Monday, August 19, 2019
Hamlet as the Complete Man :: Shakespeare Hamlet
Hamlet as the Complete Man       Tragedy, Shakespeare had come to see when he was writing Hamlet, is a kind of  consecration of the common elements of man's moral life. Shakespeare introduces  the common man in Hamlet not for what we are apt to think of as his "commonness"  but for this strange power however you care to name it that he possesses-we have  used art, or virtue, or we might have borrowed from Henry James "the individual  vision of decency." In Tragedy there is no longer a Chorus moving round the  altar of a god; but if Proust is right the spectators are still participants in  a supernatural ceremony.     Perhaps I may put the aspect of Tragedy I wish to keep before you more  clearly by drawing on Professor Harbage's study of Shakespeare's ideal man.  Collecting the approving references he finds that this ideal man is soldierly,  scholarly, and honest. If these men seem to lack the larger idealism that is so  common and abundant in our own generation, there is no suspicion that  Shakespeare's men will fail to back with their own skin their apparently modest  programs. As Professor Harbage says: "All soldierly, scholarly, honest men are  potential martyrs -you can substitute for "martyrs" tragic figures. Of that  Shakespearean type Hamlet is the ideal. Shakespeare had before him in Saxo and  Belleforest what was presented as an ideal type. This type Shakespeare  transformed. To what may be called the instinctive wisdom of antiquity and her  heroic passions, represented so impressively by Hamlet's father, Shakespeare has  united the meditative wisdom of later ages in Hamlet himself. The   re is no  surrender of the old pieties, and the idea of the drama comes from the impact of  new circum1stances upon the old forms of feeling and estimation; there is a  conflict between new exigencies and old pieties, that have somehow to be  reconciled. The play dramatizes the perpetual struggle to which all civilization  that is genuine is doomed. To live up to its own ideals it has to place itself  at a disadvantage with the cunning and treacherous. The problem Mr. Chandler (1)  sets his hero is infinitely complicated in Hamlet-to be humane without loss of  toughness. The hero must touch both extremes: without one he is just brutal,  lacking the other he is merely wet.  					    
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