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ORCHARD PRESS MYSTERIES, SHORT FICTION & POETRY |
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Orchard Press Online
Mystery Magazine Elementary,
My Dear Hamlet Copyright © 2001 David T. Jarvis. All rights reserved.
Preface
Among the papers discovered at my
family's ancestral estate was a curious manuscript proved to be more than five
hundred years old. Less certain is
its claim to contain the personal reminiscences of Hamlet of Denmark.
A cursory translation revealed this Hamlet's story to be quite different
from that popularized by Shakespeare, at least from intermission on.
I will summarize the original here for readers whose Shakespeare has
lapsed. Hamlet,
prince of the Danes, is feeling down because his father, the King, has died, and
his uncle, Claudius, has assumed the throne and married Hamlet's mother, the
dead King's widow. To make matters
worse, Hamlet is visited by what appears to be his father's ghost, who reveals
that Claudius murdered him (poison), and asks Hamlet to avenge his murder.
Hamlet hesitates. Unsure what to do, he arranges a play about murder to
be shown and is convinced by Claudius' reaction that he is indeed guilty.
That night, thinking Claudius to be hiding in his mother's closet, he
thrusts his knife through the curtain. Sadly,
the body in the closet turns out to be not Claudius but old Polonius, advisor to
the King and father to fair Ophelia, with whom Hamlet was at one time in love.
Claudius dispatches Hamlet to England, part of a scheme to have him executed
there; but Hamlet's capture and eventual release by pirates foil this plan. Our
hero returns to Denmark, reuniting with his trusted friend Horatio, and is told
that Ophelia has gone insane and drowned herself.
Claudius, still scheming to get rid of Hamlet, stages a sword-fighting
contest between Hamlet and Laertes, Polonius' son, in which Laertes will
secretly use a poisoned blade. Just
to make sure, Claudius also prepares a poisoned drink for Hamlet.
However, Hamlet's mother drinks it instead and dies.
Both Hamlet and Laertes are cut by the poisoned blade and die, but before
succumbing, Hamlet finally carries out his mission of vengeance and kills
Claudius. There
is also quite a bit of chatty dialog. The
linguist who completed the final translation published here suggested that in
some way both versions -- Shakespeare's
and this -- may be true, in some sort of metaphysical, "alternate
history" sense. I shall not
speculate on that but believe the story will yet be of interest.
Dr. Jane Watson
London, 2002 I. After Ophelia's Funeral
"So much for this," I panted.
"Now -- let me see ..."
"Good my lord ... 'Eat a crocodile'?
What was that about?"
"I was bereaved. I loved her."
"Yes. So I recall. 'Get thee to a nunnery'? Wasn't that what you told her?"
"Horatio, you wound me."
His voice softened. "My
lord, I know you wear an antic
disposition to fool your enemies. But
sometimes e'en I cannot tell which is for play, and which for show."
A lanky fellow, tallish for a Dane, with aquiline features and a hooked
nose, Horatio had been my constant friend since the years we shared rooms on
Bakker Street at school in Wittenberg. Even
now I could not be angry with him.
"Horatio, I have that within which passeth show.
Ophelia lies dead, and surely my murder of her father, and my heartless
words when last we spoke, did precipitate her drowning."
"Season your guilt for a while, my lord.
There are one or two bits about this business I find most curious."
"Indeed?"
He nodded, glancing behind us to make sure the crowd from Ophelia's
funeral was beyond earshot. "These
last few months I have developed to a keen pitch certain faculties of
observation that to me are now as natural as breathing but which often command
the admiration and amazement of others. For
example, have you ever seen the victim of a drowning?" "Why yes, in
the months I spent at sea."
"Did you observe any signs of it, my lord, in the late Ophelia's
body, just now, while you grappled with her brother Laertes in the grave?"
"No, but ... her fair and unpolluted flesh ..."
"Yes, yes. 'May violets
spring ...' "But soft now.
Who comes?"
A courtier entered and introduced himself as Osric.
He was a silly fellow in foppish dress, with dark hair and beard, and
too-ancient eyes. He told us that Claudius the King had wagered that in a
friendly exchange of swordplay I would best Laertes. I agreed to come
immediately and make a try of it.
"Dost thou know this water-fly?" I asked Horatio, as Osric
left.
"No, my good lord." I could tell from
his expression he was concerned about the match. "Since
Laertes went into France I have been in continual practice," I assured him.
"And I often fenced with the pirates."
"You will lose this wager, my lord."
"I shall win at the odds. Besides,
Horatio ... there's a special providence in the fall of a sparrow." He raised an
eyebrow. "Not for the
sparrow." II.
To Be Or Not To Be
"A hit," announced Osric.
"A very palpable hit."
Osric was getting on my nerves. But
I was enjoying the match, my skill in good form.
Laertes and I played in the courtyard, surrounded by nobles and lords. The son of
Polonius, who had been advisor to both my father and my uncle, Laertes was about
my age: a little under thirty. Though
I had not known him well -- his schooling had been mostly in France -- I had
hoped friendship might yet bloom between us.
Those hopes died when I accidentally killed his father.
Before the match
I did my best to put a good face on our conflict, explaining to him that I had
shot my arrow over a house and hurt my brother.
He did not seem to take this well, perhaps because what I had actually
done was stab his father. Still, he
was a good fellow. A brisk round of
swordplay might just patch things up between us.
"Hamlet, here's to thy health," said Claudius, pouring a cup
for me.
"I'll play this bout first." I would sooner drink poison than accept wine from that bloody, bawdy villain.
"Set it by."
Laertes and I resumed and I scored another hit.
In the corner of my eye I saw Horatio standing amongst the applauding
nobles, his eyes fixed on my uncle.
My mother raised the cup the King had poured for me moments before.
"The Queen carouses to thy fortune."
"Madam, do not drink," protested Claudius.
"I will
drink it, my lord, I ... you clumsy
oaf!"
Laertes and I halted to see what had happened. "I apologize
most heartily, Madam." Horatio
dropped a cloth over a spilled puddle of wine and a broken goblet.
"I merely sought a better view of the action." "No harm
done," grunted Claudius, surprisingly calm.
Almost relieved. "Bring
her another cup." We resumed.
"Nothing, either way," reported Osric, presently. "Good
friends!" shouted Horatio suddenly. "Might
I suggest a custom enjoyed in my home village?" All eyes turned
to him in surprise, mine included. "After three
rounds," he explained, "the fencers exchange foils!" I stared daggers
at him. How was this supposed to help me? Claudius made to
protest. The Queen cut him off,
clapping her hands. "Excellent!
Let it be done!" Laertes'
expression suggested he was even less enthused about this new development than
I. We made the
exchange and began anew. I was
unused to the heavier weapon and Laertes took advantage of my hesitation, using
my own sword to make a slight cut to my wrist.
Osric reported it gleefully, and something in his voice reminded me of
someone. But I had the
feel of Laertes' sword now, and was eager to try again. "Come on,
then!" Laertes paled.
"I ... forfeit," he said, to everyone's astonishment.
Backing out of the courtyard, he added, "I have a headache."
For a man who had
just won a bet, the King did not look pleased. III.
Frailty, Thy Name is Woman My mother's
closet. Behind the arras,
just where Polonius had hidden, after the players' diversion had ended in chaos
that fateful night, with Claudius calling for light, his fratricide exposed ... to Horatio and me, at least. Poor Polonius.
He only intended to serve his lord as best he knew.
When I questioned my mother, perhaps too roughly, and Polonius cried out,
I thought Claudius was hiding there. Hasty
for my o'er delayed revenge, I thrust my dagger through the tapestry.
But moments later we found not Claudius but his trusted advisor, dead,
features frozen in his death agonies, a spray of blood across his clothing. I wondered if
bloodstains yet remained. Detecting the slightest aroma of wine, I saw shreds of
rotten fruit on the floor. In the richly woven Flemish tapestry that had
concealed Polonius, I found the gash made by my poniard. Voices.
I edged against
the back wall. "Madame, for
this interview I do give thee thanks," I heard Horatio say.
"Laertes did heartily wish for a better understanding of his
sister's untimely death. As a
friend of the family he felt I might be better suited for this
questioning." "As my
husband has said, when sorrow visits this castle it comes not single spies, but
in whole battalions," my mother commented.
I heard her sweep into the room as she does. "If there is aught I can do to ease the pain my family
has brought his, I welcome it." "Ophelia was
hopelessly insane, then?" "You saw her
yourself." "My poor
memory does not always serve, Madam. Can
you recall her words, that last day we saw her?" "The chatter
of a child. Meaningless." "Nonetheless." My mother's voice
took on a familiar irritation, but she answered.
"She sang of flowers. This phrase remains with me: And will he not come again? No, no, he is dead Go to thy death-bed He never will come again." "And you
never saw her alive again, Madame?" "Yes.
I mean, no.
As I told you all before ... she was in the willow beside the brook.
The branch broke, sending her in her heavy garments into the weeping
brook, which pulled her to a muddy death." "You
witnessed her drowning, then?" "I ...
yes." "And no one
else was present." "Yes. I see not the
purpose ..." "Was it
quick, Madam?" "As I told
you before, she sang snatches of old tunes.
It took some time ..." "You made no
attempt to find assistance?" "Sir!"
She paused.
"I dislike your tone. Shall
we continue this interview in the King's presence?" "Indeed.
I welcome the opportunity to discuss Ophelia's murder with the head of
our state." "Murder?" "Murder most
foul, Madam." "You accuse
your Queen of lying?" "I seek the
truth. There are developments of
which you are unaware. This
morning, by the highest authority, I had Ophelia's body exhumed and
examined." Ophelia's
grave, disturbed?
I caught the cry before it escaped my lips.
I had given Horatio no such authority ... but break my heart, for I must be silent. Horatio had
previously wrung from me by laborsome petition my promise that I would remain
so, feeling the questioning best done by him alone. "And?"
Her tone had changed now. "And it was
clear that this young woman had not drowned. There were signs of a forced death
... of another sort." Now my mother was
silent. "Madam, I
suggest you tell me what you know." "I can tell
you nothing." "Surely ..." "This is
enough!" I cried, stepping into view.
My mother stared at me, startled, as if I, too, had returned from the
dead. "There was no need to disturb Ophelia's grave, Horatio!" "My good
lord," Horatio said coldly. "I
did but attempt a ruse, on the basis of what I call a 'hunch'.
Which was about to bear fruit." I stared.
"Oh." "But if you
knew about his questions ... then ... ah, heaven."
She slumped onto her couch. "Who are you
protecting, Madame?" Horatio demanded. She was still
looking at me. "Hamlet ... you, also, seek the truth about Ophelia's death?" "Of
course!" She sighed.
"I have wronged you indeed. Sit down, gentleman, and let me tell you
what really happened that day."
She paused to
collect her thoughts. "I often
take my tea beside that same brook. I
like a little time to myself each day. That
afternoon, when I arrived, I found Ophelia dead, not drowned as I told everyone
later, but strangled, on the ground
beside the willow. The marks on her
throat were clear." She looked
sadly at me. "My son, I am
sorry, but I believed you had killed her." "Me?
How could
thou?" "My son ... before you departed for England, your words were wild and whirling. I did not
yet know that time had calmed you. I
assumed, unfairly I do now acknowledge, that you had returned home and quarreled
with her as before, and that in rage you had killed her too." I winced at the
word "too", a reminder I had slain Ophelia's father in this very room. "But
madam," Horatio protested gently. "When
Ophelia was killed, you believed Hamlet still in England." "No.
On my way to inform the castle of Ophelia's murder, a messenger met me to
tell me there had been a letter from Hamlet, a letter both strange and
threatening, and that Hamlet was here in Denmark."
Her face dropped. "So I
returned to her body, covered her neck with flowers, and dragged her into the
brook, while working out the details in my mind of the story I told everyone
later. I am sorry, Hamlet." I barely heard
her. Someone had murdered
Ophelia. Not suicide.
Not an accident. Murder. And I had a good
idea who that someone probably was. Bloody, bawdy villain! I held my mother
for a moment. "Good lady, fear not. You
acted on my behalf, and Ophelia was beyond your help. But I must avenge her
death." "Hamlet,
no!" I shook off her
embrace. "Now could I drink hot blood." "First it's
crocodiles, now hot blood," commented Horatio. "You must learn to control these appetites, my
lord." "You mock
me." He shook his
head. "Old friend, Uncle
Shylock once told me that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever
remains, however improbable, must be the truth.
But O day and night, I fear the truth my investigation leads me toward
may be wondrous strange." "There are
more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your
philosophy." "I doubt
it," he muttered, but his eyes had taken on the look of someone lost in
thought. I left them.
It was time for
Claudius to die. IV.
And Be A Villain "You serve a
false king," I told the lords and officers assembled in the State Room,
striding down the length of the long table.
"Claudius seized the throne by murder of my father." Claudius rose
from his place at the head of the table. "Officers,
hold him." Marcellus and
Bernardo, officers of the guard and friends well known to me, appeared, weapons
ready. "This
usurper has no right to the crown and dishonors our state by its wearing,"
I told them all. "It has been
made known to me that he murdered my father Hamlet by loosing a vial of cursed
hebenon in his ear, whilst he slept." The room erupted
into murmurs and more than one whisper of confirmed suspicion.
The well-repeated rumor "stung by a serpent" caught my ear. "Aye, that
is what you were told. And there stands the serpent himself! "Bernardo
and Marcellus, you bar the path of the rightful heir to the throne of Denmark.
Now let me pass.
By Heaven, I'll make a ghost of the man who stops me." They nodded and
stepped aside. I strode to
Claudius and drew my dagger. "Confess
the deed now or die unrepentant." Claudius was
almost relieved. "It's true,
Hamlet. I murdered your father.
God have mercy on my soul." Explosions of
outrage behind me. "And
Ophelia?" "What ...
what of her? She's dead." And as surely as
I'd known him guilty of my father's murder when he blanched at the play, I now
knew him to be innocent of hers. Perhaps Horatio would yet solve that question.
But whether for one murder or two, Claudius still deserved to die. And now could I
do it. ... or could I?
I might ease my
father's soul by Claudius' killing, but what burden would I impose on my own?
Suddenly the deepest cause for all my warring hesitations was clear.
If Man was indeed to be more than a quintessence of dust, more than a
beast without discourse of reason, then could he kill without provocation?
Removed from his stolen throne, surely Claudius must be ... but
slaughtered, the more quickly to enter blessed Eternity? I dropped the
hand that clenched my dagger and turned my back on him. And saw
Marcellus, a shout of warning on his lips, and a hand raised in alarm ... Some instinct
brought me low and I felt the whisper of Claudius' blade over my head.
I turned, bringing my own weapon up ... ... and pierced
his heart. "Wait,"
he whispered. "Wait ... there
is another ..." Claudius fell to
the ground, dead. Free!
I had fulfilled
my father's vengeance. Free at last. I left the chaos
of the State Room and paced madly, blindly, through corridors, consumed with
wonder at his final, mysterious words, barely conscious that someone followed. When the blow
came I had just time to realize that this was perhaps the one occasion on which I should have hesitated.
At least until
Claudius had finished his sentence. The
rest is silence. V.
All The World's A Stage I woke with a
piercing headache and discomfort in my arms, seated in a forgotten dungeon of
the castle. A face pressed
itself near mine, startling me. The
eyes were old and familiar. A moment later I
recognized the dark hair and beard of Osric the courtier. "You
live," he grunted. I understood the
discomfort in my arms now; they were bound behind the chair.
"What is the meaning of this, Osric?" "The meaning
should be clear. You are my
prisoner." "Then you
struck me!" He nodded. "But
why?" He smiled.
"I'll answer that. Someone should appreciate the great efforts I have expended upon
this enterprise." "What could you
..." "You
underestimate me, my lord Hamlet, as I have always intended. I sit motionless,
like a spider in the center of its web, a web with a thousand radiations, each
quiver well known to me. In the
years I 'served' your father and uncle, I wove a fabric of trusted agents and
confidants in the castle and in the service of the royal family, agents who
reported to, and were loyal to me -- Reynaldo, for example -- all awaiting the
right moment. For dog will have his
day." "What
years?" I worked my wrists as
I spoke, hoping to loosen the cords. "I
never saw you before this ..." "Guildenstern
and Rosencrantz, for example. You
inconvenienced me, dispatching them in England." "What ... what do you want, Osric?" "The dukedom
of Elsinore, no less. You have
heard Fortinbras is on the march?" "Of course.
He has been granted passage through our lands, on route to exploits in
Poland." "So you were
led to believe. Did you really
think this hot-mettled lad would so smilingly kneel to Norway?"
He laughed. "My agents
have been in constant communication with him.
My task was to create chaos within Castle Elsinore, to weaken the royal
family before his arrival." "And
his?" "To crown
himself King of Denmark upon his arrival. Which
I anticipate any day now." "'To weaken the royal family's rule' ?" "To set
brother against brother, uncle against nephew. Divide and conquer." I stared at him
through dawning understanding. "Thou
art no mere courtier!" "Indeed not,
my lord," said a familiar voice. "He
is the Alexander of Crime." "Horatio!"
I strained my neck to see him enter through a passageway, ducking his head as he
did so. But my spirits
fell when I realized he too was a prisoner, a sword at his back. Laertes appeared,
carrying the sword. "I caught
him exploring the nearby passageways, Father," he said. With
shock, I turned back ... ... to see that
Osric had disappeared, and Polonius now stood in his place. VI.
Murder Will Speak "So you took
me for my 'better', that night, eh?" He set aside the
beard and wig he had worn until just now, his voice losing the affectations of a
foppish courtier. "In my youth
I played many roles at the university and was accounted a good actor.
That, along with more than a little facility with paints, powders and
wigs, was a skill I never lost. It
allowed me to insert myself back into Claudius' court after my 'death', with a
signed letter of recommendation from -- who else? -- Polonius." "But I stabbed
you! I saw you die!" "Did
you?" asked Horatio. "Did
you feel his pulse, my lord? Test his breathing?" "You stabbed
but a piece of fruit on the table in your lady's closet, behind the arras,"
Polonius said scornfully. "Your mother, my lord, is a woman of hearty
appetites." "Sir!"
I blushed. "I meant
merely that she keeps quite a supply of food and wine in her closet.
My mind worked quickly when you attacked that tapestry.
In truth I did fear for my life. If
you struck out once you might again, and there was no exit from the lady's
closet save past you in your fury. I
noticed then that the nearby wine was of such a color it might acceptably pass
for blood. Therefore I shouted, 'I
am slain', splashed wine upon my doublet, and knocked the fruit out of view as I
fell. "I have in
my time studied the writings of Eastern philosophers, and one gem I discovered
there is a technique of slowing one's breathing, aye, even one's heartbeat,
sufficiently to convince the casual observer that life has departed.
This technique I employed upon you and the Queen that night with great
success. Later, after your temper
had calmed, it occurred to me that it might be convenient to remain 'dead' until
Claudius was out of the way, and Fortinbras securely on the throne." "But later
... surely, the soldiers ... the priests, sent to bury you?" "All my own
agents. Who did your uncle send to
retrieve the body?" I grimaced,
remembering. "Guildenstern and
Rosencrantz!" "There is
little doubt of your genius, sir," said Horatio with affected admiration.
"Perhaps you would tell us the rest of the tale?" Polonius nodded.
"You know that Claudius placed poison in the elder Hamlet's ear ...
but who, do you think, told him to do it?" I struggled with
my bonds. "There is something rotten in the state of Denmark, sir, and I
know who it is!" "And 'uncle
against nephew'?" Horatio prompted. Polonius smiled
broadly. "The greatest of my
triumphs." He slipped into
another chamber and shortly returned, carrying a sable-silvered wig and false
beard. Putting them on, he repeated
the words I had heard months earlier, in the dead of night: "I
am thy father's spirit, doom'd for a certain term to walk the night." "Oh,
God!" I cried. "I thought
it might have been a demon, assuming a more pleasing form ..." "Blame not
thy royal self, Hamlet," consoled Horatio.
"I did in part believe it too. Yet these last two days I began to
perceive the truth. It seemed only
too convenient that a courtier unknown to both Hamlet and myself should have
become part of Claudius' court so soon upon Polonius' death.
And when I posed questions regarding Polonius' burial and interment, the
answers I received were tellingly incomplete." "Sir, you
swore an oath of loyalty to my father!" Polonius made a
face. "Fie upon it. To thine own self
be true, I always say." "'And as the night follows the day ..." Laertes muttered. Horatio cleared
his throat. "But why did you
kill Ophelia?" Polonius lost his
smile. "That ... that was not
by design. She saw through this façade.
It unhinged her. Having
already mourned my death, she thought me the ghost of her father.
A common occurrence in Elsinore, it would seem.
This was followed by anger as her sanity began to return.
By the brook that day she told me she would expose me and clear Hamlet's
name. Foolish girl.
I struggled with her ... too roughly.
"When I
realized she was dead, I ran." He shot a
malevolent glance at Horatio. "Hamlet
I would leave alive until Fortinbras' arrival, but regarding your life I am
under no such constraint. Kill him,
Laertes." Laertes was as
much taken aback by the command as I. He
had been staring at the floor during the telling of his sister's murder, and his
blade had drifted. But Horatio was
ready. He lithely sidestepped
as Laertes raised the blade and caught Laertes' right arm between his knee and
fist, dislodging his grip. As the
weapon clattered to the floor, Horatio drew Laertes' own dagger.
Pulling his arm behind him in a powerful grip, he pressed the blade to
Laertes' throat. "Release
Hamlet, sir, or your son shall die." Horatio
is being naïve, I thought. Even now Polonius was grasping
a war-ax from the wall behind him. And those ropes
that held my arms were not quite loosed. But
Polonius had not tied my feet. I leaped up,
bolts of fire shooting through my too-long inactive legs.
Spinning around, I battered Polonius with the chair still tied to me as
he turned, pinning him against the wall. I took two steps away and hurled myself
back. This time I felt his body
crumple against the stones. The loosened
cords gave way and the chair fell from my back. I whirled, ready
for a fight. But Polonius lay
in a broken and bloody heap, his own ax embedded in his side. In a heartbeat I
held Laertes' own rapier at his throat. Horatio
stepped away. "Stay your
hand for a brief request, noble Hamlet," Laertes pleaded. I nodded. "Only
this," he gulped. "Forgiveness.
I sought to kill you at the match that day.
My sword tip was poisoned, as was the cup your mother almost drank." "Just as I
suspected!" crowed Horatio. "My lord,
that day I believed you had unjustly killed my father.
I acted with the hot temper of a loving son. Since then I have had occasion to regret my error."
He closed his eyes. "Kill
me quickly." I shook my head.
"There has been too much ill will between our families already.
Laertes, take a horse and ride north to meet Fortinbras. Tell him to turn
back whilst he can or face my strengthened armies, for we shall be ready for
him. If he lets you live, you have
a place in my court. I swear it." Gratefully,
Laertes left. A sound told us
that Polonius still lived. We hastened to
him. I pressed water from a flask I carried to his pale lips. "Old man ...
I confess admiration for your skills, if not your intentions. But still I have one question. "How could
you appear once more as my father's ghost while you lay counterfeiting death on
the floor nearby, that night in my mother's chamber?" His
uncomprehending gaze met mine and he opened his mouth as if to ask a question.
But it remained unasked, his eyes open, still staring, but now forever
blind. Polonius was
dead. VII.
Readiness is All I was quickly
crowned King, and the next few days were spent in hastily resumed preparations
for battle. Within the month, my armies and I defeated young Fortinbras and sent
him home. I never saw
Laertes again. Horatio stood by
me through the transition to my new government, advising me with much wisdom. But one day he
announced his departure. "You have a
place here, sir," I told him. "I
shall make you a lord." "Noble
Hamlet, I am more antique Roman than Dane.
I thank thee heartily, but I have a thirst to see England. By the by, I perceive you had eggs for breakfast." In the end I
could not dissuade him, though he did accept a generous gift from the royal
treasury for the service he had rendered our kingdom. Today as I write
these words the castle and my homeland are quiet.
If any ghosts endure, I pray their rest be easy. And I heartily wish Godspeed to him who I shall ever regard as the best, the bravest, and the wisest man I have ever known. Contact the Author - DavidTJarvis@yahoo.com |
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