The
Sons Also Rise
Two
princes, one sullen and moody, one full of youthful rebellion: Hamlet—Danish,
age thirty, an introspective and solitary man. Prince Hal—English, no older
than fifteen—an extroverted party boy. Hamlet (in Shakespeare’s play of the
same name) has had a proper upbringing, while Prince Hal (in King Henry IV, Part 1) is rebelling
against the establishment, (his father King Henry IV). Both have come to their
position in usurpulous circumstances, both are disinterested in the task at
hand—Hamlet does not show any interest in the day-to-day workings of his
family’s kingdom or life in the castle. Hal is not even in his castle. Hamlet
is alone in his shell of grief, while stepfather/ Uncle Claudius is enjoying
the spoils of "[m]y crown, mine own ambition, and my queen" (Hamlet 3.3.59). Hal is off drinking sack
with his thieving friends for most of the play, as King Henry laments: “I … /
See riot and dishonor stain [his] brow” (King
Henry IV 1.1.83, 84)
Hal
was twelve when his father usurped the throne from King Richard H. The
education of a prince is different than that of a Duke or Lord. Not only would
Hal (had he been born heir to the throne) have an academic education, he would
have been instructed daily on his role as prince and future King (“As the King,
you walk ten paces in front, nobody should stand taller than you," etc). Hal
had already been hanging out with Falstaff before he became Prince—no one with
a direct bloodline to the crown would be caught dead with him—and that
"fat-kidneyed rascal" is too fun of a habit to break. For a boy to
drop all of his old friends and start acting in a different manner—just to
please his father—that doesn’t happen overnight. Hal sees a moat ahead called
"dignity," and he will eventually cross the drawbridge, leaving his
old cronies to be eaten by crocodiles; now he just wants to have fun. His
father’s not in danger—Hal’s kingship is a long way off—he thinks. Hamlet
spends his time in introspection (note the soliloquies; he has six versus Hal,
who has only two). He fights his revenge battle on his own; the fewer people
who know he is not really mad, the better, and he is more introverted than Hal.
Hal
wants to party with his friends, exchange verbal assaults; especially with his
old friend and father figure, Sir John Falstaff, who happens to be Prince Hal’s
vice:
PRINCE This san-
guine coward, this bed-presser, this
horse-back-
breaker, this huge hill of flesh—
FALSTAFF
‘Sblood, you starveling, you elfskin, you
dried neat’s tongue, you bull’s pizzle,
you stockfish!
O, for breath to utter what is like
thee!
PRINCE
Well, breathe awhile, and then to it again, and
when thou hast tired thyself in base
comparisons,
hear me speak but this. (2.4.251–261)
He loves plotting a
practical joke or two on his friends; “I have a jest to execute that I cannot /
manage alone,” Poins announces in Act 1, scene 2 (168–169). After some details
of the plan are made clear, Hal jumps right in; "Well, I’ll go with
thee" (198).
Hamlet, on the other hand, is an
introvert who would rather read than join in his family’s festivities. While he
is inclined to introversion, Hamlet naturally knows that he needs to force himself
to be more extroverted; as king he will have to interact socially with many
different people—his circumstances prove the contrary—“I am dead, Horatio"
(Hamlet, 5.2.365).
Hal,
a natural extrovert, knows that he eventually will have to grow up and be a
conscientious King:
I
know you all, and will awhile uphold
The
unyoked humor of your idleness.
Yet
herein will I imitate the sun,
Who
doth permit the bass contagious clouds
To
smother up his beauty from the world,
.
. .
And,
like bright metal on a sullen ground,
My
reformation, glitt’ring o’er my fault,
Should
show more goodly and attract more eyes,
Than
that which hath no foil to set it off
(King Henry IV 1.2.201–206, 219–222)
He’ll need more than
a simple conscience; for he’s going to pass judgment on commoners who have committed
the same petty crimes he has done, as well as deciding the fate of his former
cronies:
FALSTAFF
If to be old and
merry
a sin, then many an old host that I know is
damned
....
Jack Falstaff, banish not
him
thy Harry’s company, …
Banish plump jack,
and banish
all
the world.
PRINCE
I do, I will.
(King Henry IV 2.4.488–489, 495–499)
Care for a little
foreshadowing, anyone?
Hamlet,
aged thirty when his father is murdered, the prime age for a King—but the crown
goes to Claudius, leaving Hamlet to revert to a passive-aggressive plot to
reclaim the throne:
Here,
as before, never, so help you mercy,
How
strange or odd some’er I bear myself
(As
I perchance hereafter shall think meet
To
put an antic disposition on)
(Hamlet, 1.5.189–192)
Hal, being a
teenager, sees no rush to adopt princely (indeed, kingly) behavior. With no
knowledge of the threat to his father’s throne; he’s living life now, before he
has all the royal responsibilities to contend with. He cannot bring himself to
say the royal "we," as his father does in Act 1, scene 1: "We
are impressed and engaged to fight—” (Henry
IV, 21).
Hamlet’s
only behavior model (his father), is dead. Why would anyone choose to look up
to people they refer to as a “villain" (Hamlet 1.5.13), and a "most pernicious woman" (Hamlet 1.5.12)? Is Hamlet going to go ask
his parents for advice on anything? No. If he thinks of his parents that way,
the only direction to go is toward solitude. “Most people experiencing . . . mourning require both permission and
encouragement (verbal and nonverbal) to mourn because of the traditionally
unacceptable thoughts and feelings that become aroused and the personal and
social discomfort such an experience brings. For many mourners experiencing
difficulties, there is less need for permission and encouragement than for
actual prescription. They often require an authority figure to inform them that
they need to mourn” (Rando 7). The court in Denmark is very business as usual,
despite the fact that usurper Claudius is king, and the legitimate heir is
sitting at his side at the table. This is very unsettling for Hamlet, and will
become part of his personality from then on: ““very seldom does one consider
that loss . . . [of] a [loved one] . . . is part of development and contributes
to it” (Schoenberg 4).” Psychologically he is stuck at age thirty until he
processes his grief; for Hamlet this includes fulfilling his need for retributory action against Claudius.
One
might say these men are as different as night and day. Looking at their
personalities, yes they are. Circumstantially, however, they are a lot alike.
How these two princes become the people they are is due to circumstances beyond
their control. Hamlet, reeling from the murder of his father and subsequent
marriage of his mother to his uncle, whereas Hal spends twelve years growing up
to the manor born, yet ends up to the kingdom born, as his father, Henry usurps
the crown from his cousin, Richard II. Both Princes are disinterested in The
Royal Life. Hal shows youthful disinterest and rebellion, whereas Hamlet uses
his to hide his plot of revenge. The truth comes out in each character’s
soliloquies: “Now I might do it now he is a-praying, / And now
I’ll do ‘t {He draws his sword}"
(Hamlet 3.3.77–78). Hamlet is not all
talk; he does have the guts to kill
Claudius—maybe.
Hal,
however, schemes a less life-threatening plan, as he delivers an impromptu
eulogy for the “dead” Falstaff:
What,
old acquaintance, could not all this flesh
Keep
in a little life? Poor jack, farewell.
I
could have better spared a better man.
O,
I should have a heavy miss of thee
If
I were much in love with vanity.
(King
Henry IV 5.4.104–108)
Hal transformed from playboy to prince. He
will not "miss" Falstaff as much as he would have, had this happened,
say, in a tavern. The boy moved on. A prince needs to learn how to be king.
Interestingly, when Hal is speaking to
the audience, he uses verse, a technique Shakespeare employs to distinguish
royal characters from others — though he talks to his friends in a casual way. “Brian Vickers writes that when Hal
changes to Henry, changing from prose to verse, he is "stepping up to verse,’ and ‘a change of medium
which always corresponds to his reclamation of dignity’ (emphasis added, 99).
Characters step up as does language” (Tate 91). Using this technique,
Shakespeare lets the audience know that Hal changed perspectives;
he knows that he must grow up and be King; this fact is unavoidable.
Hamlet
also speaks in verse when talking to the King and Queen, “But I have that
within me passes show, / These but the trappings and the suits of woe" (Hamlet,
1.2.88439). Yet he talks to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in prose:
O
wonderful son that can so ’stonish a moth-
er.
But is there no sequel at the heels of this
mother’s
admiration? Impart. (Hamlet 3.2.356-357)
Hamlet, schooled in
the ways of royalty from birth, also knows how to speak correctly. Etiquette dissipates
when young noblemen converse with friends.
In
the end, Hamlet and Prince Hal are self-fulfilling prophesies of what their
fathers say they are. King Henry IV laments that Prince Hal (rather than
Hotspur) is his son, he wishes that
… it could be proved
That
some night-tripping fairy had exchanged
In
cradle-clothes our children where they lay,
And
called mine “Percy,” his “Plantagenet”!
Then
I would have his Harry, and he mine.
(King Henry IV 1.2.85–89)
For most of the play,
Hal is fighting an uphill battle against his father’s notion that his son is
the perpetual ingrate who will always have "dishonor stain[ed] [on his]
brow" (1.1.84). Prince Hal throws up his hands in a “What the Hell, I’ll
just do what I want" fashion; which ends only when he realizes that his
family is under siege. Claudius’ view of Hamlet isn’t desirable, either. At
first he seems confused as to why “the clouds still hang on thee” (Hamlet
1.2.68). Hamlet responds, "Not so, my lord; I am too much
in the sun" (Hamlet 1.2.69).
These
puns on son/ sun and knight/ night come up in King Henry IV too; as when Falstaff describes a thief’s lifestyle in Act 1, scene 2:
. . . we
that
take purses go by the moon and the seven
stars,
and not by Phebus, he, that wand’ring
knight
so far. (King Henry IV 14-17)
And as Hal reveals
later,
herein
I will imitate the sun,
Who
doth permit the base contagious clouds
To
smother up his beauty from the world,
(King Henry IV 1.2.204–206)
He knows that his
reputation will precede him when he becomes king, but he will have put this
life in a little locked box—to be opened only in a nostalgia emergency. So what
happens to our two princes? Do they ever come out from behind their respective clouds
to shine? Unfortunately for Hamlet, the answer is no. But Fortinbras lets
Denmark have a wonderful speculation of his “most royal” (Hamlet
5.2.444) outcome, had he lived. And Hal? Well that's
another whole paper.
Works
Cited
Schoenberg,
Bernard, Irwin Gerber, Alfred Wiener, Austin H. Kutscher, David Peretz, and
Arthur C. Carr, Ed. Bereavement, Its Psychosocial Aspects. Columbia University Press. NY, NY. 1975. Web.
23 Oct. 2011.
Shakespeare,
William. Barbara A. Mowat, Paul Werstine, ed., The New Folger Library: Hamlet; New York, New York: Washington
Square Press, 1992.
Shakespeare,
William. Barbara A. Mowat, Paul Werstine, ed., The New Folger Library: Henry IV, Part; New York, New York:
Washington Square Press, 1994.
Shakespeare,
William. Barbara A. Mowat, Paul Werstine, ed., The New Folger Library: The History of Henry IV Part 1. New
York, New York: Washington Square Press, 1994.
Tate, Joseph, Shakespeare,
Prose and Verse: Unreadable Forms, University
of Washington, 2005.


