"Hamlet and His
Problems"
by: T.
S. Eliot
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FEW critics have even
admitted that Hamlet the play is the primary problem, and
Hamlet the character only secondary. And Hamlet the character has had
an especial temptation for that most dangerous type of critic: the
critic with a mind which is naturally of the creative order, but which
through some weakness in creative power exercises itself in criticism
instead. These minds often find in Hamlet a vicarious existence for
their own artistic realization. Such a mind had Goethe, who made of
Hamlet a Werther; and such had Coleridge, who made of Hamlet a
Coleridge; and probably neither of these men in writing about Hamlet
remembered that his first business was to study a work of art. The
kind of criticism that Goethe and Coleridge produced, in writing of
Hamlet, is the most misleading kind possible. For they both possessed
unquestionable critical insight, and both make their critical
aberrations the more plausible by the substitution—of their own Hamlet
for Shakespeare's—which their creative gift effects. We should be
thankful that Walter Pater did not fix his attention on this play. |
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Two recent writers, Mr. J. M. Robertson and
Professor Stoll of the University of Minnesota, have issued small
books which can be praised for moving in the other direction. Mr.
Stoll performs a service in recalling to our attention the labours of
the critics of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, observing
that
they knew less about psychology than more recent Hamlet critics,
but they were nearer in spirit to Shakespeare's art; and as they
insisted on the importance of the effect of the whole rather than on
the importance of the leading character, they were nearer, in their
old-fashioned way, to the secret of dramatic art in general.
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Qua work of art, the work of art cannot be
interpreted; there is nothing to interpret; we can only criticize it
according to standards, in comparison to other works of art; and for
"interpretation" the chief task is the presentation of relevant
historical facts which the reader is not assumed to know. Mr.
Robertson points out, very pertinently, how critics have failed in
their "interpretation" of Hamlet by ignoring what ought to be
very obvious: that Hamlet is a stratification, that it
represents the efforts of a series of men, each making what he could
out of the work of his predecessors. The Hamlet of Shakespeare
will appear to us very differently if, instead of treating the whole
action of the play as due to Shakespeare's design, we perceive his
Hamlet to be superposed upon much cruder material which persists
even in the final form. |
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We know that there was an older play by Thomas Kyd, that extraordinary dramatic (if not poetic) genius who was in all
probability the author of two plays so dissimilar as the Spanish
Tragedy and Arden of Feversham; and what this play was like
we can guess from three clues: from the Spanish Tragedy itself,
from the tale of Belleforest upon which Kyd's Hamlet must have
been based, and from a version acted in Germany in Shakespeare's
lifetime which bears strong evidence of having been adapted from the
earlier, not from the later, play. From these three sources it is
clear that in the earlier play the motive was a revenge-motive simply;
that the action or delay is caused, as in the Spanish Tragedy,
solely by the difficulty of assassinating a monarch surrounded by
guards; and that the "madness" of Hamlet was feigned in order to
escape suspicion, and successfully. In the final play of Shakespeare,
on the other hand, there is a motive which is more important than that
of revenge, and which explicitly "blunts" the latter; the delay in
revenge is unexplained on grounds of necessity or expediency; and the
effect of the "madness" is not to lull but to arouse the king's
suspicion. The alteration is not complete enough, however, to be
convincing. Furthermore, there are verbal parallels so close to the
Spanish Tragedy as to leave no doubt that in places Shakespeare
was merely revising the text of Kyd. And finally there are
unexplained scenes—the Polonius-Laertes and the Polonius-Reynaldo
scenes—for which there is little excuse; these scenes are not in the
verse style of Kyd, and not beyond doubt in the style of Shakespeare.
These Mr. Robertson believes to be scenes in the original play of Kyd
reworked by a third hand, perhaps Chapman, before Shakespeare touched
the play. And he concludes, with very strong show of reason, that the
original play of Kyd was, like certain other revenge plays, in two
parts of five acts each. The upshot of Mr. Robertson's examination is,
we believe, irrefragable: that Shakespeare's Hamlet, so far as
it is Shakespeare's, is a play dealing with the effect of a mother's
guilt upon her son, and that Shakespeare was unable to impose this
motive successfully upon the "intractable" material of the old play. |
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Of the intractability there can be no doubt. So
far from being Shakespeare's masterpiece, the play is most certainly
an artistic failure. In several ways the play is puzzling, and
disquieting as is none of the others. Of all the plays it is the
longest and is possibly the one on which Shakespeare spent most pains;
and yet he has left in it superfluous and inconsistent scenes which
even hasty revision should have noticed. The versification is
variable. Lines like
Look, the morn, in russet mantle clad,
Walks o'er the dew of yon high eastern hill,
are of the Shakespeare of Romeo and Juliet. The lines in Act v.
sc. ii.,
Sir, in my heart there was a kind of fighting
That would not let me sleep...
Up from my cabin,
My sea-gown scarf'd about me, in the dark
Grop'd I to find out them: had my desire;
Finger'd their packet;
are of his quite mature. Both workmanship and thought are in an
unstable condition. We are surely justified in attributing the play,
with that other profoundly interesting play of "intractable" material
and astonishing versification, Measure for Measure, to a period
of crisis, after which follow the tragic successes which culminate in
Coriolanus. Coriolanus may be not as "interesting" as
Hamlet, but it is, with Antony and Cleopatra, Shakespeare's
most assured artistic success. And probably more people have thought
Hamlet a work of art because they found it interesting, than
have found it interesting because it is a work of art. It is the "Mona
Lisa" of literature.
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The grounds of Hamlet's failure are not
immediately obvious. Mr. Robertson is undoubtedly correct in
concluding that the essential emotion of the play is the feeling of a
son towards a guilty mother:
[Hamlet's] tone is that of one who has suffered tortures on the
score of his mother's degradation.... The guilt of a mother is an
almost intolerable motive for drama, but it had to be maintained and
emphasized to supply a psychological solution, or rather a hint of
one.
This, however, is by no means the whole story. It is not merely the
"guilt of a mother" that cannot be handled as Shakespeare handled the
suspicion of Othello, the infatuation of Antony, or the pride of
Coriolanus. The subject might conceivably have expanded into a tragedy
like these, intelligible, self-complete, in the sunlight. Hamlet,
like the sonnets, is full of some stuff that the writer could not drag
to light, contemplate, or manipulate into art. And when we search for
this feeling, we find it, as in the sonnets, very difficult to
localize. You cannot point to it in the speeches; indeed, if you
examine the two famous soliloquies you see the versification of
Shakespeare, but a content which might be claimed by another, perhaps
by the author of the Revenge of Bussy d' Ambois, Act v. sc. i.
We find Shakespeare's Hamlet not in the action, not in any
quotations that we might select, so much as in an unmistakable tone
which is unmistakably not in the earlier play.
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The only way of expressing emotion in the form of
art is by finding an "objective correlative"; in other words, a set of
objects, a situation, a chain of events which shall be the formula of
that particular emotion; such that when the external facts,
which must terminate in sensory experience, are given, the emotion is
immediately evoked. If you examine any of Shakespeare's more
successful tragedies, you will find this exact equivalence; you will
find that the state of mind of Lady Macbeth walking in her sleep has
been communicated to you by a skilful accumulation of imagined sensory
impressions; the words of Macbeth on hearing of his wife's death
strike us as if, given the sequence of events, these words were
automatically released by the last event in the series. The artistic
"inevitability" lies in this complete adequacy of the external to the
emotion; and this is precisely what is deficient in Hamlet.
Hamlet (the man) is dominated by an emotion which is inexpressible,
because it is in excess of the facts as they appear. And the
supposed identity of Hamlet with his author is genuine to this point:
that Hamlet's bafflement at the absence of objective equivalent to his
feelings is a prolongation of the bafflement of his creator in the
face of his artistic problem. Hamlet is up against the difficulty that
his disgust is occasioned by his mother, but that his mother is not an
adequate equivalent for it; his disgust envelops and exceeds her. It
is thus a feeling which he cannot understand; he cannot objectify it,
and it therefore remains to poison life and obstruct action. None of
the possible actions can satisfy it; and nothing that Shakespeare can
do with the plot can express Hamlet for him. And it must be noticed
that the very nature of the données of the problem precludes
objective equivalence. To have heightened the criminality of Gertrude
would have been to provide the formula for a totally different emotion
in Hamlet; it is just because her character is so negative and
insignificant that she arouses in Hamlet the feeling which she is
incapable of representing. |
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The "madness" of Hamlet lay to Shakespeare's
hand; in the earlier play a simple ruse, and to the end, we may
presume, understood as a ruse by the audience. For Shakespeare it is
less than madness and more than feigned. The levity of Hamlet, his
repetition of phrase, his puns, are not part of a deliberate plan of
dissimulation, but a form of emotional relief. In the character Hamlet
it is the buffoonery of an emotion which can find no outlet in action;
in the dramatist it is the buffoonery of an emotion which he cannot
express in art. The intense feeling, ecstatic or terrible, without an
object or exceeding its object, is something which every person of
sensibility has known; it is doubtless a study to pathologists. It
often occurs in adolescence: the ordinary person puts these feelings
to sleep, or trims down his feeling to fit the business world; the
artist keeps it alive by his ability to intensify the world to his
emotions. The Hamlet of Laforgue is an adolescent; the Hamlet of
Shakespeare is not, he has not that explanation and excuse. We must
simply admit that here Shakespeare tackled a problem which proved too
much for him. Why he attempted it at all is an insoluble puzzle; under
compulsion of what experience he attempted to express the
inexpressibly horrible, we cannot ever know. We need a great many
facts in his biography; and we should like to know whether, and when,
and after or at the same time as what personal experience, he read
Montaigne, II. xii., Apologie de Raimond Sebond. We should
have, finally, to know something which is by hypothesis unknowable,
for we assume it to be an experience which, in the manner indicated,
exceeded the facts. We should have to understand things which
Shakespeare did not understand himself. |
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