Susan, an English professor in her mid-30s,
from
BOOKENDS.
(Warning: Using this monologue without permission is illegal, as is reproducing it on a website or in print in any way.)
SUSAN
Good morning. I am Professor Susan Harris, and the name of this course
(Eric, looking like he's overslept, enters. Susan pauses to watch
him.)
is Shakespeare. It should be called Shakespeare's plays, because we don't
study his poetry. I don't like all that sissy sonnet crap. Shakespeare, ladies
and gentlemen, is about winners and losers. And whatever happens is always
the loser's fault. Richard II, consummate loser. Loses his kingdom because
he's too slow and pathetic to do anything. It's his fault. Think about it.
Why do we care about Richard? It's ludicrous. In fact, I would propose that
Richard is actually the usurper and that Henry Bullingbrook was king all along.
Richard is therefore filler, and since there are already two plays named after
Henry IV, Richard II should be eliminated entirely. However, the department
is strongly against eliminating Richard II from the syllabus, so as a compromise
we will be reading only Henry's lines.
(beat)
Give me a loser, ladies and gentlemen, and I will give you a place to lay
the blame. Did Richard III cry? Of course not. But all those cowardly dukes
and princes who committed suicide and tried to frame him did. Richard III
met death the way he met life. With confidence. He went out a winner. Study
his speeches with care. Memorize them. You will be tested on them. You will
not be asked to remember the losers. You may discard them in literature as
you should in life.