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Articles
Churchill’s Shakespeare: “Romeo and Juliet”
- By VALERIE LILLINGTON AND RICHARD M. LANGWORTH
- | August 16, 2023
- Category: Q & A The Literary Churchill
Q: Did Churchill ever quote from Romeo and Juliet?
“I knew that Churchill was an avid Shakespeare reader and quoter. But can someone tell me if he ever quoted from Romeo and Juliet?”
A: Once, perhaps twice…
Darrell Holley’s excellent book, Churchill’s Literary Allusions, offers only one reference to Romeo and Juliet. The Churchill Project’s digital resource of Churchill’s 20 million published words offers another, but his private secretary thought it was bogus. We are not so sure. Read on and decide for yourself.
Holley’s book is one Churchill scholars should keep at their desks. Long out of print and pricey, it is an outstanding specialty study deserving reissue, even as an e-book. We have tried to find the author, thus far without success. (Reader assistance welcome.)
Darrell Holley devotes an entire chapter to Shakespeare, citing nearly fifty Churchill allusions to the Bard in his writings and speeches. To no other English author, he writes, does Churchill allude so often:
Both by formal quotations, some quite lengthy, and by well-known phrases almost hidden in his text, Churchill makes allusion to many of Shakespeare’s plays. Somewhat surprisingly, he makes no reference to any of the sonnets. It is certainly not surprising, however, that Churchill should allude often to the histories and tragedies, King John, Richard III, and Hamlet being referred to most.1
“Yoke of inauspicious stars”
Churchill’s Literary Allusions offers one citation from Romeo and Juliet. In his biography of his father, Lord Randolph Churchill, Sir Winston writes: “Would he, under the many riddles the future had reserved for such as he, snapped the tie of sentiment that bound him to his party, resolved at last to ‘shake the yoke of inauspicious stars’….?”2 As so often in that better-read age, he didn’t bother to cite the play, assuming most of his readers would know the source.
Darrell Holley found this allusion in Romeo and Juliet, Act 5, Sc. 3, almost at the end of the play, where Romeo slays Count Paris and lays him in his tomb before taking his fatal draught:
Depart again: here, here will I remain
With worms that are thy chamber-maids; O, here
Will I set up my everlasting rest,
And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars
From this world-wearied flesh. Eyes, look your last!3
“In three long hours…”
On 18 June 1940, Churchill’s private secretary Jock Colville records another allusion to Romeo and Juliet. Colville felt certain this was not accurate:
I asked him if he would see General Sikorski tomorrow. “I will see him,” he said, “at noon,” and then went on to quote some entirely bogus quotation about that time of day, which he pretended was spoken by the Nurse in Romeo and Juliet.4
It wasn’t a good idea to challenge Churchill’s memory of Shakespeare. And so we wondered, re-reading the play, whether Churchill had the quote right, but not the speaker? The answer is: quite possibly. In Act 2 Juliet, talking to herself, says:
The clock struck nine when I did send the Nurse.
In half an hour she promised to return….
Now is the sun upon the highmost hill
Of this day’s journey, and from nine till twelve
Is three long hours, yet she is not come.5
So, the Nurse was due back at 9:30 but she’s been gone three hours and it is noon. That is the time Churchill specified for meeting General Sikorski. If he repeated those words of Juliet’s ascribing them to the Nurse, he had the quote right but the speaker wrong.
Endnotes
1 Darrell Holley, Churchill’s Literary Allusions: An Index to the Education of a Soldier, Statesman and Litterateur (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., 1987), 74.
2 Winston S. Churchill (hereinafter WSC), Lord Randolph Churchill, 2 vols. (London: Macmillan, 1906, II: 486.
3 William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet, Act 5, Sc. 3, lines 108-12; Churchill quoted line 111.
4 John Colville, Fringes of Power: Downing Street Diaries 1940-1955, 2 vols. (Sevenoaks, Kent: Sceptre Publishing, 1986-87), I: 194.
5 Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet, Act 2, Sc. 6, lines 1 and 9.
The authors
Richard Langworth is Senior Fellow for the Churchill Project. Valerie Lillington, born in England in 1932, lived in Trinidad and Canada before emigrating to Australia in 1962, where she taught high school English and drama for almost thirty years. That included a year’s teacher exchange to America. Twice a candidate for Parliament, she enjoyed an active life of travel, acting and directing. Currently she runs fortnightly sessions on Shakespeare in the local library, where Romeo and Juliet is the current topic; and writes and talks copiously on Charles Dickens.
Valerie writes: “I saw Churchill once in London, and remember gathering round the wireless, as we called it then, to hear him speak. I was almost seven when the war started, over twelve when it finished. As members of our family, became involved, it became urgent to hear anything we could. Two of my uncles were killed and another seriously wounded. There wasn’t anyone in my class at school who did not have similar stories to tell.”
Further reading
David Forman, “Churchill and Shakespeare without Melodrama: A Response to Jonathan Rose,” 2020.
Richard M. Langworth, “‘Mirrored in the Pool of England’: Churchill, Shakespeare and Henry V,” 2019. “Churchill’s Memorable Allusions to Richard II,” 2019. “Churchill and Shakespeare,” 2016.
Lewis E. Lehrman, “Churchill, Lincoln and Shakespeare,” 2016.
Justin D. Lyons, “Churchill, Shakespeare and Agincourt,” 2015.