The Comedy of "Hamlet"
The Comedy of "Hamlet"
The Comedy of "Hamlet"
.
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The SundayTimesdeclaredHamletthe
Justbeforetheend of themillenium,
1000
masterwork
of
the
years.It maynotbe generally
recognized
past
outstanding
characteristic
oftheworld'smostpopulartragedy
thata defining
is, infact,itscomic
- although
ofthese
criticshavelongpointedto thesignificance
elements
discerning
from
of
the
rest"
comicelements.What"distinguishes
[Hamlet]
plays
Shakespeare's
criticDr Johnson,
its "variety....
The scenes
is, accordingto theeighteenth-century
and solemnity",
he argues,and
are interchangeably
diversifiedwithmerriment
i.e. laughter
continues
that"thepretended
madnessof Hamletcauses muchmirth",
line on this
(1968: 1010-11). Some moderncriticsand editorstake a stillfirmer
issue. In her introduction
to the New PenguineditionAnne Bartonclaims that
"Hamletcontainsmanymorecomic charactersand episodes thanOthello,Lear,
ofthetragedy
but
[and]Macbeth".She notonlybriefly
surveysthecomiccharacters
also comments
on theuniqueness
ofthecentral
character:
Hamlet... seemsto be theonlyone of Shakespeare's
...
tragicprotagonists
- a sense of humour.Like thewitty
who possesses- and demonstrates
charactersof the comedies,he likes to play games withlanguage,to
verbalstyles,and he has a predilection
forpuns,
parodyothercharacters'
and sophisticatedbadinagewhichlinkshim
bawdydouble entendres,
like... Touchstone
andFeste.(1980: 23)
[even]withfigures
One may add thatHamlet'swit and humour,which distinguishhim from
Claudiusand Gertrude,
contribute
to the antagonismbetweenhim and the royal
couple.In thispaperI shouldliketo pursuethiselementsystematically,
exploring
some comicaspectsof theprotagonist,
examiningthe variouscomic figures,and
also commenting
on thecomplexrelationship
betweentheplay'scomicand serious
theuniquemixture
of "merriment
and solemnity".
elements,
Comedyis, according
to Susan Snyder,"thegroundfromwhich,or againstwhich,tragedydevelops....
... as polaropposites,... [or]as twosidesof thesame
Comedyandtragedyfunction
coin"(1979: 5).
ManfredDraudt
12
Night's
of Verona,A Midsummer
See, forexample,The Tamingof theShrew,The Two Gentlemen
Dreamand TheMerryWivesof Windsor.
use compareMiola 2000: 87-97.
ofthemotifanda briefsurveyofShakespeare's
Forthetradition
3
References
areto Hamlet.Ed. PhilipEdwards.
like Hamlet's,is thetragedyof obedienceto a father"
Edwardsarguesthat"Ophelia'stragedy,
(1985:
46).
"old givesa clue to Shakespeare'sconceptionof thecharacter",
accordingto Jenkins1982 (Note on
Shakespeare's
2.1). In his "Polonius,derTypusdes Senilen"B. Scherer(1930) confirms
stage-direction
froma psychological
pointofview.
type-casting
betweenthetwotypesofsenexsee Hosley1966: 137-38.
andthedistinction
Fortheclassicaltradition
A<mto&lS2Al(2002)
TheComedyofHamlet
73_
refersto
Hamletagainharpson his age when,to theactors,he contemptuously
"That greatbaby ... not yet out of his swaddlingclouts" (2.2.351).7 Polonius's
to Reynaldoand gets
senilityalso becomespalpablewhenhe is givingdirections
lostinmid-sentence:
Andthensirdoesa this- a does- whatwas I aboutto say?
WheredidI leave?
By themassI was aboutto saysomething.
(2.1.49-50)8
In thesamescenehe showsanothertraitassociatedwithold age, pedantry,
by
splittinghairs (or words) when proposingto accuse Laertesof "drabbing",i.e.
i.e. sexual excess(2.1.26-30).Poloniusalways
butnotof "incontinency",
whoring,
to appearlearnedand witty,yethis pridein his own skill,cunning,and
attempts
wisdommakeshim appearall the moreridiculous.In additionto his "laboured
are hallmarks
quibbling"(Hibbard1987: 34), his tediousnessand long-windedness
to his son Laertesopens with
of his character.His twenty-three-line-instruction
"And thesefewpreceptsin thymemory"(1.3.58), and he again promisesto "be
brief, "sincebrevityis the soul of wit/And tediousnessthe limbsand outward
flourishes"
The verycause of
(2.2.90-92),whenhe believesthathe "ha[s] found/
and circular
Hamlet'slunacy"(2.2.48-49). Yet his preliminary
"expostulation"
to
define
true
What
is't
but
to
be
else
madness,/
("for
reasoning9
nothing butmad?",
him:"More
triesto interrupt
2.2.92-94)boretheQueenso muchthatshe impatiently
matterwithless art"(95). She fails,however,muchlike Lady Capulet,who is
equallyunableto stoptheofficious
loquacityoftheNurse.10
Romeoand Julietis echoedagain whenin his exaggerated
show of paternal
affection
and anxietyforhis daughter's
honourtheblockingfatherbehavesexactly
like old Capulet,11
cruellyridiculinghis daughterby pickingup a wordfromher
itindifferent
senses:
speechandrepeating
Do youbelievehis[Hamlet's]tenders
as youcall them?
a baby
MarryI'llteachyou.Thinkyourself
Thatyouhavetanethesetenders
fortruepay,
Whichareno sterling.
Tenderyourself
moredearly,
Rosencrantz
backsHamlet'smockery
withtheproverbial
saying"anold manis twicea child"(2.2.352).
CompareJaquesinAs YouLikeIt,whodescribesthelastsceneoflifeas "secondchildishness"
(2.7.165).
His servantassistswiththe cue, "At 'closes at the consequence1",
whichis eagerlypicked up by
Polonius.Whenexpounding
thecause of Hamlet'smadness,Poloniusagainappearsto lose thethreadof
hisargument
andnonsensically
andtheremainder
thus"(2.2.104).
repeatshimself:"Thusitremains,
Polonius'srhetorical
Accordingto Dr Johnson,
stylewas meant"toridiculethepracticeof thosetimes"
(in Hibbard1987,Noteon 2.2.86-104).
Afterher"Enoughof this,I praytheeholdthypeace",theNursecarrieson foranothereightlinesso
thatevenJulietinterferes:
"Andstintthoutoo,I praythee,Nurse".Yet she,too,failsto stopher(1.2.5059).
Whatis this?/
'Proud',and 'I thankyou',and
Compare3.5.149-152:"Howhow,howhow,chopt-logic?
'I thankyou not',/And yet'notproud',mistressminionyou?/Thankme thankings,
norproudme no
prouds".
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TheComedyofHamlet
75_
ManfredDraudt
76
15
For example in the National Theatre productionof 1976 (David 1978: 78).
See 2.2.30-32: "[we] here give up ourselves in the full bent/To lay our service freelyat your feet/To
be commanded".
77_
Osric is a younger counterpartto Polonius,19a superficial busybody and gobetween,possibly a nouveau riche thanksto the King's favour: "he hath much land
and fertile", observes Hamlet (5.2.85). Not only his affected manners and
fashionablejargon but also the stage-directionof the First Quarto (1603), "Enter a
Bragart Gentleman"(I2[r]), leave no doubt that he originatedfromanothercomic
type,the braggartsoldier: the miles gloriosus of Latin comedy and the capitano of
19
"youngOsricke", according to the Folio stage-directionand the Second Quarto (compare 5.2.171).
XHMins 24J.(2J00Z)
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_80
the famous soliloquy (3.1.56) but already at the end of the second scene, "O ... that
the Everlastinghad not fixed/His canon 'gainstself-slaughter"(1.2.129-32), Hamlet
has pondered on suicide and death; now, in the graveyard (act 5, scene 1), two
Clowns are commentingon the issue of suicide - Ophelia's, but in a way thatmakes
complete nonsense of conventional logic and legal argument:"[Has] she drowned
herselfin her own defence? ... Argal, he thatis not guiltyof his own death shortens
not his own life" (5.1.5-17). The gravediggers,who are criticalof theirbetters,25
are
"the
more
that
should
have
aware
of
social
folk
acutely
potential
injustice:
pity
great
countenance in this world to drown or hang themselves more than their evenChristians"(22). With theirquibbles and riddles (Adam was the firstgentlemanto
bear arms),26theyprove to be genuine English rusticswho combine shrewdwit and
bluntness with a careless ignorance of the conventions of language, logic and
propriety.Hamlet wonders whether"this fellow [has] no feeling of his business"
(55), because he sings while throwingup skulls and digging a grave. Yet it is the
seemingly dull gravedigger- at firstdisparaginglycompared to an "ass" (67) by
Hamlet- who eventuallyoutwitsthe sophisticatedintellectual:"How absolute the
knave is!", the Prince remarks to Horatio, "We must speak by the card, or
equivocationwill undo us" (115-16).
The Clown bringsabout a radical change of perspectivein the play, fromthe
metaphysical concerns associated with the protagonist to the macabre physical
realityof digginga grave, knockingabout skulls and the question of a corpse rotting
in the earth:
... if a be not rottenbefore a die ... a tannerwill last you nine year ...
[because] his hide is so tannedwithhis trade,thata will keep out water a
greatwhile. (140-45)
This change of perspectivealso entails a profoundchange in Hamlet himself.
Throughhis new awareness of the great levelling power of death, he finallycomes
to termswithall the fears,qualms and obsessions thathave troubledhim forso long.
Whereas in the great soliloquy he felt almost paralysed by thoughtsof "the law's
delay/[and] The insolence of office"(3.1.72-73), now, facingthe realityof death,he
laughs at the absurditiesof lawyers: "Where be his quiddities now, his quillets, his
cases, his tenures,and his tricks?Why does he sufferthe rude knave to knock him
about the sconce with a dirtyshovel, and will not tell him of his action of battery?"
(5.1.84-87). In the grotesque panorama of the dead, including politicians,
fashionable courtiersand ladies, as well as the "mad" (149) jester Yorick who is
equated with great conquerors such as Alexander and Caesar, Hamlet becomes
aware of a "comic relativism" (Snyder 1979: 127). He is struck by the "fine
revolution" (75) which turns a beautiful lady into a grinningskull and changes
emperors"who keptthe world in awe" intothe dust thatcan be used to "stop a beerbarrel"or patcha hole in thewall (179-83).
25
If the mad young Hamlet does not recover his wits in England, "'tis no great matter[, because] there
the men are as mad as he [is]" (5.1.124-31).
Compare also the gallows-maker,who builds the strongestframe(5.1.35-37).
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TheComedyofHamlet
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295-313.
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Campbell, Oscar James and Edward G. Quinn, eds. 1966: A Shakespeare
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University
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(Quarterly
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Athanasios
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Draper,JohnW. 1935: "LordChamberlain
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