opinion'd,
to name a few, and also manages to assert that Verges and himself
are indeed the malefactors. (1-87) The scene culminates in Dogberry's
outrage at having been called an ass and a rather conceited speech
in which he demands that the whole incident, particularly the fact
of his ass-ness, be recorded. As a brief aside, this notion of recording
Conrade's slight seems to reflect another scene-Hero's shameful
rebuff at the wedding and Claudio's curious desire to "write against"
her apparent dishonor (IV.i.56-7). It's almost as if writing represents
a way for both Dogberry and Claudio to ossify the events swirling
around them into something concrete, something tangible. In a play
whose driving conflict is generated by a virtual swamp of misunderstood,
misguiding words, it seems like no coincidence that these two key
characters are both looking for solid ground-an immutable text-upon
which to base judgment.
Returning
to the notion of Dogberry as comic relief

Works Cited
Shakespeare, Willam. Much Ado
About Nothing. The Riverside Shakespeare. Ed. G. Blakemore Evans
et al. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1974. 327-364.
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