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1 Henry IV

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Prince Hal as a son. Prince Henry, Harry, Hal take your pick. Hotspur as a 'foil' to the young prince; in the King's own words, Hotspur is 'A ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1 Henry IV


1
1 Henry IV
2
Shakespeares Histories as Chronicle Plays
  • What is the relationship between the two parts of
    Henry IV?
  • Henry IV, Part 2 Die Harder?
  • Kill Bill / Kill Henry IV?
  • Star Wars / Rose Wars?

3
The Henriad, or Shakespeares Two Tetralogies
  • The eight plays in historical sequence
  • Richard II (1595),
  • Henry IV, parts one and two (1597)
  • Henry V (1598)
  • Henry VI, parts one, two and three (1590)
  • Richard III (1592/4)
  • In compositional order
  • 2 Henry VI (1590) The first part of the
    contention betwixt the two famous houses of York
    and Lancaster
  • 3 Henry VI (1590) The second part of the
    contention
  • 1 Henry VI (1590) Richard, Duke of York (Richard
    of Gloucesters father)
  • Richard III (1592/4)
  • Richard II (1595)
  • 1 Henry IV (1597)
  • 2 Henry IV (1597)

4
Source material Chronicle History
  • The Tudor Chronicles.
  • The source material used by Shakespeare for all
    the histories written principally by Raphael
    Holinshed, often revised from earlier sources.
  • The Tudor Myth ideological justification for
    the Tudor monarchy.
  • Most pronounced in the first tetralogy where
    Richard III is defeated by Henry VII at Bosworth.
  • In 1 Henry IV, Shakespeare downplays the Tudor
    myth.

5
Source Material Dramatic Precedents
  • Indebted to dramatic sources, especially the
    earlier play The famous victories of Henry the
    Fifth (Anonymous).
  • Enlarged by Shakespeare into three separate
    plays.
  • Derives importance of Falstaff, named Sir John
    Oldcastle.
  • Censored by the Master of the Revels, Lord
    Cobham, in 1597.
  • Opposition to theatre by Puritans closed
    theatres in 1642.

6
Source Material Generic Precedents
  • Relationship of histories to older dramatic
    genres, especially morality play.
  • Falstaff as a vice figure.
  • Psychomachia or soul struggle of the protagonist.
  • Who or what is virtue?

7
Henry IV as a King
  • Henry Bolingbroke young and ambitious lord of
    the House of Lancaster with claim to throne.
  • Deposes Richard II and allegedly has him killed.
  • Legitimacy of Kingship? Divine authority versus
    conscience of rule.
  • This play opens with guilt Henry feels compelled
    to mark the ending of the period of civil war by
    starting a Crusade.
  • Begins idea of restlessness well see later in
    the play.
  • His admiration for Hotspur whats wrong with
    this picture?

8
Prince Hal as a son
  • Prince Henry, Harry, Hal take your pick.
  • Hotspur as a foil to the young prince in the
    Kings own words, Hotspur is A son who is the
    theme of honours tongue, / Amongst a grove the
    very straightest plant, / Who is sweet Fortunes
    minion and her pride.
  • Antithesis of courtly world to the inns and
    taverns of Eastcheap social deconstruction
    provided by language damnable iteration.
  • The pub world as space of rebellion and
    adolescence.
  • Moral options provided by the pattern of the
    morality play path of righteousness versus path
    of debauchery.
  • How does Hal negotiate these two options?

9
The Importance of Language in the Play
  • Language as a signifier of rank, status,
    occupation, culture different kinds of language
    groups include the carriers, the thieves, as well
    as, importantly, the Scottish and Welsh
    characters.
  • Code shared by linguistic communities to create
    shared identity.
  • But how does one overcome difference when it is
    ingrained in the act of utterance itself?
  • Key scene Prince Hal at 2.4.10 brags of being
    able to adopt the language of tapsters idea of
    self-fashioning.
  • What is thieves cant or cryptolect?

10
England and Britain
  • Presence of the Welsh in Act 3 Glyndwr.
  • Welsh were seen to be superstitious and barbaric
    remember Westmorelands description at 1.1.42
    of the Welsh women performing ritualistic
    mutilations on the battle dead.
  • Great Britain followed the union of the crowns
    in 1603 prior to Elizabeths death, the unity of
    Britain was a key political issue.
  • Nascent sense of British Empire in early modern
    period the need to overcome differences between
    national cultures in Britain to face formidable
    power of French and, especially, Spanish.
  • Union of nations as marriage.

11
What is the meaning of honour?
  • OED definition of honour.
  • Concept of honour underwent significant
    metamorphosis in the renaissance most important
    transition was move from external to internalized
    sense of honour.
  • Medieval, chivalric code of honour emphasis on
    lineage (blood), allegiance to ones lord
    violence (martial prowess) honour by right of
    birth specifically male form of honour.
  • Renaissance code emphasized the moral and
    political individual conscience, godliness, and
    political allegiance to the collective state.
  • Tension between the two Renaissance men had to
    cope with both an old, medieval code of honor and
    the tensions of a new one, tensions that were
    created, to a large degree, by the contemporary
    insistence on the importance of the individual
    conscience (Reta 1072).

12
Hotspur and Honour
  • What kind of honour does Hotspur represent? Is
    there irony or distance?
  • Praise from King at beginning of play A son
    who is the theme of honours tongue (1.1.80)
  • Hotspur in 3.1 how does Hotspur compare (foil)
    to Prince Hal? Worcesters comments at 3.1.172.
  • Hostpur in 4.1 Harry to Harry shall, hot horse
    to horse, / Meet and neer part till one drop
    down a corse (123-4).
  • Chivalric principle of honour in death
    Doomsday is near die all, die merrily
    (4.1.135).

13
Falstaff and Honour
  • What is significant about Falstaffs battle
    preparations in 4.2? Prose soliloquy at 4.2.10.
  • Irony? How does Falstaff compare to higher
    status characters such as Hal and the King?
  • Speech on honour at 5.1.128ff honour is a mere
    scutcheon (funeral tablet or cloth used for
    funeral processions and gravestones).
  • 5.3, Falstaffs comment over Blunts body
    Theres honour for you. Heres no vanity!
    (32).
  • 5.4, after Falstaff rises from the dead The
    better part of valour is discretion, in the which
    better part I have save my life (117-18).

14
Prince Hal and Honour
Charles Robert Leslie, Falstaff impersonating
the King (c. 1851)
  • What is the purpose of the joke played on
    Falstaff and his cohorts by Hal and Ned in Act 2?
    What does it suggest about Hals character?
  • Honour among thieves?
  • The role-play between Hal and Falstaff in Act 2
    (2.4.362ff) anticipates the real meeting between
    Hal and his father in 3.2.
  • King Cambyses vein (2.4.372) alludes to an
    earlier play from the late 1560s early 1570s by
    the lesser-known dramatist Thomas Preston.

15
Prince Hal and Honour
  • Prince saves his fathers life in 5.4.
  • Final confrontation with Hotspur Hal begins by
    stating, two stars keep not their motion in one
    sphere (5.4.64). Honour as fixed commodity?
  • Hotspur, before his death I better brook the
    loss of brittle life / Than those proud titles
    thou has won of me (5..77-8).
  • Hals eulogy over Hotspur When that this body
    did contain a spirit, / A kingdom for it was too
    small a bound, / But now two paces of the vilest
    earth / Is room enough (5.4.88-91) honour is a
    scutcheon?
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