[Sound of shooting] Hamlet: what NOW? Osric: invasion maybe? (5.2.333-336) #InkyCloak #SlowShakespeare

(A march afar off [and a sound of shooting])

HAMLET         What warlike noise is this?

Enter OSRIC.

OSRIC Young Fortinbras with conquest come from Poland

To th’ambassadors of England gives

This warlike volley.   (5.2.333-336)

The stage has shrunk and shrunk, all eyes now on the dying Hamlet, cradled by his distraught friend Horatio—so there’s a particular violence and violation in the noise, drums, perhaps trumpets, and even the sound of shooting, which Hamlet (even in extremis) queries: what warlike noise is this? (what NOW?) Is this part of the conspiracy, a coup, something else? (In modern dress there can be the sound of helicopters; in film, paratroopers, marines abseiling in.) But the world has rushed into this intimate scene, like a shock of cold water, a blast of wind through a broken window. Osric brings the news: young Fortinbras with conquest come from Poland to th’ambassadors of England gives this warlike volley. It’s so PLOTTY: Fortinbras, named in the very first scene, encountered what seems like aeons ago, marching—but he’s here, he’s back, and he seems to be taking charge, greeting the English ambassadors (who?? oh yes, there was an abortive trip to England for Hamlet) with the sound of cannon. The interruption of emotion with story, the intrusion of such vastly different concerns—politics! war!—featuring unknown or anonymous characters—is beyond jarring, it’s a kind of cognitive violence. Everyone is exhausted, characters and audience, and now this? All that confusion, that overload—that’s a powerful, audacious dramatic effect, putting the audience in the position where they too cannot take anything more. There are very good reasons to cut Fortinbras and the ambassadors. But it’s a shame.

View 3 comments on “[Sound of shooting] Hamlet: what NOW? Osric: invasion maybe? (5.2.333-336) #InkyCloak #SlowShakespeare

  1. I can’t cut this bit! After ‘To tell my story’ he drinks the last dregs from the cup he has wrestled from Horatio -he can’t spill it on the floor for Horatio to lick, but also he’s in agreement with his death. As he is drinking he hears the warlike noise. Osric’s response provides a neat amount of time for this extra poison to take effect.

    1. Oh I don’t think he needs more poison even, but absolutely possible. The speed of the deaths of Claudius and Gertrude suggest that the poison in the cup is extremely fast acting, faster than the poisoned rapier? and he gets more time than either of them, as does Laertes. But in performance, no one’s going to quibble with choices I think!

  2. Not that he needs more poison but rather that he needs to make his own contribution to his death in the same way that each assassin needs to plunge their dagger in to Caesar. Also what else is he going to do with the cup in his hand😊!

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