Dr. Michael Delahoyde
Washington State University
ACT III
SCENE i
Claudius and Gertrude have a conflab with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern.
Claudius clearly senses something ominous in Hamlet's "turbulent and
dangerous lunacy" (III.i.4), but R & G report that he's being too crafty
and aloof for them to detect the cause. Claudius seems glad about Hamlet's
enthusiasm for the players -- at least the boy has a hobby to keep him
occupied. Claudius dismisses Frick and Frack, and Gertrude too, so that
he and Polonius can hide and spy on Hamlet's interaction with Ophelia.
Polonius tells her exactly where to stroll and to pretend to read a book.
Claudius, in an aside, acknowledges that he is tormented by an unspecified
guilt.
Hamlet's "To be or not to be" soliloquy (III.i.55ff) -- expressing an outlook
directly influenced by Cardanus Comforte (Anderson 64) -- debates the
desirability of oblivion in light of human misery. "It seems to be a meditation
on suicide, and Hamlet feels that everyone would kill himself and escape this
miserable world, if only he were sure that some unknown and more frightful horror
did not await him in the afterworld" (Asimov 118). The soliloquy "has become the
hallmark of interiority and consciousness, the speech that -- quoted, parodied,
parsed, and pondered -- has come to define modernity and modern self-consciousness,
the birth, in effect, of the modern subject, of modern subjectivity itself"
(Garber 475). Traditionally, Hamlet has been accused of melancholic
procrastination (as in the Olivier film's unwelcome introductory assertion
that the story is about "a man who could not make up his mind"), but Hamlet
is also morally scrupulous. This soliloquy can be read as a regression to the
first one, but there is no easy Christian dismissal of suicide this time; here
it's a matter of the imprisonment of hyperconsciousness -- something one is
likely not to escape even after "we have shuffled off this mortal coil"
(III.i.66). So where can one find peace if not in the oblivion of "The
undiscover'd country" (III.i.78)? That's legitimately worrisome. "Thus
conscience does make cowards of us all" (III.i.82).
Ophelia insists that Hamlet take back his love letters to her, "for to the
noble mind / Rich gifts wax poor when givers prove unkind" (III.i.99-100).
Hamlet no doubt catches the Polonian tone and influence in that adage, or
platitude, and realizes she's now thoroughly a puppet for daddy. He rants at
her, commanding, "Get thee to a nunn'ry, why wouldst thou be a breeder of
sinners?" (III.i.120) and making her believe "O, what a noble mind is here
o'erthrown!" (III.i.150).
In light of this extreme behavior, upon which Claudius and Polonius have
eavesdropped, Polonius still insists Hamlet's madness is "Sprung from neglected
love" (III.i.178), but Claudius is obviously worried there's more and decides
that Hamlet must be sent to England. "England had been paying tribute to Danish
raiders ever since 991.... Such tribute was called the 'Danegeld'" (Asimov 120).
Polonius proposes another spying session: he'll eavesdrop on a private
conversation arranged between Hamlet and Gertrude. Claudius approves of this
idea, since "Madness in great ones must not unwatch'd go" (III.i.188).
Here's a reading of the play that strikes a familiar chord to those of us who
have been jerked around by scumbags with power.
SCENE ii
In "what is called 'metatheater,' or 'metadrama,' the discussion of theater and
playing within a play" (Garber 471), Hamlet (and presumably Shakespeare) discusses
effective acting vs. affectation: bombast is not eloquence. "Nor do not saw the air
too much with your hand" (III.ii.4-5), he advises singers on American Idol
(just the new Star Search) and Miss America contestants. "Suit the action to
the word, the word to the action" (III.ii.17-18). He advises against clowns upstaging
too. "He wants King Claudius tobe hit hard and therefore the play must be as natural
as possible. A ridiculous or postured artificiality would ruin the impact" (Asimov
121). The warning about letting clowns ad lib (III.ii.39f) was probably referring to
Tarleton, the clown of the Queen's Men, who died in 1588 (Ogburn and Ogburn 690).
Asked about the female lead vowing eternal love to her husband, Gertrude
says, "The lady doth protest too much, methinks" (III.ii.230). So after
carefully setting up "The Mouse-trap," Hamlet springs the trap himself,
essentially. "There is nothing to show that [Shakespeare] ever followed
any other practice than that of leaving art free to produce its own effect,
of letting a play speak for itself. Even his Choruses ... are not his
comment" (Goddard, I 364). Hamlet, however, does not let the play do its
work. Nevertheless, he seems to get the reaction he'd hoped for when Claudius
stops the play at the point of the poisoning and calls, "Give me some light"
(III.ii.269).
Hamlet is elated. He toys with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, and his
reference to the "musty" proverb, "While the grass grows" [the horse starves]
(III.ii.343-344), appears also in a 1576 letter from de Vere to Burghley: "I
am to content myself according to the English proverb that it is my hap to
starve while the grass doth grow" (qtd. in Ward 111; Clark 657; Ogburn and
Ogburn 89, 659). Hamlet then turns to Polonius, making him agree to perceive shapes
in the clouds of a camel, a weasel, and a whale. "The first two acts were the
camel--they treated of Hamlet's burden. The third was the weasel--it was dedicated
to hot blood. The last two are the whale--they tell how Hamlet was swallowed by
the 'monster' of the unconscious" (Goddard, I 374). But Burghley had been
called a "dromedary" and "leviathan" by Henry Howard -- Ogburn and Ogburn (666)
seem to have found this in Winstanley's
Hamlet and the Scottish Succession: "Yet more curious parallels may
be quoted. In a strange letter to Essex, Lord Henry Howard exults that 'the
dromedary that would have won the favour of the Queen of Sabez is almost
enraged' (meaning Burleigh by the dromedary), and asks the earl whether
'he cannot drag out the old leviathan and his cub' (meaning the two Cecils)."
Oxford adds the weasel, and from a nature website we hear that "Weasels are
active either day or night but prefer the cloak of darkness to move about.
When they run, they have a hunch-back appearance, like an inch-worm on the
move." In The Romance of the Peerage; or, Curiosities of Family History
by George Lillie Craik, a letter written by Lord Henry Howard to the Earl of
Mar (estimated date, 1602) is quoted. It's about Lady Kildare (formerly Lady
Frances Howard), who had married Henry Brooke, Lord Cobham in 1600. She'd
imparted to Robert Cecil certain things in confidence and he'd spilled the
beans. She was furious. Henry Howard wrote: "she threatened to break the
neck of that weasel (which was her own term) that had disgraced her" (181-183).
Was it "her own term," or did she pick it up from Hamlet, having
recognized who was meant? As for the natural history quotation, we recall
that Robert Cecil also had a "hunch-back appearance." So Robert Cecil fits
the bill for the dromedary reference also, given his physical impairment:
the dromedary has one hump.
Hamlet agrees to meet with his mother. "Now could I drink hot blood, / And do
such bitter business as the day / Would quake to look on" (III.ii.390-392).
But we've heard this note of resolve before. How does one reconcile the notion
of Hamlet as poet with Hamlet as revenge-frenzied brute (as the sources or
original genre for this play would dictate)? "I will speak daggers to her, but
use none" (III.ii.396). For his meeting with Queen Elizabeth after his banishment
from court, "Oxford must have approached the Queen with a resolve similar to the
Dane's (Ogburn and Ogburn 665).
SCENE iii
The King checks in with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, who refer to "those
many many bodies safe / That live and feed upon your Majesty"
(III.iii.9-10) -- in other words, parasites. He hears briefly from
Polonius too, who will go eavesdrop on Hamlet's conversation with his
Gertrude by hiding behind an arras (a tapestry). Claudius then privately
ruminates about his rank "offense" for which he cannot go through with a
penance (which would involve not just contrition and confession but also
restitution). Hamlet nearby considers killing him, but does not want to
send him to death in a state of grace:
SCENE iv
Repulsion and Hamlet's "sexual nausea" dictate his harangue until the
Ghost appears to him "to whet thy almost blunted purpose" (III.iv.111).
Hamlet seems to win his mother over to his perspective, and he promises
to turn the tables on Rosencrantz and Guildenstern as he begins to "lug
the guts [Polonius] into the neighbor room" (III.iv.212). "This
counsellor / Is now most still, most secret, and most grave, / Who was in
life a foolish prating knave" (III.iv.213-215).
Hamlet is an extremist, for whom women seem to represent either cold
chastity or depravity; men are celestial or bestial. He sees no middle,
more human ground. After persuading his mother to avoid Claudius' bed, he
seems to have accomplished his real task. He now accepts England and
seems to ignore the killing of the King, now that mom has renounced
sexuality. Perhaps he was really fishing for the conscience of a queen.
In any case, it seems he has now separated the negative female archetype
from the personal mother figure, and he gets along well with her,
especially in the last scene of Act V as depicted in the Mel Gibson film
version.
Biographical Notes
Hamlet commands, organizes, and stages the play not as an actor but more
as a producer, director, and author. He seems to be well-known as a
patron. The portrait matches de Vere.
Hamlet's phrase concerning his father's death -- "full of bread" (III.iii.80)
-- comes from the Geneva Bible -- "Pride, fulness of bread, and abundance of
idleness" (Ezekiel 16:49) -- which is marked in de Vere's copy owned today
by the Folger Library (Farina 197; Anderson 386).
At Kronberg Castle in Elsinore, the great hall was divided in two by a large
tapestry with portraits of the kings of Denmark. Although Hamlet shows his
mother pictures in lockets, originally, he could have "pointed to the figures
on the arras" (Ogburn and Ogburn 666). (Remains of the arras may be in a
Copenhagen museum.)
See Peter Usher, "Shakespeare's Support for the New Astronomy." The
Oxfordian 5 (2002): 132-146. Usher includes the bit in the last scene
of Act III here where Hamlet rails at his mother and shows her images of
his late father and the uncle she has now married. He describes the face
of the former as "the front of Jove himself, / An eye like Mars, to
threaten and command" (III.iv.56-57). This has traditionally been taken
just as scattergun olympian praise. But the "eye like Mars" phrase is
odd, because of some syntactical ambiguity and Mars (god nor planet) not
being known for an "eye," only the color red maybe in the case of the
planet. The determination is that the reference here is to the red eye of
Jove (Jupiter) in the previous phrase -- Hamlet is describing his
father's face as that of Jupiter, with an eye that is red like Mars, a
reference to the planet Jupiter's Great Red Spot. But at the turn of the
17th century it was not known that Jupiter had this spot since it can be
discerned only with a telescope, and historically the claim is that the
Great Red Spot was first observed in 1664-65 by Robert Hooke and Jean
Cassini. But de Vere was on friendly terms with the Digges family, and
may have been privileged to play with Leonard Digges' "perspective
trunk." Leonard Digges died in 1574; he and his son were working with
"proportional glasses" and the "perspective trunk" was a combination of
the mirror-lens and the plano-convex lens -- proto-telescopic technology.
There apparently is a lot more in Hamlet suggesting advanced optics and
astronomical observations.
When still relatively young, de Vere killed a man in an altercation.
Burghley stamped the incident "self-defense" ("se defendendo" -- the term
punned on in Act V), and it is speculated that at the root of the
altercation was de Vere's discovery that this man was a spy planted in
his home by Burghley. The arras scene may be a transmutation of the
incident in some respects.
Those who mistake their roles for their total real identity can
understand neither themselves nor others. Since they cannot apprehend either
essential humanity or existential uniqueness, they can comprehend only
role-determined behavior. When such inauthentic men encounter someone who
has not betrayed the inner self to serve a fixed persona, they defend themselves
from the painful self-questioning he precipitates by projecting their own
self-betrayal on him. (Driscoll 63)
Hamlet's multidimensionality looks insane to "a court where ossified roles and
fixed expectations make behavior mechanical" (Driscoll 62).
Hamlet greets his friend Horatio, praising him: "Give me that man / That
is not passion's slave, and I will wear him / In my heart's core"
(III.ii.71-73). Hamlet now has a spy too in Horatio, who will watch the
King's reaction to the play. The Prince is manic. "The victim of social
actors, Hamlet becomes one. He sees that the world around him is peopled
with pretenders, that only those who know they are actors are 'real'" (Garber
498). He jauntily mocks Polonius, who did some acting in his day. "It is
interesting, to begin with, that Polonius was accounted a good actor in his
youth. He has been playing a part ever since, until his mask has become
a part of his face.... That Polonius acted Julius Caesar characterizes both
men: Caesar, the synonym of imperialism, Polonius, the petty domestic despot"
(Goddard, I 339). (And mention of Brutus killing Caesar is interesting
when in a short time Hamlet will kill Polonius.) Hamlet is bawdy with Ophelia
(note the Elizabethan punning on "nothing" or "O"); and, somewhat
contrary to his own advice to the players, he is too excited to shut up
about the relevance of the play to the circumstances surrounding the
death of his father. Even Ophelia says he's functioning like a chorus
(III.ii.245). "The play itself begins in pompous rhymed verse (which
Shakespeare deliberately writes in inferior style to make it seem like
a play in comparison to the 'reality' of Hamlet)" (Asimov 123).
The murderer is "suggestively named Lucianus" -- suggestive because of
Leicester's reputation as a poisoner (Ogburn and Ogburn 634).
Now might I do it pat, now 'a is a-praying;
He thinks this through. The irony is that Claudius has not been able to pray,
and besides, the sacrament of penance requires penitance, confession, and
restitution.
And now I'll do't--and so 'a goes to heaven,
And so I am reveng'd. That would be scann'd.
(III.iii.73-75)
As Polonius hides, Hamlet enters Gertrude's "closet" or "chamber" (a
private sitting-room but not her bedroom, despite Freud-influenced films
ever since Olivier's in 1948). "What need of an Oedipus complex, then? It
is not unconscious love that explains his actions, but a very conscious
and reasonable hate" (Asimov 96). Conversation is tense and Hamlet
accusatory. When he hears noise from behind the arras, Hamlet stabs away,
claiming it's a rat, hoping it's the King, but killing Polonius. Perhaps
the intention is for Oxford to dramatize his skewering of Burghley with
his "rapier-wit" (Ogburn and Ogburn 667).
Geoffrey Bullough has detected an intriguing connection between Hamlet
and Castiglione's Book of the Courtier (and de Vere wrote a Latin preface
for Clerke's 1572 Latin translation of Castiglione; the earlier 1561 English
edition had been translated by Burghley's brother-in-law Thomas Hoby). The
victim represented in the play-within-the-play may have been Francesco Maria
della Rovere, Duke of Urbino, rumored to have been poisoned in the ear in
1538. Urbino appears as one of Castiglione's characters in The Courtier.
"Before his death, Urbino was painted by Titian, and this portrait [left] seems
to resemble the ghost of Hamlet's father in every detail. De Vere may have had
an opportunity to see this portrait during his Grand Tour" (Farina 196).