HAMLET
HAMLET
Hamlet was the only son of the King of Denmark. He loved his
father and mother dearly--and was happy in the love of a sweet lady named
Ophelia. Her father, Polonius, was the King's Chamberlain.
While Hamlet was away studying at Wittenberg, his father
died. Young Hamlet hastened home in great grief to hear that a serpent had
stung the King, and that he was dead. The young Prince had loved his father so
tenderly that you may judge what he felt when he found that the Queen, before
yet the King had been laid in the ground a month, had determined to marry
again--and to marry the dead King's brother.
Hamlet refused to put off mourning for the wedding.
"It is not only the black I wear on my body," he
said, "that proves my loss. I wear mourning in my heart for my dead
father. His son at least remembers him, and grieves still."
Then said Claudius the King's brother, "This grief is
unreasonable. Of course you must sorrow at the loss of your father, but--"
"Ah," said Hamlet, bitterly, "I cannot in one
little month forget those I love."
With that the Queen and Claudius left him, to make merry
over their wedding, forgetting the poor good King who had been so kind to them
both.
And Hamlet, left alone, began to wonder and to question as
to what he ought to do. For he could not believe the story about the
snake-bite. It seemed to him all too plain that the wicked Claudius had killed
the King, so as to get the crown and marry the Queen. Yet he had no proof, and
could not accuse Claudius.
And while he was thus thinking came Horatio, a fellow
student of his, from Wittenberg.
"What brought you here?" asked Hamlet, when he had
greeted his friend kindly.
"I came, my lord, to see your father's funeral."
"I think it was to see my mother's wedding," said
Hamlet, bitterly. "My father! We shall not look upon his like again."
"My lord," answered Horatio, "I think I saw
him yesternight."
Then, while Hamlet listened in surprise, Horatio told how
he, with two gentlemen of the guard, had seen the King's ghost on the
battlements. Hamlet went that night, and true enough, at midnight, the ghost of
the King, in the armor he had been wont to wear, appeared on the battlements in
the chill moonlight. Hamlet was a brave youth. Instead of running away from the
ghost he spoke to it--and when it beckoned him he followed it to a quiet place,
and there the ghost told him that what he had suspected was true. The wicked
Claudius had indeed killed his good brother the King, by dropping poison into
his ear as he slept in his orchard in the afternoon.
"And you," said the ghost, "must avenge this
cruel murder-- on my wicked brother. But do nothing against the Queen-- for I
have loved her, and she is your mother. Remember me."
Then seeing the morning approach, the ghost vanished.
"Now," said Hamlet, "there is nothing left
but revenge. Remember thee--I will remember nothing else--books, pleasure,
youth--let all go--and your commands alone live on my brain."
So when his friends came back he made them swear to keep the
secret of the ghost, and then went in from the battlements, now gray with
mingled dawn and moonlight, to think how he might best avenge his murdered
father.
The shock of seeing and hearing his father's ghost made him
feel almost mad, and for fear that his uncle might notice that he was not
himself, he determined to hide his mad longing for revenge under a pretended
madness in other matters.
And when he met Ophelia, who loved him--and to whom he had
given gifts, and letters, and many loving words--he behaved so wildly to her,
that she could not but think him mad. For she loved him so that she could not
believe he would be as cruel as this, unless he were quite mad. So she told her
father, and showed him a pretty letter from Hamlet. And in the letter was much
folly, and this pretty verse--
"Doubt that the stars are fire;
Doubt that the sun doth move;
Doubt truth to be a liar;
But never doubt I love."
And from that time everyone believed that the cause of
Hamlet's supposed madness was love.
Poor Hamlet was very unhappy. He longed to obey his father's
ghost--and yet he was too gentle and kindly to wish to kill another man, even
his father's murderer. And sometimes he wondered whether, after all, the ghost
spoke truly.
Just at this time some actors came to the Court, and Hamlet
ordered them to perform a certain play before the King and Queen. Now, this
play was the story of a man who had been murdered in his garden by a near
relation, who afterwards married the dead man's wife.
You may imagine the feelings of the wicked King, as he sat
on his throne, with the Queen beside him and all his Court around, and saw,
acted on the stage, the very wickedness that he had himself done. And when, in
the play, the wicked relation poured poison into the ear of the sleeping man,
the wicked Claudius suddenly rose, and staggered from the room--the Queen and
others following.
Then said Hamlet to his friends--
"Now I am sure the ghost spoke true. For if Claudius
had not done this murder, he could not have been so distressed to see it in a
play."
Now the Queen sent for Hamlet, by the King's desire, to
scold him for his conduct during the play, and for other matters; and Claudius,
wishing to know exactly what happened, told old Polonius to hide himself behind
the hangings in the Queen's room. And as they talked, the Queen got frightened
at Hamlet's rough, strange words, and cried for help, and Polonius behind the curtain
cried out too. Hamlet, thinking it was the King who was hidden there, thrust
with his sword at the hangings, and killed, not the King, but poor old
Polonius.
So now Hamlet had offended his uncle and his mother, and by
bad hap killed his true love's father.
"Oh! what a rash and bloody deed is this," cried
the Queen.
And Hamlet answered bitterly, "Almost as bad as to kill
a king, and marry his brother." Then Hamlet told the Queen plainly all his
thoughts and how he knew of the murder, and begged her, at least, to have no
more friendship or kindness of the base Claudius, who had killed the good King.
And as they spoke the King's ghost again appeared before Hamlet, but the Queen
could not see it. So when the ghost had gone, they parted.
When the Queen told Claudius what had passed, and how
Polonius was dead, he said, "This shows plainly that Hamlet is mad, and
since he has killed the Chancellor, it is for his own safety that we must carry
out our plan, and send him away to England."
So Hamlet was sent, under charge of two courtiers who served
the King, and these bore letters to the English Court, requiring that Hamlet
should be put to death. But Hamlet had the good sense to get at these letters,
and put in others instead, with the names of the two courtiers who were so
ready to betray him. Then, as the vessel went to England, Hamlet escaped on
board a pirate ship, and the two wicked courtiers left him to his fate, and
went on to meet theirs.
Hamlet hurried home, but in the meantime a dreadful thing
had happened. Poor pretty Ophelia, having lost her lover and her father, lost
her wits too, and went in sad madness about the Court, with straws, and weeds,
and flowers in her hair, singing strange scraps of songs, and talking poor,
foolish, pretty talk with no heart of meaning to it. And one day, coming to a
stream where willows grew, she tried to bang a flowery garland on a willow, and
fell into the water with all her flowers, and so died.
And Hamlet had loved her, though his plan of seeming madness
had made him hide it; and when he came back, he found the King and Queen, and
the Court, weeping at the funeral of his dear love and lady.
Ophelia's brother, Laertes, had also just come to Court to
ask justice for the death of his father, old Polonius; and now, wild with
grief, he leaped into his sister's grave, to clasp her in his arms once more.
"I loved her more than forty thousand brothers,"
cried Hamlet, and leapt into the grave after him, and they fought till they
were parted.
Afterwards Hamlet begged Laertes to forgive him.
"I could not bear," he said, "that any, even
a brother, should seem to love her more than I."
But the wicked Claudius would not let them be friends. He
told Laertes how Hamlet had killed old Polonius, and between them they made a
plot to slay Hamlet by treachery.
Laertes challenged him to a fencing match, and all the Court
were present. Hamlet had the blunt foil always used in fencing, but Laertes had
prepared for himself a sword, sharp, and tipped with poison. And the wicked
King had made ready a bowl of poisoned wine, which he meant to give poor Hamlet
when he should grow warm with the sword play, and should call for drink.
So Laertes and Hamlet fought, and Laertes, after some
fencing, gave Hamlet a sharp sword thrust. Hamlet, angry at this treachery--for
they had been fencing, not as men fight, but as they play--closed with Laertes
in a struggle; both dropped their swords, and when they picked them up again,
Hamlet, without noticing it, had exchanged his own blunt sword for Laertes'
sharp and poisoned one. And with one thrust of it he pierced Laertes, who fell
dead by his own treachery.
At this moment the Queen cried out, "The drink, the
drink! Oh, my dear Hamlet! I am poisoned!"
She had drunk of the poisoned bowl the King had prepared for
Hamlet, and the King saw the Queen, whom, wicked as he was, he really loved,
fall dead by his means.
Then Ophelia being dead, and Polonius, and the Queen, and
Laertes, and the two courtiers who had been sent to England, Hamlet at last
found courage to do the ghost's bidding and avenge his father's murder--which,
if he had braced up his heart to do long before, all these lives had been
spared, and none had suffered but the wicked King, who well deserved to die.
Hamlet, his heart at last being great enough to do the deed
he ought, turned the poisoned sword on the false King.
"Then--venom--do thy work!" he cried, and the King
died.
So Hamlet in the end kept the promise he had made his
father. And all being now accomplished, he himself died. And those who stood by
saw him die, with prayers and tears, for his friends and his people loved him
with their whole hearts. Thus ends the tragic tale of Hamlet, Prince of
Denmark.