Delphi Collected Works of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe \(Illustrated\) pdfdrive com



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Delphi Collected Works of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Illustrated) ( PDFDrive )

CHAPTER XI.

The forenoon and the afternoon fled rapidly away. The playhouse was already

full: our friend hastened to dress. It was not with the joy which it had given him

when he first essayed it, that he now put on the garb of Hamlet: he only dressed

that he might be in readiness. On his joining the women in the stage-room, they

unanimously cried that nothing sat upon him right; the fine feather stood awry;

the buckle of his belt did not fit: they began to slit, to sew, and piece together.

The music started: Philina still objected somewhat to his ruff; Aurelia had much

to  say  against  his  mantle.  “Leave  me  alone,  good  people,”  cried  he:  “this

negligence will make me liker Hamlet.” The women would not let him go, but

continued trimming him. The music ceased: the acting was begun. He looked at

himself in the glass, pressed his hat closer down upon his face, and retouched the

painting of his cheeks.

At this instant somebody came rushing in, and cried, “The Ghost! the Ghost!”

Wilhelm had not once had time all day to think of the Ghost, and whether it

would  come  or  not.  His  anxiety  on  that  head  was  at  length  removed,  and  now

some strange assistant was to be expected. The stage-manager came in, inquiring

after various matters: Wilhelm had not time to ask about the Ghost; he hastened

to  present  himself  before  the  throne,  where  King  and  Queen,  surrounded  with

their court, were already glancing in all the splendors of royalty, and waiting till

the  scene  in  front  of  them  should  be  concluded.  He  caught  the  last  words  of

Horatio,  who  was  speaking  of  the  Ghost,  in  extreme  confusion,  and  seemed  to

have almost forgotten his part.

The  intermediate  curtain  went  aloft,  and  Hamlet  saw  the  crowded  house

before him. Horatio, having spoken his address, and been dismissed by the King,

pressed  through  to  Hamlet;  and,  as  if  presenting  himself  to  the  Prince,  he  said,

“The Devil is in harness: he has put us all in fright.”

In the  mean  while,  two  men  of large  stature,  in  white  cloaks  and capouches,

were  observed  standing  in  the  side-scenes.  Our  friend,  in  the  distraction,

embarrassment,  and  hurry  of  the  moment,  had  failed  in  the  first  soliloquy;  at

least,  such  was  his  own  opinion,  though  loud  plaudits  had  attended  his  exit.

Accordingly,  he  made  his  next  entrance  in  no  pleasant  mood,  with  the  dreary

wintry feeling of dramatic condemnation. Yet he girded up his mind, and spoke

that appropriate passage on the “rouse and wassail,” the “heavy-headed revel” of

the Danes, with suitable indifference; he had, like the audience, in thinking of it,

quite forgotten the Ghost; and he started, in real terror, when Horatio cried out,




“Look,  my  lord!  it  comes!”  He  whirled  violently  round;  and  the  tall,  noble

figure, the low, inaudible tread, the light movement in the heavy-looking armor,

made  such  an  impression  on  him,  that  he  stood  as  if  transformed  to  stone,  and

could  utter  only  in  a  half-voice  his  “Angels  and  ministers  of  grace  defend  us!”

He glared at the form, drew a deep breathing once or twice, and pronounced his

address to the Ghost in a manner so confused, so broken, so constrained, that the

highest art could not have hit the mark so well.

His translation of this passage now stood him in good stead. He had kept very

close  to  the  original,  in  which  the  arrangement  of  the  words  appeared  to  him

expressive of a mind confounded, terrified, and seized with horror: —

“‘Be  thou  a  spirit  of  health,  or  goblin  damn’d,  Bring  with  thee  airs  from

heaven, or blasts from hell, Be thy intents wicked, or charitable, Thou com’st in

such a questionable shape, That I will speak to thee: I’ll call thee Hamlet, King,

father, royal Dane: oh, answer me!’“

A  deep  effect  was  visible  in  the  audience.  The  Ghost  beckoned,  the  Prince

followed him amid the loudest plaudits.

The  scene  changed:  and,  when  the  two  had  re-appeared,  the  Ghost,  on  a

sudden, stopped, and turned round; by which means Hamlet came to be a little

too close upon it. With a longing curiosity, he looked in at the lowered visor; but

except  two  deep-lying  eyes,  and  a  well-formed  nose,  he  could  discern  nothing.

Gazing timidly, he stood before the Ghost; but when the first tones issued from

the helmet, and a somewhat hoarse, yet deep and penetrating, voice, pronounced

the  words,  “I  am  thy  father’s  spirit,”  Wilhelm,  shuddering,  started  back  some

paces;  and  the  audience  shuddered  with  him.  Each  imagined  that  he  knew  the

voice: Wilhelm thought he noticed in it some resemblance to his father’s. These

strange emotions and remembrances, the curiosity he felt about discovering his

secret  friend,  the  anxiety  about  offending  him,  even  the  theatric  impropriety  of

coming  too  near  him  in  the  present  situation,  all  this  affected  Wilhelm  with

powerful  and  conflicting  impulses.  During  the  long  speech  of  the  Ghost,  he

changed  his  place  so  frequently,  he  seemed  so  unsettled  and  perplexed,  so

attentive and so absent-minded, that his acting caused a universal admiration, as

the  Spirit  caused  a  universal  horror.  The  latter  spoke  with  a  feeling  of

melancholy  anger,  rather  than  of  sorrow;  but  of  an  anger  spiritual,  slow,  and

inexhaustible.  It  was  the  mistemper  of  a  noble  soul,  that  is  severed  from  all

earthly things, and yet devoted to unbounded woe. At last he vanished, but in a

curious  manner;  for  a  thin,  gray,  transparent  gauze  arose  from  the  place  of

descent, like a vapor, spread itself over him, and sank along with him.

Hamlet’s friends now entered, and swore upon the sword. Old Truepenny, in




the mean time, was so busy under ground, that, wherever they might take their

station, he was sure to call out right beneath them, “Swear!” and they started, as

if the soil had taken fire below them, and hastened to another spot. On each of

these occasions, too, a little flame pierced through at the place where they were

standing. The whole produced on the spectators a profound impression.

After  this,  the  play  proceeded  calmly  on  its  course:  nothing  failed;  all

prospered; the audience manifested their contentment, and the actors seemed to

rise in heart and spirits every scene.





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