Look,
whe’r he has not turn’d his colour, and tears in’s eyes.
-Polonius
Hamlet Act II, scene ii Line 517
Hamlet. Will’s longest, and arguably most famous work, and
certainly a masterpiece. And yet, it’s a troubling little line to have to deal
with today. I’m afraid I’m going to have to give a little context and try to
squeeze a bit of meaningfulness out of it.
This play is full of complexities (one of the things that
makes it great) and this scene is no exception. For those of you unfamiliar
with the play (and if you’re reading this blog that would seem unlikely,
nonetheless…), long story short: Hamlet has spoken with his dead father, King
Hamlet (two different Hamlets, one a king, one a prince – keep them straight),
who has informed Hamlet that he was murdered by Hamlet’s Uncle Claudius.
Meanwhile Uncle Claudius, now King Claudius, has married King Hamlet’s widow
Gertrude, making Uncle Claudius Hamlet’s stepfather. Hamlet has promised his
dead dad, King Hamlet, that he will avenge his murder and spends the rest of the
play acting strange and trying to figure out exactly how to carry out this
pledge while everyone else tries to figure out what the heck he’s doing. Got
it?
So I taught this play when I was doing my student teaching
of high school juniors. We had a good time with it (well, I did, and I think
some of them might have enjoyed it a little). I used Kenneth Branagh’s movie
version a lot (which, by the way, if you’re going to watch a movie version of
Hamlet, of which there are many, you can’t do any better than this one. Mel
Gibson’s version- not so good, but on the other hand that one does have Ian
Holmes playing Polonius, so that’s a plus.), but I don’t remember much about
this scene. Anyway, the speaker of today’s Totally Random line is Polonius.
He’s an advisor to King Claudius and he’s got a pretty big role in the play
until he gets stabbed for hiding behind a bedroom curtain (let that be a lesson
to you- never hide behind a bedroom curtain). At this point, well before the
bedroom curtain scene, an acting troupe has arrived at the castle and they are
reciting, impromptu, a scene for Hamlet and some others. Polonius’s Totally
Random line is in reaction to these actors. There, it took two paragraphs, but
that should tell you exactly where we are. Does it?
So Polonius is reacting to someone acting out the scene from
a play (a play within a play, so to speak). But what’s he saying? I believe
he’s impressed with the actor who’s so good that he’s made himself cry. I have
to admit that I’m not quite sure what he’s referring to when he says the actor
‘has not turned his colour,’. I’m going to mull on that one and see if
something doesn’t strike me during the day. So we’ll see if we can’t finish
this fascinating, unprecedented post this evening.
Okay, I forgot that I have a bunch of Hamlet texts and one
of them has a full modern day text and according to it the line means Look,
he has turned pale and has tears in his eyes. I was already on board with the tears, but I
struggle to get to the ‘turned pale’ part. Oh well. That's okay. let's not be dismayed and just move on for now. The die tells me that
tomorrow’s line will come from The Tempest, and that is one play that I know
very, very well. So let’s be optimistic that we’ll be getting a good line and a
proper discussion, with a somewhat better conclusion, tomorrow.
2 comments:
I read this blog and I don't crap about Hamlet. Well, we might have read one of his speeches in an english class in college but def not the whole play.
Post a Comment