The influence of Hamlet, the play and the character, on modern literature is vast. Consider Hamlet as model for Prufrock:
Zulfikar Ghose says the "I am not Hamlet" in Eliot's Prufrock may be literal or ironic, but then adds: "the more one ponders the language of 'Prufrock' and of Hamlet the more one observes a striking convergence of thought. In the end of 'Prufrock,' the mind, having failed to perceive the vision it has sought, invents one for itself; and to have heard mermaids singing is to have experienced a madness tha may or may not have been feigned; the mind, unable to arrive at philosophical truth, turns to the world of pure fiction to see if reality may not be discovered through the formulations of fiction.
"As does Hamlet: 'Enter the Players.'"
Martin Scofield muses along the following lines: "what did Prufrock think Hamlet was? One who did 'murder' (if not 'create')? One who did 'disturb the Universe'? Certainly one who had time for 'a hundred indecisions/And for a hundred visions and revisions.'" Hamlet certainly rolls the universe up into the "overwhelming question" of "To be or not to be." For Prufrock, Hamlet is the hero, but as Scofield points out "Hamlet himself has Prufrockian moments," moments when his greatness flickered, when he wept and prayed, when he played the fool, when he longed to be a pair of ragged claws scuttling beneath the sea. For Eliot, Hamlet was "a particularly interesting romantic hero because his heroism seems to tend towards something very different, a Prufrockian lack of belief in himself. He is the romantic hero on the verge of becoming something else. . . . In rejecting an identification with Hamlet, Prufrock is still thinking in romantic and heroic terms. . . . The poem is Eliot's critique of the vestiges of literary romanticism in a modern mind, and he turns to Hamlet for an aptly ambiguous symbol of that romanticism."
posted by Peter J. Leithart on Thursday, January 05, 2006 at 11:46 AM
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