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Ur-Hamlet

The Ur-Hamlet is the name given to a play, now lost, that was possibly extant before 1589, a decade before Shakespeare wrote his own Hamlet.

In 1589 Thomas Nashe implies the existence of such a play in his introduction to Robert Greene's Menaphon:

English Seneca read by candle-light yields many good sentences, as Blood is a begger, and so forth; and if you entreat him fair in a frosty morning, he will afford you whole Hamlets, I should say handfuls of tragical speeches.[1]

There is a record of a performance of Hamlet in 1594 in Philip Henslowe's diary and in 1596 Thomas Lodge wrote of "the ghost which cried so miserably at the theatre, like an oyster-wife, Hamlet, revenge!"[2] Nashe makes allusions to Thomas Kyd in the same passage and because of this and disputed similarities between the Shakespearean Hamlet and Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy, it is often posited that Kyd was the author of the Ur-Hamlet.[3]

However, with the absence of a copy of the play making stylistic and linguistic comparison impossible, there is no direct evidence of Kyd's authorship, nor is there any evidence the play was not an early version by Shakespeare himself. In this regard, a few orthodox Shakespeareans, including Harold Bloom, have accepted Peter Alexander's case that Shakespeare himself was the author of the Ur-Hamlet, and that the later play is a reworking by the author of one of his own earliest works.[4]This belief was also held by Prof. Alfred Cairncross, who stated that "It may be assumed, until a new case can be shown to the contrary, that Shakespeare's Hamlet and no other is the play mentioned by Nash in 1589 and Henslowe in 1594."[5] This view is upheld by anti-Stratfordians, who believe that there was no Ur-Hamlet, and that the references are merely signs that the Shakespearean Hamlet was written earlier than the generally accepted date, and revised on numerous occasions. [6] Harold Jenkins[7] dismisses this assertion.[8][9]

How much of the Ur-Hamlet, regardless of who its author was, survives or is utilised in the Shakespeare play is impossible to ascertain. Shakespeare may have ignored the play, using earlier versions of the "Amleth" (or "Hamblet") legend to put together the story (see Sources for Hamlet), and in the course of it inventing the ghost and much else. But the surviving references to the ur-Hamlet suggest it was well-known, at least to London writers such as Nashe and Lodge — and presumably to their fellow playwright Shakespeare. So it is possible that he used the contemporary play, perhaps in great detail, and took what else he needed from available versions of the old legend. He worked that way in other plays (most notably, Henry IV, Part 1, where he used Holinshed as well as an extant play).

Saxo Grammaticus wrote of Hamlet, Amleth or Amlóði (Norse for "mad", "not sane") in his Gesta Danorum some 400 years prior. It is believed the original tale was contained in the lost Skjöldunga saga and may have been a traditional Scandinavian tale.

See also


Notes

  1. ^ Nashe quoted in Jenkins, p.83
  2. ^ Jenkins, p.83
  3. ^ Jenkins, p.83-4
  4. ^ Bloom, pp. xiii, 383
  5. ^ Alfred F. Carincross, The Problem of Hamlet: A Solution, London, Mcmillan, 1936
  6. ^ Charlton Ogburn Jr., The Mystery of William Shakespeare, Cardinal, 1988,pg 631
  7. ^ "All students of Hamlet are in debt to Harold Jenkins for the results of his patient and exacting research." — Edwards, p. ix
  8. ^ Jenkins, p. 84, note 4
  9. ^ As Bloom is basing his opinion on the 1964 Alexander's Introduction to Shakespeare there is no reason to assume post-1982 (the year of Jenkins's book) scholarship has changed the terms of the argument.

References

  • Bloom, Harold, Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human. New York, 1998.
  • Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Philip Edwards, ed. Cambridge, 2003. Original Edition 1985. (New Cambridge Shakespeare)
  • Hamlet, Harold Jenkins, ed. Methuen & Co., 1982. (The Arden Shakespeare, Second Series)

 
 
 

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