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Young couples discover that Hamlet is a reckless, disturbed, free-spirited youth. |
about 2200 words James Foley faramdthen@gmail.com www.beyondthewind.com www.mywarlove.com Hamlet and James Dean Died Young by James Foley In Virginia, an hourâs drive south of D.C., thereâs a huge white houseâbuilt in the 1890s out on a point on the Chesapeake. And this summer when I drove there for a Wednesday-evening literary-club meeting, a gale was churning the water in front and on both sides of the house. And somehow on that lightning-blasted and thunder-shaken night, this lit-up mansion seemed like some gleaming humanoid monster, summoned into existence by the ghost of Edgar Allen Poe. Still, there were a half-dozen cars parked out front. And inside, in the living room with its immense stone fireplace, Ellen Wayne was discussing Hamlet, describing him as âthe Elizabethan James Deanâ. âDeanâs career is how you define âmeteoricââ she was saying. âListen to this. I copied this from an article online.â Now she was reading from some file sheâd copied to her Android phone: âDean was living in New York City, performing on TV, when he was amazingly cast to play in East of Eden, directed by Elia Kazan. And Dean left for Los Angeles on April 8, 1954. âEast of Eden was followed by Rebel Without a Cause, then Giant. Within a year, Dean had become a superstar, dating beautiful women and racing cars. Then about 5:15 p.m on September 30th, 1955, he died in a highway crash.â Ellen looked up from the notes sheâd been reading and whispered: âLived too fast. Died at twenty-four. Always will be beautiful.â # Most of our group were seatedâthree or four of us standing. Then, as I stepped back nearer a window to glance out at the seething dark waterâand you could see water from every window in this houseâI collided with a girl whoâd just entered the room. What girl? Impossible! Julia Cortland? Julia wild and unpredictable Cortland: latte skin, dark luxuriant hair, equatorial eyes as fine and fatal as ever. But at the moment she seemed paralyzedâexactly as I felt. Two years before, this girl had ruled the tangled emotions of my youth. I knew her all too well. But not well enough. What now? Nothing. As the wind screamed outside and the booming thunder rumbled in our ears, neither of us spoke. We stared in dead silence, like dead motionless bodiesâuntil finally I said, âWhere? Where were you? Paris? Monaco?â Her laugh was ironic. âSure, Paris and Monaco. You know where I was, Josh: California.â âI was afraid to know.â âYou canât remember two years back? I was with Robert at BWI. No, not the British West Indies: Baltimore-Washington International airport. Robert was already emotionally destroyed. Heâd flown out to San Francisco to stay with his mother, and I was going to join him. But at the last moment I panicked, Josh. I called Algernon in Baltimore and had him call you. I had Algernon tell you that I was going to go and marry Robert to care for him, unlessâunless you told me not to. Unless you told me to stay. And what did you do, Josh? You had Algernon tell me to go on.â # While Julia was speaking, I could hear a voice in the group asking with some intensity. âHow old was Hamlet anyway when he died? We simply donât know.â Then Juliaâs brother Arthur answered that we do know approximately. Arthur was a young Johns Hopkins professor. He and Julia were charter member of our group. And I said to Julia now, âWhen did you get back? Why didnât Arthur tell me youâd be here tonight?â âI wouldnât let him tell you. I thought it would keep you from coming.â Arthur was holding up a sheaf of papers as he spoke. And Julia and I drifted back into the discussion. âThis is T.S. Eliotâs famous paper on Hamlet,â Arthur was saying. âLet me read two sentences: âThe Hamlet of Laforgue is an adolescent; the Hamlet of Shakespeare is not, he has not that explanation and excuse. We must simply admit that here Shakespeare tackled a problem which proved too much for him.â Now Arthur went on: âHere, Eliot brilliantly proposes the right question: Hamletâs age. This is the single most important fact that we need to know to understand Shakespeareâs play.â Arthur smiled. âThen Eliot gives an unconsidered answer: Hamletâs not adolescent. But Eliot doesnât tell us how he knows Hamletâs age. He merely assumes that Shakespeareâs Hamletâs mature.â âLike almost everybody else,â someone in the group said. Arthur nodded. âConceivably, Eliot preferred a Hamlet of mature years, because this would make Hamletâs wild recklessness utterly absurd, and so bolster Eliotâs theory that the playâs a confused failure.â Arthur relaxed. âWe can only calculate Hamletâs age from what Shakespeare tells us in his text. In Act I, Scene II, the King says to Hamlet: For your intent In going back to school in Wittenberg, It is most retrograde to our desire: And we beseech you bend you to remain here. âAnd Hamletâs mother says to him: I pray thee stay with us; go not to Wittenberg. âLater in the same scene, Hamlet sees his close friend Horatio, still in school at Wittenberg, who jokingly declares himself a truant. âHamlet: And what make you from Wittenberg, Horatio? âHoratio: A truant disposition, good my lord.â âA little later Hamlet says, âI prithee do not mock me, fellow-student. âThen in Act II, Scene II, the king addresses Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern in words that also highlight the youthfulness of Hamlet and his companions: âI entreat you both That, being of so young days brought up with him, And since so neighbour'd to his youth and humour, That you vouchsafe your rest here in our court Some little time.â # Our group seemed to stir a little restlessly. But now a blonde schoolteacher named Agnes Grant said, âThereâs nothing in the play that makes Hamlet mature: no hint of any official position in society or assignment of duties at court. In the play, the only fact we learn about Hamletâs age is that heâs been a student and is preparing to return to school. âI made some quick calculations: students generally finish grammar school about age fourteen; high school about eighteen; and college about twenty-two. Postgraduate students may be a year or two older. âEven if we didnât have the explicitly repeated explanations that Hamlet was in his student years, everything else we know about his situation at court, his life and his emotions would indicate that. âJames Dean died at twenty-four. Itâs extremely unlikely that Hamlet was older than that.â Our conversation was continually jarred by the strong winds still slamming this venerable house. So I missed some of what Agnes was sayingâsomething about actors and how prestigious the Hamlet role is. âAn actor,â she said finally, âwill usually not be privileged to play Hamlet in a major production without having risen to the top of his profession. So, our image of Hamlet may be drawn from mature, masterful actors. âSuch famous players as Edwin Booth or John Barrymore in their prime could hardly pretend to be students in school. I think Laurence Olivier was about thirty when he played Hamlet.â # When the discussion broke for relaxation and refreshments, Julia Cortland and I moved out of that great roomâout onto the houseâs wraparound veranda and so into the storm. But that didnât matter. The tumult in my nerves made natureâs uproar seem petty. âRemember that day,â Julia said, âwhen we were sailing offshore and we got caught in a squall? We were drenched, with the ocean exploding around usâenough to scare anyone to death.â Easy to remember that afternoon. Weâd kept the sail up to get to shore quickly and our mast was almost horizontalâthe sail flattened by the wind, almost capsized. Then the dinghy grounded on the shoal as I jumped out, grabbing the painter and hauling the small boat up on the sandâbumping her up in rhythm with the swell of the surf till we reached the dunes. Then the two of us: standing in the roaring rain, hugging each other. And now two years later, here on this veranda, Julia was saying, âWhen I dream let me dream of that summerâbefore Robert came into our life and things got too wild. âHard to believe, Josh, that you knew Robert long before I did. You grew up with him from grammar school. You were just about his oldest friend. Then you introduced us.â âAnd you fell for him.â âYou know it wasnât like that. At first, we were all three together. Yes, I was something of a rebel then. I thought I was an artist. Robert thought so too. âSo, I fell into his way of life. He was a free-spirited maverick who went his own way. He was a hippie out of his time. He should have been around for the Woodstock music festival and the Summer of Love.â I nodded. âYeah, he was born forty years too late.â âBut he was still together then, Josh. Robert was the life of every party. Everyone thought he was great. Except you. But you loved him. You took care of him. You were always there for him. âAnd life was sweet: day after day after day. What Robert called our days of daylight and delightâand nights of midnight moonlight. And always talking about art and love and freedom.â Now Julia grew sober: âBut the danger was in Robertâs totally insane partying: what he called his days of wine and weed, days of weed and roses. âAnd it crashed. Heâd gone too far to come back. An emotional nosedive: all ruins. And youâd left him and you left me.â âYou didnât come with me.â âI couldnât leave Robert. You werenât there for him anymore. He had nobody,â Julia said, looking out at the pounding rain and the black night, wild and empty. # The discussion had reconvened now and Arthur Cortland was speaking: âIn Shakespeare, there are many action-heroes, driven by ambition, passion, jealousy or revenge: Richard III, Brutus, Hotspur, Romeo, Macbeth, Othello and many others. âThe play Hamlet has such characters. The King Claudius, after his diabolical crime, seems to rule well: dignified, courteous, with good judgment and balanced policies. âThe Norwegian prince Fortinbras is another man of action. And Laertes is determined to avenge the death of his father and sisterâas Hamlet was supposed to avenge his fatherâs death. âThe original Hamlet was such an action-hero, focused on killing a king and pretending insanity to cover his intentions. And Hamlet fully realizes his duty to become an avenger. When his fatherâs ghost begs him to revenge his death, Hamlet swears to concentrate only on that goal and to purge every other thought from his consciousness: âYea, from the table of my memory I'll wipe away all trivial fond records, All saws of books, all forms, all pressures past, That youth and observation copied there; And thy commandment all alone shall live Within the book and volume of my brain, Unmix'd with baser matter: yes, by heaven! âBut Shakespeareâs Hamletâs too complex for this role that fateâs imposed. Heâs a mixed-up youth before the playâs action begins. In Soliloquy One, his first words are that he wants his body to melt away. Heâs upset because the Almighty forbids suicide. The whole world seems, quote: âweary, stale, flat and unprofitable.â âBut what Hamlet hates most is his motherâs hasty remarriage. He jokes that the meat cooked for his fatherâs funeral was served as cold cuts at his motherâs wedding feast.â âThese childlike sentiments, uttered so impetuously, are typical of youth, not maturity,â Ellen Wayne said. âYes, Hamletâs the born nonconformistâlike the James Dean characters in East of Eden and Rebel Without a Cause. Thatâs their charm and attraction, and itâs what makes their lives so tragic.â Arthur nodded. âHamlet curses himself for lacking the forcefulness to mold himself into the avengerâthe kind of forcefulness Fortinbras has. Hamletâs not a coward. Heâs not afraid of danger. He just canât adopt a defined personality with its fixed plan of action. Heâs a reckless, disturbed, free-spirited youth who can only be himself.â âLike other romantic heroes,â Ellen said, âHeathcliff and the great Russian rebels.â âPushkinâs Eugene Onegin,â Agnes Grant suggested. And a boy named Wayne Arlington added: âLermontovâs Perchorin and Dostoevskyâs Stavrogin: social misfits, but passionately true to themselves.â # So that ended that eveningâs intellectual festival. And as the others were leaving, Julia said to me, âArthur and Ryan are going to some other party. Can you drive me home?â I nodded. âRobert and I never married,â Julia said. âWe were never lovers. He didnât last that long. You know?â âI heard.â âYou just heard? You did nothing else?â âI heard too late.â âSo now his memory means nothing to you?â âNot true. He was one of the biggest parts of my life.â âAnd me?â âYou were the biggest part of my life.â Julia was staring with some astonishment. âIf thatâs true, Josh, what follows?â Strangely, somehow while she was conversing, we had entangled ourselves haltingly in each otherâs arms. âWe tried,â she said. âWe tried, Josh. We tried to save Robert. But in the end, it was too late. But what about us, Josh. What about saving us? Is it too late?â Now, embracing this extraordinary woman, I could only say, âNo, not too late. Why shouldnât we be together? Why shouldnât we be happy? Itâs not too late.â |