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Hamlet: Articles & Essays

Madplay, Wordplay,
Inner-play
by James L. Calderwood

www.hamletguide.com |
A great many truths interest Hamlet, but
the ones he must find a voice for are of two kinds. There are the
fundamental truths imparted to him by the ghost: the secret facts about
his father's murder and his mother's faithless remarriage. Then
there are the truths about the human condition that seem entailed by these
primary facts: all the melancholy distresses that Hamlet registers about a
mutable world in which the cosmetics of lies and false seeming conceal the
moral ugliness of evil. These latter truths Hamlet both tells and
untells in his wordplay, engaging in a verbal balancing act between
silence and noise that is paralleled by his assuming an antic disposition
that lies between inaction and action.
Regarding action: Hamlet's predicament is
cause by his need to reconcile the Ghost's command, "Revenge his foul
and most unnatural murder," and its perplexing codicil, "But,
howsomever thou pursues this act,/ Taint not they mind" (1.5.26,
5—86). How to act within a tainted world without becoming tainted
oneself? How, on the other hand, not to act without suffering the stigma
of filial betrayal? Hamlet's solution for the moment is to take refuge in
the cleft between action and inaction. He does not act but instead
"acts," that is, plays mad, which plays his behavior in epoche,
zoned off from the world of pragmatic affairs in which action and inaction
have no meaning. Hamlet's antic disposition thus becomes a form of
inactive action, to which the verbal analogy is the unvoiced speech of his
wordplay. And inasmuch as play is largely an end in itself
rather than a means to other ends, so Hamlet's wordplay fails to
communicate the truth in Denmark and his madplay fails to kill the King.
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Part of the reason for this suspension of
action and speech is that Hamlet is not altogether persuaded that the
Ghost's truths are truths, or even that the Ghost is merely a ghost.
The spirit that I have seen
May be a devil, and the devil hath power
To assume a pleasing shape; yea, and perhaps
Out of my weakness and my melancholy,
As he is very potent with such spirits
Abuses me to damn me.
(2.2.599 - 604).
The way to resolve his uncertainties about
the Ghost, about Claudius, and about his own imagination is, he decides,
theatrical: "The play's the thing/ Wherein I'll catch the conscience
of the King" (2.2505-606). The way to resolve his verbal and actional
dilemmas is also theatrical. In rewriting and presenting "The
Murder of Gonzago" he will accept his own advice to the players and
"Suit the action to the word, the word to the action"
(3.2.17-18). The silent truths about murder in the orchard and
remarriage in hast will be made manifest to eyes and ears —
For murder, though it have no
tongue, will speak
With most miraculous organ
(2.2 594 - 595).
Silence thus acquires a voice to make its
meanings heard, if not by everyone, at least by Claudius. Like
Hamlet's wordplay and madplay. "The Murder of Gonzago" in its
original form was presumably an artistic end in itself. As revised
by Hamlet, however, it becomes "The Mousetrap." Dramatic
art is transformed into pragmatic instrument, a weapon in the real world.
Suited mutually to one another to comprise the dramatic ensemble, words
now act and acts speak, so that in one concerted motion the truth is
conveyed to Claudius with the impact of a sword thrust.
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