Tuesday, March 04, 2014

And My Poor Fool Is Hang'd! .... Or Is He?

You may have noticed this week that Caitlin Griffin's 2012 "Everbody Dies" poster has gone viral (again) this week. Caitlin's been a reader/contributor to this blog for quite some time, so if you're talking about that graphic please make sure to give her the proper credit and links!

Of course with that much Shakespeare content all in one place it's got to stir up some conversation. I was curious about "The Fool just disappears".  I thought he was hanged?  I went back to the text:

Lear. And my poor fool is hang'd! No, no, no life!
Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,
And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more,
Never, never, never, never, never!
Pray you undo this button. Thank you, sir.
Do you see this? Look on her! look! her lips!
Look there, look there!
And then Lear dies.  It's even in Sir Ian McKellen's version of King Lear that came out on video a few years ago. Not the quote, the quote's always there - I mean you witness Fool being hanged in that one.   (Found a link!)

But I asked Bardfilm and he pointed me to the Arden footnotes (and I mean that literally, he messaged me a picture of him pointing to the footnote) that says Lear is referring affectionately to Cordelia (who, obviously, was hanged). It seems odd that all of a sudden he'd pull out a pet name for his daughter that wasn't used previously in the play, that also happens to be the name of a character. But, the footnotes argue, Lear is basically confusing the two characters at this point and thinks them to be the same person. (I imagine this to be much like when you visit a relative who suffers from Alzheimer's and discover yourself being called by the name of someone long dead).

Until right now I'd just always assumed that the fool was hanged, possibly even right in front of him.  I don't know when or where or how (it's strangely awkward in the McKellen version, and really dark), but it just always seemed to me like one more sorrow to be heaped upon us.  After all, what exactly did the fool do to deserve hanging?  He's not even a soldier who could or would have defended himself. It's like hanging a child. I just always imagined Lear having to watch his fool die.

What do you all think? Isn't Shakespeare typically better at tying up his loose ends? Would he have just forgotten to tell us the fate of that character? Or is this his way of finding a place to squeeze it in? Have you just always read it as referring to Cordelia?

We can talk about whose button it is later. :)

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Didn't see McKellan version, or ever watch one; just read the play. I think Lear is referring to Cordelia.

Anonymous said...

I like the interpretation that the fool is hanged (although I do think he's referring to Cordelia there) but I have trouble imagining circumstances in which the fool is hanged right in front of Lear--the point at which the fool is hanged in the McKellen version is immediately after Lear's escape, if I remember correctly. That doesn't sound to me like Lear would really be in a position to witness the hanging.

Duane Morin said...

Keep in mind, though, that McKellen's version is simply them saying "Where can we fit in the Fool's hanging?" I find it very awkward, it just comes out of nowhere. "You're surrounded! We'll take these people prisoner. You, we'll just hang right now for no apparent reason. And we'll smile while doing it."

Here's a link to the scene in question:

http://youtu.be/NPdYIFyY43g?t=1h26m13s

Anonymous said...

In having only read the play, I think that King Lear uses the word "fool" as a sign of affection towards his devoted daughter, kind of like the term "a fool for your love" with the price of her love being her death. The footnotes in my edition say that this is a term of endearment from Lear for Cordelia, although it also recalls the fool who had accompanied Lear, and suggests that Cordelia and the Fool may have been played by the same actor.

Space Station Mir said...

That's funny, I had always read that line as being an affectionate reference to Cordelia and her foolishness, either for being stubborn in the beginning or caring for Lear in the end. It made sense to me since I didn't view it as a previously established pet name, but rather a reference to the behavior that got her hanged.

Anonymous said...

Well, I guess we can scrutinize, analyze or criticize, but I don't think any of us will really know for sure.

Anonymous said...

When I studied the play in college my professor said there was a more pragmatic explanation. Cordelia and the fool are never on stage at the same time and was probably played by the same boy. This line explains the absence of the fool in the last act.