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Monday 6 May 2013

“HAMLET”--AN ARTISTIC FAILURE:

T.S. Eliot In his essay entitled “Hamlet and his Problems” has written about Hamlet. So farfrom being Shakespeare’s mater-piece, the play is most certainly an artistic failure.” Hehas called the play the “Mona Lisa of Literature”, something puzzling and disquieting.According to him, there are many superfluous and inconsistent scenes in the play and assuch it lacks the unity of action. Then, he says, in this play, workmanship and thought arein an’ unstable condition which is an artistic defect.These objections are based on T.S; Eliot’s much controversial idea of “objectivecorrelative”. The defects in Hamlet arc the result of the absence of the objective correlative.He ‘believes that the only w of expressing emotion in the form of art is by finding anobjective correlative, in other words a set of objects, a situation, a chain of events whichshall be the formula of that particular’ emotion, and which shall evoke the same emotionfrom the reader. In Eliot’s opinion, Hamlet is dominated by an emotion which isinexpressible because it is in excess of the facts as they appear.Eliot’s objections can be answered easily. He is in the habit of expressing starting opinionand sometimes does not follow them himself. His idea of subjective correlative is vague as itfalsifies the way a poet actually composes. No object or situation can in itself be a, formulafor any emotion. No doubt, the play is puzzling as the problems of delay madness andghosts have been subjects of much discussion. But it is also a fact that’ every poses of artposes a challenge and demands thinking. Eliot’s own poem “The Waste Land” has not beenless puzzling. The objection that there are many superfluous scenes relates to theconstruction of plot. No doubt, there are many such scenes but they are interwoventhematically and as such nothing remains superfluous.In fact, if we have a deep study of the play and keep in view the delineation of the complexcharacter of Hamlet, artistic construction of the play, consistent theme and the beautifullanguage used in the speeches, we are compelled to conclude that Hamlet is a master-pieceof dramatic art.
Plot:
As regards plot of the play, it has a definite form and obeys the laws of dramaticconstruction arid is regarded as a well constructed play. The action of the whole play fallsinto three movements, and has a beginning, middle and an end. The first movementexposes the crime and the culprit, the Polonius family is linked to the main action and itvoices the secondary theme: “Frailty thy name is woman”. The second movement shows thedevelopment in Hamlet’s character and the enacting of the play to confirm Claudius’sguilt, and his two tragic errors---not killing Claudius, and killing Polonius, Hamlet who hasto avenge his father’s death, becomes a victim of revenge by another son, for killing afather. The final movement brings the action to an end along with the death of Hamlet,Laertes, Claudius and Gertrude. So we see there is a gradual development in the progressof the plot Hamlet deteriorates in character as the progresses, but regains his lost balanceof mind with an added strength at the end of the play before he dies.
Characterization:
As regards characterization, the character of. Hamlet is the chief attraction of the play. Hamlet’s personality is as complex as an undetected murder. He iscontrasted with obedient, prying Polonius, smiling but villainous Claudius, SheepishGertrude, poor, lovable Ophelia, faithful Horatio active Laertes and the strong mindedbrave Fortinbras The audience and the readers share his feelings. We laugh at Osric withhim at, reprove Gertrude with him, curse with him Claudius, and speak friendly to Horatiowith him. In him we have a speculative man “caught in ethical and metaphysicaluncertainties.” He assumes madness as a device to give vent to his feelings but at times heseems truly mad. These contradictions add to the beauty of artistic quality rather thanspoil it.
Thematic Coherence:
Hamlet is much praised for its thematic coherence and structuralunity. The main theme is revenge--- a son avenging the murder of his father. This themedepicts the character of the hero, the development or deterioration in his character, thesuccess or failure in carrying out the work, and the means he adopts to achieve his aimScenes like play within play, nunnery scene, Fortinbras incident, graveyard scene, whichappear to be superfluous, become relevant through the theme of the play.
 
 

Beautiful Speeches:
Then we have very beautiful speeches in this play Soliloquies of Hamlet, Claudius and Ophelia have been used as dramatic device to reveal the inner mindof a character. But they have a beauty of their own. The language used in them is terse,pithy and fluent. They are full of quotable lines and phrases like “to be or not to be”, “theundiscovered country”, “the unweeded garden”, “the native hue of resolution”, “bestialobliviousness”, “the glass of fashion and mold of form”To sum up, like other plays of Shakespeare, Hamlet may be criticized on some groundssuch as the artificial role of chance, puzzling relationship of Horatio to Denmark, Hamlet’sage and many other loose ends But taken as whole, far from being an artistic failure,Hamlet is a well-constructed play which appeals to the imagination and intellect of theaudience and reader alike.

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