Layne Bolden
Though
on the surface setting may seem unimportant, it actually serves a larger
purpose than to provide a backdrop against which literary action takes place.
Setting has the power to inform the emotions and attitudes of the audience.
This proves incredibly relevant in plays; setting is even more important to the
narrative but often scarcely described. In works steeped in layers of meaning,
such as Hamlet, setting acts as a key
to perhaps unraveling some of these layers. Most of the action in Hamlet takes place in the castle, but
some of the most notable scenes occur in a nearby graveyard, and with good
reason. Placing such scenes as Act 5, Scene 1 in a graveyard emphasizes the
play’s obsession with questions of mortality and death.
In
many ways, the first scene of the final act mirrors the famous “To Be or Not To
Be” scene occurring earlier in the play, in which Hamlet, standing in the same
graveyard, contemplates whether or not life is worth living. Similarly, the
last scene before Hamlet’s death concerns itself with mortality and the
fleeting nature of life, but with an even greater sense of urgency, as if
Hamlet somehow knows his fate. This time, Hamlet also witnesses’ Ophelia’s
funeral and gets into a fight with her brother, Laertes, inside of her grave.
This fight within a grave at a funeral held in a graveyard is in and of itself
a layered instance of setting-related imagery that should cause the audience to
consider ideas such as death and what it actually means and whether or not it
is quite as significant as Hamlet and Laertes believe it to be. Consider the
context of the fight itself:
“HAMLET: [comes
forward] What is he whose grief
Bears such an
emphasis? whose phrase of sorrow
Conjures the
wand'ring stars, and makes them stand
Like wonder-wounded
hearers? This is I,
Hamlet the Dane.
[Leaps in after Laertes.]
LAERTES: The devil
take thy soul! [Grapples with him.]
HAMLET: Thou
pray'st not well.
I prithee take thy
fingers from my throat;
For, though I am
not splenitive and rash,
Yet have I in me something
dangerous,
Which let thy
wisdom fear. Hold off thy hand!”
The main focus in this passage
should be less on the words and more of the irony when considering the
characters’ attitudes in context with the larger events of the play, as well as
with the setting that frames them. Hamlet and Laertes are uncannily similar,
both young men unhealthily bent on revenge, both with a connection to the young
woman who recently committed suicide, and both eventually show themselves
willing to kill in order to get their revenge. Though they fight formally at a
later time, this is a powerful instance of no-holds-barred emotion and an
almost animalistic way of expressing it. The entire reason that this fight
seems so important is the fact that it takes place in a grave. On one level, it
shows that the two completely disregard everything around them in their desire
to attack one another. On another level, though, it foreshadows the outcome of
the pair’s second battle – Hamlet ending up in a grave of his own. Unrelated to
the actual events of the play, by having the two fight inside the grave of the
newly dead Ophelia, it shows a sort of disrespect to her, even though it is
likely that neither Hamlet nor Laertes would have intended it that way. In any
case, it should cause the audience to pause and wonder what, if anything,
Shakespeare is attempting to convey. Much of the play focuses on attitudes
toward life and death, and whether they really mean as much as one might think.
This fight provides a subtle nod to such attitudes; does Ophelia’s death really
mean that much if her grave serves no purpose but as a place for a fight
between two angry young men?
Whenever
an author employs setting with such specific connotations as a graveyard, the
audience should take notice. In Hamlet,
Shakespeare sets one of the most iconic scenes of all time – the “To Be or Not
To Be” scene – in a graveyard, but he also sets the second-to-last scene there
as well. By doing so, he instantly brings to mind ideas of life and death.
Against the larger thematic backdrop of the
play, one should wonder what this scene says about the significance of life and
death. The end of the scene gives a slight nod to the problem as Hamlet and
Laertes battle it out in Ophelia’s grave. No matter what the audience might
take away from the scene, one thing is for certain – it is not long before
Hamlet ends up back in that same graveyard, though under far different
circumstances.
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