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Essay(s) by Arthur C. Benson
Hamlet
Arthur C.Benson
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       We were talking yesterday about the stage, a subject in which I am ashamed to confess I take but a feeble interest, though I fully recognise the appeal of the drama to certain minds, and its possibilities. One of the party, who had all his life been a great frequenter of theatres, turned to me and said: "After all, there is one play which seems to be always popular, and to affect all audiences, the poor, the middle-class, the cultivated, alike--_Hamlet_." "Yes," I said, "and I wonder why that is?" "Well," he said, "it is this, I think: that beneath all its subtleties, all its intellectual force, it has an emotional appeal to every one who has lived in the world; every one sees himself more or less in Hamlet; every one has been in a situation in which he felt that circumstances were too strong for him; and then, too," he added, "there is always a deep and romantic interest about the case of a man who has every possible external advantage, youth, health, wealth, rank, love, ardour, and zest, who is yet utterly miserable, and moves to a dark end under a shadow of doom."
       I thought, and think this a profound and delicate criticism. There is, of course, a great deal more in _Hamlet_; there is its high poetry, its mournful dwelling upon deep mysteries, its supernatural terrors, its worldly wisdom, its penetrating insight; but these are all accessories to the central thought; the conception is absolutely firm throughout. The hunted soul of Hamlet, after a pleasant and easy drifting upon the stream of happy events, finds a sombre curtain suddenly twitched aside, and is confronted with a tragedy so dark, a choice so desperate, that the reeling brain staggers, and can hardly keep its hold upon the events and habits of life. Day by day the shadow flits beside him; morning after morning he uncloses his sad eyes upon a world, which he had found so sweet, and which he now sees to be so terrible; the insistent horror breeds a whole troop of spectres, so that all the quiet experiences of life, friendship, love, nature, art, become big with uneasy speculations and surmises; from the rampart-platform by the sea until the peal of ordnance is shot off, as the poor bodies are carried out, every moment brings with it some shocking or brooding experience. Hamlet is not strong enough to close his eyes to these things; if for a moment he attempts this, some tragic thought plucks at his shoulder, and bids the awakened sleeper look out into the struggling light. Neither is he strong enough to face the situation with resolution and courage. He turns and doubles before the pursuing Fury; he hopes against hope that a door of escape may be opened. He poisons the air with gloom and suspicion; he feeds with wilful sadness upon the most melancholy images of death and despair. And though the great creator of this mournful labyrinth, this atrocious dilemma, can involve the sad spirit with an art that thrills all the most delicate fibres of the human spirit, he cannot stammer out even the most faltering solution, the smallest word of comfort or hope. He leaves the problem, where he took it up, in the mighty hands of God.
       And thus the play stands as the supreme memorial of the tortured spirit. The sad soul of the prince seems like an orange-banded bee, buzzing against the glass of some closed chamber-window, wondering heavily what is the clear yet palpable medium that keeps it, in spite of all its efforts, from re-entering the sunny paradise of tree and flower, that lies so close at hand, and that is yet unattainable; until one wonders why the supreme Lord of the place cannot put forth a finger, and release the ineffectual spirit from its fruitless pain. As the play gathers and thickens to its crisis, one experiences--and this is surely a test of the highest art--the poignant desire to explain, to reason, to comfort, to relieve; even if one cannot help, one longs at least to utter the yearning of the heart, the intense sympathy that one feels for the multitude of sorrows that oppress this laden spirit; to assuage if only for a moment, by an answering glance of love, the fire that burns in those stricken eyes. And one must bear away from the story not only the intellectual satisfaction, the emotional excitement, but a deep desire to help, as far as a man can, the woes of spirits who, all the world over, are in the grip of these dreary agonies.
       And that, after all, is the secret of the art that deals with the presentment of sorrow; with the art that deals with pure beauty the end is plain enough; we may stay our hearts upon it, plunge with gratitude into the pure stream, and recognise it for a sweet and wholesome gift of God; but the art that makes sorrow beautiful, what are we to do with that? We may learn to bear, we may learn to hope that there is, in the mind of God, if we could but read it, a region where both beauty and sadness are one; and meanwhile it may teach us to let our heart go out, in love and pity, to all who are bound upon their pilgrimage in heaviness, and passing uncomforted through the dark valley.
       [The end]
       Arthur C. Benson's essay: Hamlet
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The Abbey
Accessibility
Affection
After Death
Ambition
Andrew Marvell
The Apocalypse
Art
Art And Morality
Art [From a College Window]
The Artist
Authorship
Authorship (from Thread of Gold)
Authorship [From a College Window]
Beauty
The Beetle
Behold, This Dreamer Cometh
Books
By The Sea Of Galilee
Canterbury Tower
Charlotte Bronte
Charm
Christina Rossetti
Contentment
Conversation
The Cripple
The Criticism Of Others
The Cuckoo
The Darkest Doubt
The Death-Bed Of Jacob
The Deserted Shrine, The Manor House
The Diplodocus
Dorsetshire
Dr. Johnson
The Dramatic Sense
Dreams
Education
Egotism
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Emotion
Equality
Escape
The Eternal Will
The Ever-Memorable John Hales
Experience
Faith
The Faith Of Christ
The Farm-Yard
Fear Of Life
Fears Of Age
Fears Of Boyhood
Fears Of Childhood
Fears Of Middle Age
Fears Of Youth
The Fens
The Flower
Friendship
Games
Growth
Habits
Hamlet
The Hare
Henry Bradshaw
Henry More, The Platonist
Herb Moly And Heartsease
Hope
The House Of Pengersick
Humor
Humour
Ideas
Instinctive Fear
Interpretation
John Sterling
Joy
Kelmscott And William Morris
Knowledge
The Late Master Of Trinity
Leisure
Leucocholy
Life
Literary Finish
Literature And Life
The Love Of God
Memory
The Message
A Midsummer Day's Dream
A Minute Philosopher
Music
The Mystery Of Evil
The Mystery Of Suffering
The New Poets
On Growing Older
Optimism
Our Lack Of Great Men
Oxford
The Pleasures Of Work
Poetry
Poetry And Life
The Poetry Of Edmund Gosse
The Poetry Of Keble
The Point Of View
Portland
Prayer
Priests
The Principle Of Beauty
Progress
The Red Spring
Religion
Renewal
Retrospect
The Scene
Schooldays
Science
A Sealed Spirit
The Secret
The Sense Of Beauty
Serenity
The Shadow
Shapes Of Fear
Shyness
The Simple Life
Simplicity
Sin
Sociabilities
Specialism
A Speech Day
Spiritualism
Spring-Time
The Statue
A Strange Gathering
Sunset
Symbols
Sympathy
Tennyson, Ruskin, Carlyle
That Other One
Thomas Gray
Thought
Travel
Until The Evening
The Use Of Fear
Villages
Vincent Bourne
Visions
The Visitant
Vulnerability
Walt Whitman
The Well And The Chapel
William Blake
Wordsworth
Work
Young Love