The Merry Wives of Windsor, a comedy…
April 1597 CE
The Merry Wives of Windsor, a comedy by William Shakespeare featuring the fat knight Sir John Falstaff, is Shakespeare's only play to deal exclusively with contemporary Elizabethan era English middle class life.
The play's date of composition is unknown; it will be registered for publication in 1602, but was probably several years old by that date.
Textual allusions to the Order of the Garter suggest that the play may have been intended for performance in April 1597, prior to the installation in May of the Knights-Elect of that order at Windsor; if so, it was probably performed on April 23 when Elizabeth I attended Garter Feast.
This was not necessarily the premiere; presumably, the play was also staged at the public theater.
Key themes of Merry Wives include love and marriage, jealousy and revenge, social class and wealth.
Explored with irony, sexual innuendo, sarcasm, and stereotypical views of classes and nationalities, these themes help to give the play something closer to a modern-day view than is often found in Shakespeare's plays.
The play is centered on the class prejudices of middle-class England.
The lower class is represented by characters such as Bardolph, Nym, and Pistol (Falstaff's followers), and the upper class is represented by Sir John Falstaff and Master Fenton.
Shakespeare uses both Latin and misused English to represent the attitudes and differences of the people of this era.
Much of the comedic effect of the play is derived from misunderstandings between characters.
Another prominent Elizabethan theme that runs through the play is the idea of the cuckold.
Elizabethans found the idea of a woman cheating on her husband absolutely hilarious and seem to have assumed that if a man was married then his wife was cheating on him.
Because a cuckolded husband was said to "wear horns", any reference, no matter how oblique, to horns or a horned animal (for example, the "buck" basket where Falstaff finds himself) probably brought down the house.