The Tragedie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
_Ham_. That you must teach me: but let mee coniure[4] you by the rights of our fellows.h.i.+p, by the consonancy of our youth,[5] by the Obligation of our euer-preserued loue, and by what more deare, a better proposer could charge you withall; [Sidenote: can]
be euen and direct with me, whether you were sent for or no.
_Rosin_. What say you?[6]
_Ham_. Nay then I haue an eye of you[7]: if you loue me hold not off.[8]
[Sidenote: 72] _Guil_. My Lord, we were sent for.
_Ham_. I will tell you why; so shall my antic.i.p.ation preuent your discouery of your secricie to [Sidenote: discovery, and your secrecie to the King and Queene moult no feather,[10]]
the King and Queene[9] moult no feather, I haue [Sidenote: 116] of late, but wherefore I know not, lost all my mirth, forgone all custome of exercise; and indeed, [Sidenote: exercises;]
it goes so heauenly with my disposition; that this [Sidenote: heauily]
goodly frame the Earth, seemes to me a sterrill Promontory; this most excellent Canopy the Ayre, look you, this braue ore-hanging, this Maiesticall [Sidenote: orehanging firmament,]
Roofe, fretted with golden fire: why, it appeares no [Sidenote: appeareth]
[Footnote 1: --because they were by no means hearty thanks.]
[Footnote 2: He wants to know whether they are in his uncle's employment and favour; whether they pay court to himself for his uncle's ends.]
[Footnote 3: He has no answer ready.]
[Footnote 4: He will not cast them from him without trying a direct appeal to their old friends.h.i.+p for plain dealing. This must be remembered in relation to his treatment of them afterwards. He affords them every chance of acting truly--conjuring them to honesty--giving them a push towards repentance.]
[Footnote 5: Either, 'the harmony of our young days,' or, 'the sympathies of our present youth.']
[Footnote 6: --_to Guildenstern_.]
[Footnote 7: (_aside_) 'I will keep an eye upon you;'.]
[Footnote 8: 'do not hold back.']
[Footnote 9: The _Quarto_ seems here to have the right reading.]
[Footnote 10: 'your promise of secrecy remain intact;'.]
[Page 94]
other thing to mee, then a foule and pestilent congregation [Sidenote: nothing to me but a]
of vapours. What a piece of worke is [Sidenote: what peece]
a man! how n.o.ble in Reason? how infinite in faculty? in forme and mouing how expresse and [Sidenote: faculties,]
admirable? in Action, how like an Angel? in apprehension, how like a G.o.d? the beauty of the world, the Parragon of Animals; and yet to me, what is this Quintessence of Dust? Man delights not me;[1] no, nor Woman neither; though by your [Sidenote: not me, nor women]
smiling you seeme to say so.[2]
_Rosin._ My Lord, there was no such stuffe in my thoughts.
_Ham._ Why did you laugh, when I said, Man [Sidenote: yee laugh then, when]
delights not me?
_Rosin._ To thinke, my Lord, if you delight not in Man, what Lenton entertainment the Players shall receiue from you:[3] wee coated them[4] on the way, and hither are they comming to offer you Seruice.
_Ham._[5] He that playes the King shall be welcome; his Maiesty shall haue Tribute of mee: [Sidenote: on me,]
the aduenturous Knight shal vse his Foyle and Target: the Louer shall not sigh _gratis_, the humorous man[6] shall end his part in peace: [7] the Clowne shall make those laugh whose lungs are tickled a'th' sere:[8] and the Lady shall say her minde freely; or the blanke Verse shall halt for't[9]: [Sidenote: black verse]
what Players are they?
_Rosin._ Euen those you Were wont to take [Sidenote: take such delight]
delight in the Tragedians of the City.
_Ham._ How chances it they trauaile? their residence both in reputation and profit was better both wayes.
_Rosin._ I thinke their Inhibition comes by the meanes of the late Innouation?[10]
[Footnote 1: A genuine description, so far as it goes, of the state of Hamlet's mind. But he does not reveal the operating cause--his loss of faith in women, which has taken the whole poetic element out of heaven, earth, and humanity: he would have his uncle's spies attribute his condition to mere melancholy.]
[Footnote 2: --said angrily, I think.]
[Footnote 3: --a ready-witted subterfuge.]
[Footnote 4: came alongside of them; got up with them; apparently rather from Fr. _cote_ than _coter_; like _accost_. Compare 71. But I suspect it only means _noted_, _observed_, and is from _coter_.]
[Footnote 5: --_with humorous imitation, perhaps, of each of the characters_.]
[Footnote 6: --the man with a whim.]
[Footnote 7: This part of the speech--from [7] to [8], is not in the _Quarto_.]
[Footnote 8: Halliwell gives a quotation in which the touch-hole of a pistol is called the _sere_: the _sere_, then, of the lungs would mean the opening of the lungs--the part with which we laugh: those 'whose lungs are tickled a' th' sere,' are such as are ready to laugh on the least provocation: _tickled_--_irritable, ticklish_--ready to laugh, as another might be to cough. 'Tickled o' the sere' was a common phrase, signifying, thus, _propense_.
_1st Q._ The clowne shall make them laugh That are tickled in the lungs,]
[Footnote 9: Does this refer to the pause that expresses the unutterable? or to the ruin of the measure of the verse by an incompetent heroine?]
[Footnote 10: Does this mean, 'I think their prohibition comes through the late innovation,'--of the children's acting; or, 'I think they are prevented from staying at home by the late new measures,'--such, namely, as came of the puritan opposition to stage-plays? This had grown so strong, that, in 1600, the Privy Council issued an order restricting the number of theatres in London to two: by such an _innovation_ a number of players might well be driven to the country.]
[Page 96]
_Ham_. Doe they hold the same estimation they did when I was in the City? Are they so follow'd?
_Rosin_. No indeed, they are not. [Sidenote: are they not.]
[1]_Ham_. How comes it? doe they grow rusty?
_Rosin_. Nay, their indeauour keepes in the wonted pace; But there is Sir an ayrie of Children,[2]
little Yases,[3] that crye out[4] on the top of question;[5]
and are most tyrannically clap't for't: these are now the fas.h.i.+on, and so be-ratled the common Stages[6] (so they call them) that many wearing Rapiers,[7] are affraide of Goose-quils, and dare sca.r.s.e come thither.[8]
_Ham_. What are they Children? Who maintains 'em? How are they escoted?[9] Will they pursue the Quality[10] no longer then they can sing?[11] Will they not say afterwards if they should grow themselues to common Players (as it is like most[12] if their meanes are no better) their Writers[13] do them wrong, to make them exclaim against their owne Succession.[14]
_Rosin_. Faith there ha's bene much to do on both sides: and the Nation holds it no sinne, to tarre them[15] to Controuersie. There was for a while, no mony bid for argument, vnlesse the Poet and the Player went to Cuffes in the Question.[16]
_Ham_. Is't possible?