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remark, keen satire, and high-toned irony of the dramatic Hamlet, no comparison can, of course, be instituted; but it is, nevertheless, observable, that ambiguous expressions and obscure allusions are resorted to by both characters, to induce a belief of insanity; that the imperfect assumption of madness is productive, in both cases, of the same results: a conviction that Hamlet only counterfeited madness; that the king's safety demanded the sacrifice of the prince's life; and a determination to send him to England, to meet a death treacherously prepared for him.

The Hystorie of Hamblet, then, contributes much towards the illustration of a character deemed peculiarly difficult. It assigns rational motives for actions otherwise unintelligible, and lays the foundation for the necessary distinction that has been made between the natural and artificial character of Hamlet; a clue to the interpretation of his actions which, carefully pursued, leaves little in his conduct dubious or obscure. Above all things, the reason for his deportment to Ophelia is explained.

The general adherence of Shakspeare to the novel necessitated him to engraft on his play the principal agents of the story. The dramatic importance of the queen is so small, that but for a curious question that has been raised relative

to the extent of her criminality, she would not require notice. Of her infidelity to her first husband there is no doubt: the ghost calls the usurper an adulterate beast," speaks of the queen's" seduction," and denominates her

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seeming virtuous.” * But the apparition does not even insinuate her privity to the murder. Hamlet, indeed, almost directly charges her with the crime t, but apparently without authority, for he neither reiterates nor attempts to prove his accusation. No sure conclusion can be drawn from the queen's exclamation ‡, for it may be as well considered as an ejaculation of horror at such an imputation, as of wonder at Hamlet's knowledge of her guilt. It is singular, that in the blackletter history the same point is left in equal ambiguity. In both works, the adultery is indisputable; and the black-letter history, therefore, justly calls the queen an "unfortunate and wicked woman." And with regard to the murder, it is alleged against her, that she married " him that had been the tyrannous murderer of her lawful husband; which made divers men think, that she had been the causer of the murder, thereby

*Act I. sc. 5.

+"Almost as bad, good mother,

As kill a king and marry with his brother."

Act III. sc. 4.

"As kill a king!"

to live in her adultery without control." In her interview with Hamlet, she solemnly protests against being insulted by the accusation of ever

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having consented to the death and murder of her husband; swearing by the majesty of the gods, that if it had lain in her to have resisted the tyrant, although it had been with the loss of blood, yea, and of life, she would surely have saved the life of her lord and husband." With the exception, therefore, of the omission of this extenuating declaration, Shakspeare left the character of the queen just such as he found it; but he has carefully heaped obloquy on the king, by ascribing to him nothing but low qualifications and disgustingly vicious propensities; a striking contrast, indeed, to the man whose perfections were such, that Hamlet had no hope of ever looking "on his like again."

In Polonius is, of course, recognized "the counsellor who entered secretly into the queen's chamber, and there hid himself behind the arras;" but it would be difficult to point out any further obligation of the poet to the history, for a character which boasts great originality in its conception and excellence in its execution. The commentators have not always been so successful as they proved themselves in their

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essays on this full-grown baby." Warburton ingeniously struck upon a right chord for the interpretation of the character; but he "gamboled from" it, when he should have pushed it to its application. With somewhat unusual candour, Johnson acknowledged his predecessor's merit, while he rectified his error; defining Polonius as "a man bred in courts, exercised in business, stored with observation, confident in his knowledge, proud of his eloquence, and declining into dotage. Such a man is positive and confident, because he knows his mind was once strong, and knows not that it is become weak. Such a man excels in general principles, but fails in the particular application. He is knowing in retrospect, and ignorant in foresight. While he depends upon his memory, and can draw from his repositories of knowledge, he utters weighty sentences, and gives useful counsel; but as the mind in its enfeebled state cannot be kept long busy and intent, the old man is subject to sudden dereliction of his faculties he loses the order of his ideas, and entangles himself in his own thoughts, till he recovers the leading principle, and falls again into his former train. This idea of dotage encroaching upon wisdom, will solve all the phoenomena of the character of Polonius. His

mode of oratory ridicules the practice of Shakspeare's times, of prefaces that made no introduction, and of method that embarrassed rather than explained."

As a prototype of "the most beautified Ophelia," must be quoted "the fair and beautiful woman employed to discover the intent and meaning of the young prince, by flattering speeches, and all the craftiest means she could. The lady, from her infancy, had loved and favoured Hamblet, who was himself wholly in affection for her." The skill with which Shakspeare has availed himself of this hint for the introduction of a female character is eminently deserving of notice. A young, delicate, and accomplished lady, tenderly loved by a prince who commanded the admiration of all hearts, but whose exalted station forbad even a hope that his vows could be listened to with honour, excites an interest which ripens into the deepest sympathy, when the preservation of his life forces on Hamlet the necessity of taunting, insulting, and upbraiding her. It was an additionally refined stroke of art to make Ophelia the daughter of Polonius. He who lately bowed in adoration to her charms, had just abjured his faith; the lips that had ever previously flowed with "words of sweetest breath,'

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