Play Info

Plot

Act 1

Antonio Bologna, who has recently returned to Malfi from France, describes to his friend Delio the workings of the French court. The melancholy malcontent Daniel de Bosola enters and is spurned by his former employer, the Cardinal. After Ferdinand, the Cardinal’s brother, banters with the courtiers, Antonio delivers a speech of enthusiastic admiration in praise of the Duchess of Malfi, a young and attractive widow. The Duchess’s two brothers, Ferdinand and the Cardinal, both deliver a stern admonition to the Duchess of Malfi not to marry again, and Ferdinand engages Daniel de Bosola as his spy to monitor the Duchess’s marital status. The Duchess, however, soon reveals she is in love with Antonio, her steward. In defiance of her brothers’ orders, the couple celebrates a chamber wedding, with the maid Cariola as their witness.

Act 2

Nine months later, Daniel de Bosola arrives at the court with some apricots to test whether or not the Duchess of Malfi is pregnant. The Duchess experiences a sharp reaction to the fruit and withdraws. Antonio orders all the courtiers to remain in their own quarters, owing to a disturbance and theft at the palace. Cariola tells him the Duchess has given birth to a son. In semi-darkness, Bosola and Antonio Bolognia exchange aggressive insults. Departing, Antonio accidentally drops a piece of paper on which he has cast his newborn son’s horoscope. Retrieving it, Bosola vows to inform the Duchess’s brothers that Antonio is the child’s father. Meanwhile, in Rome, the Cardinal entertains his mistress Julia, who is the courtier Castruccio’s wife. The Cardinal and Ferdinand receive Bosola’s letter revealing the birth of a son to the Duchess, and Ferdinand explodes with rage.

Act 3

Two years have passed. Ferdinand proposes the Duchess of Malfi marry Count Malateste, but the Duchess dismisses this suggestion. Ferdinand then secures from Daniel de Bosola a skeleton key for the door of the Duchess’s bedchamber. In the following scene he covertly enters the chamber and threatens the Duchess. Agitated, the Duchess bids Antonio Bologna to flee to Ancona. To explain his sudden departure she fabricates a story that he has cheated on his accounts. Taking Bosola into her confidence, she confesses she has had three children with Antonio. He suggests she pretend she is going on a pilgrimage to the shrine at Loreto, located near Ancona. When she and the children arrive at Loreto, a dumb show, or pantomime, dramatizes the installation of the Cardinal as a military commander, as well as the banishment of Antonio, the Duchess, and their children by the state of Ancona—all arranged by the Cardinal. The Duchess and Antonio bid each other a sad farewell, with Antonio headed now to Milan. Bosola arrests the Duchess, who is now to be held in prison at her brothers’ orders.

Act 4

Angered by the Duchess of Malfi’s fortitude in prison, Ferdinand arranges to meet with her in total darkness, for he has sworn never to see her again. He presents her with a dead man’s hand, implying it is the limb of Antonio Bologna. Then Daniel de Bosola brings up the lights and draws back a curtain, revealing a collection of wax figures that simulate Antonio and the children in death. Ferdinand continues with his sadistic campaign to drive the Duchess to madness and despair. From the local hospital he assembles a group of madmen, who jabber at the Duchess but fail to drive her mad. Bosola now enters, disguised as an old tomb-maker. Accompanied by executioners, he orders the deaths of the Duchess, Cariola, and the Duchess’s children by strangling. Ferdinand enters to survey the slaughter. His bizarre reactions hint he is sliding into insanity. Meanwhile, Bosola experiences a wave of pity and remorse.

Act 5

The Cardinal uses his influence to strip Antonio Bologna of some of his land, and Antonio makes plans to confront the corrupt prelate, or church official. Meanwhile, Ferdinand has begun to suffer from lycanthropy, a disease that has him believing he is a wolf. The Cardinal pretends to Daniel de Bosola not to know about the Duchess of Malfi’s death. He commissions Bosola to track down Antonio in Milan and murder him. Julia and Bosola flirt with each other, but Julia, of whom the Cardinal has wearied, is soon disposed of when the Cardinal orders her to kiss a poisoned Bible. Near the Duchess’s grave, Antonio and Delio hear the ominous forebodings of an echo from a ghostly voice. In a fast-moving scene, full of confusion, Bosola accidentally stabs Antonio, whom he mistakes for the Cardinal. In the play’s final scene Bosola delivers death blows to the Cardinal and Ferdinand and is himself wounded mortally. In his dying speech he exclaims that mankind exists in a “deep pit of darkness.”

CharacteRS

Character

Description

Duchess of Malfi

A young widow, the Duchess of Malfi is articulate, gracious, brave, dignified, and endowed with a sense of humor. When her brothers learn she has disobeyed their command not to remarry, she is forced to endure severe punishments.

Daniel de Bosola

A criminal who has served a prison sentence as a galley slave, Daniel de Bosola is melancholy, cynical, and reputed to be malcontent. Ferdinand recruits him to spy on the Duchess of Malfi, to keep track of her marital status. 

Ferdinand

The Duchess of Malfi’s twin brother, cruel and tyrannical Ferdinand invests much of his energy trying to drive his sister mad. Finally, he himself is overtaken by insanity. 

Cardinal

The cynical and calculating older brother of the Duchess and Ferdinand, the Cardinal keeps a mistress, Castruccio’s wife Julia. In the past, he engaged Daniel de Bosola to commit murder. 

Antonio Bologna

Loyal and upstanding, Antonio Bologna is the Duchess’s palace steward, with whom she falls in love. After he and the Duchess marry in a chamber ceremony, Antonio suffers the hostility of Bosola, Ferdinand, and the Cardinal. 

Cariola

Cariola is the Duchess’s maid, who remains loyal to her mistress and faithfully guards the secret of the Duchess’s marriage. She is strangled under Bosola’s supervision.

Castruccio

Castruccio is one of the important courtiers at Malfi. As the cuckolded husband of Julia, Castruccio is a target of Bosola’s mockery, and his pretensions to refinement, or acting as though he is of a higher station, as a courtier are made to look ridiculous.

Delio

Delio is one of the most important courtiers at Malfi. A good-hearted gentleman, he remains loyal to Antonio and the Duchess.

Doctor

The Doctor relates and comments on Ferdinand’s case of lycanthropy. In Act 5, Scene 2 the Doctor describes Ferdinand’s behavior as that of a werewolf.

Grisolan

Grisolan is one of the minor courtiers at Malfi.

Julia

Castruccio’s lustful and deceitful wife, Julia is the Cardinal’s mistress. The Cardinal murders her by having her kiss a poisoned Bible.

Madmen

A chorus of madmen, led by a soloist, sing a song that introduces the dialogue of individual lunatics in Act 4, Scene 1. Ferdinand presses the group into service to drive his sister into insanity.

Malateste

Malateste is a count whom Ferdinand chooses to become the Duchess’s new husband. The Duchess does not take the suggestion seriously, and other courtiers apparently regard Malateste as a coward in warfare.

Old Lady

The Old Lady serves as a midwife for the Duchess.

Pescara

Pescara, a marquis, or nobleman, is one of the minor courtiers at Malfi.

Roderigo

Roderigo is one of the minor courtiers at Malfi.

Silvio

Silvio is one of the minor courtiers at Malfi.

Please Note: not all characters will necessarily appear in this production. 

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