Prince of Denmark

David Brooks
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

At the very end of Hamlet Fortinbras pronounces the following epitaph on the hero: Let four captains Bear Hamlet like a soldier to the stage, For he was likely, had he been put on, To have proved most royal; and for his passage The soldier's music and the rite of war Speak loudly for him. What are we to think of this? Do we think it is true? Does it matter whether we think it is true or not? Shakespeare has been thought to be rather cavalier in ending his plays. Once the protagonist is dead, the play has to be wound up as quickly as possible, and someone must say the necessary things that will allow the remaining characters to get off the stage. In this case Fortinbras says what a Renaissance prince might be expected to say of another Renaissance prince. So, is the speech merely perfunctory? Or does Hamlet's princeliness matter? Does it rightly receive the final emphasis of the play?
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丹麦王子
在《哈姆雷特》剧终时,福丁布拉斯为这位英雄宣读了如下的墓志铭:让四位上尉像士兵一样把哈姆雷特抬上舞台,因为,如果他被推上舞台,他很可能是最高贵的;士兵的音乐和战争的仪式为他大声疾呼。我们该怎么想呢?我们认为这是真的吗?我们认为它是真的还是假的重要吗?人们认为莎士比亚在剧终时相当随意。一旦主角死了,这出戏必须尽快结束,必须有人说些必要的话,让剩下的角色离开舞台。在这种情况下,福廷布拉斯说了一个文艺复兴时期的王子可能会对另一个文艺复兴时期的王子说的话。那么,演讲仅仅是敷衍了事吗?或者哈姆雷特的王子身份重要吗?它是否正确地得到了戏剧的最后强调?
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