Thou dost lie in’t, to be in’t and say it is
thine. ‘Tis for the dead, not for the quick. Therefore thou liest.
-Hamlet
Hamlet Act V, Scene i, Line 123
So it’s the graveyard scene in Hamlet. First the two
gravediggers are going at it, trading puns and barbs, and then one of the
gravediggers leaves and Hamlet starts sparring with the one that’s still there.
Hamlet has asked whose grave the fellow is digging, he replies that it’s his
own, and now they’re going back and forth about lying in or on the grave. They
playing with the meaning of ‘lying’ going to and fro between lying- telling an
untruth, and lying- laying down.
In any event, the grave is being dug for Ophelia,
but Hamlet doesn’t realize that yet. In just a few moments, still ignorant to
the death of Ophelia, Hamlet’s going to go into his ‘Alas, poor Yorick’ speech.
If the first part of the scene is centered on puns and bad jokes, the Yorick
speech changes the pace to talk about life and things lost. Then shortly the
king and others come in with the body of Ophelia to bury her, and Hamlet and
Laertes almost come to blows, jumping in the grave together. Yeah, it really is
a great scene and it’s got everything in it. I guess if I was going to pick
just one scene to recommend to someone to get a taste of Shakespeare, this
might be it.
This here is Gunther Gebel-Williams. I saw him in the New Haven Coliseum in the early 80's. If I had to pick one circus act, or circus person, to give you a taste of what the circus was about, this is the guy.
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