<p class="center"><SPAN name="The_Hamlet_Night" id="The_Hamlet_Night"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</SPAN></span>
<ANTIMG src="images/illus055.jpg" alt="heading" /></p>
<p style="margin-left: 18em;">
"Murder most foul, as in the best it is;<br/>
But this most foul, strange, and unnatural."<br/></p>
<p class="center"><ANTIMG src="images/illus056.jpg" alt="hamlet" /></p>
<p><b>A FEW</b> days after the events recorded in the last chapter, a new trick
was invented to obtain under, false pretences, the money of the public.
A number of needy and seedy individuals having been told that in England
several of the most dis<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</SPAN></span>tinguished literary men in that country had
given a few theatrical exhibitions with great success, conceived the
plan of exhibiting, in a similar manner, in the city of New York, a
number of authors, artists and other celebrities, admitting the public
at twenty-five cents per head. That it might look less like a humbug,
and by way of hiding, as far as possible, the swindle which was only too
transparent, after all, it was announced that the living poets and
painters would be shown all alive in secure cages, undergoing a
periodical stirring-up by the keeper, and being benevolently fed in the
presence of the spectators afterward.</p>
<p>Preparations had been made to secure the services of the biggest
authors, the most notorious painters, the largest sized sculptors, the
most melodious poets, and the most sanguinary editors the country could
produce. The anxious world expected nothing less than to see the author
of "Thanatopsis" appear as <i>Hamlet</i> in black-tights and a slouched
hat—and he who invented "Evangeline" and "Hiawatha" come on as the
<i>Ghost</i> with a pasteboard helmet and a horse-hair beard. Who should be
<i>Laertes</i> but he who "skulped" the Greek Slave, or what editor could
play "the king" like the democratic conductor of the <i>Tribune</i>? who, in
assuming the crown, was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</SPAN></span> to doff the white hat, "positively for one
night only?" The <i>Queen of Denmark</i> would of course be represented by
the architect of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," whose familiarity with courts and
royalty would enable her to invest the character with life-like
interest. The public had made up its mind to be content with no
<i>Ophelia</i> except Ruth Hall, for no one else could play the crazy scenes
so admirably. But alas for the expectations of the misguided public—the
illustrious individuals aforesaid would not come, and consequently the
public were compelled to witness the consummation of the dreadful
tragedy, by authors whose works they had never heard of; painters whose
productions were unknown to the world, and editors whom a close
investigation resolved into obscure scribblers.</p>
<p>To this literary exhibition Overdale, Wagstaff, and John Spout resolved
to go—Overdale to give the necessary explanations, Wagstaff to make a
transcript of his friend's valuable remarks, and John Spout (himself an
amateur artist) to see the celebrated men of his own profession, whose
contributions to art had been so persistently kept out of sight.</p>
<p>The performance was to take place in the Academy of Music, a building
designed and completed by a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</SPAN></span> diabolically ingenious architect, who
endeavored to construct a theatre in such a manner that one half the
audience could not hear, and the other half could not see, and who
succeeded to admiration.</p>
<p>Our friends obtained seats in that part of the house where they could
see, though it was not possible to <i>hear</i> a word.</p>
<p>After a great many preliminary flourishes and false starts by the
members of the orchestra, they set off as nearly together as they could,
in obedience to the frantic gestures of the leader, who flourished his
fiddle-bow with as much energy and vindictiveness as if he had been
insanely endeavoring to kill mosquitoes with it, in forty different
directions at once.</p>
<p>Finally the curtain went up amid the uproarious applause of the
assembled multitude, interrupted only by a small boy in the gallery, who
hissed like a whole flock of enraged wild-geese, having been stationed
there especially for the performance of this sibilant duty by an
avenging washerwoman, to whom one of the amateurs owed four and
sixpence; his dissenting voice was, however, soon hushed by the police,
who put him out, and didn't give him his money back, after which the
exhibition proceeded.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>To give a full description of one half of the ridiculous performances
indulged in by these deluded persons—to tell of the new readings which
they gave, and the old readings which they didn't give—to relate how
carefully they avoided the traps, and with what commendable caution they
kept away from the footlights—to give an idea of the bedlamitish
ingenuity they had displayed in the selection of wardrobe, how each one
had put on the most inappropriate articles imaginable, and how they
could not have been more incongruously attired if they had been all
dressed in sheep's grey breeches and straw hats—to dilate upon the
disasters which befell the said wardrobe, how the tunics caught in the
wings, and the shoulder-cloaks got singed by the side-lights; how the
ladies' trains were in everybody's way, and their feathers in
everybody's eyes—how, in their confusion, when they painted their
faces, they put the wrong colors in the wrong places, and some of them
went on with white cheeks, chalked lips, and eyebrows colored a bright
vermilion—how the gilt crowns got bent and battered until they looked
like ancient milk-pans with the bottoms melted out—how the flannel
ermine on the regal calico robes got greasy, and looked like tripe—how
the wax pearls melted and the glass ones broke—how the "supes"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</SPAN></span> painted
their whiskers uneven, and got their wigs on wrong side before—how some
of them couldn't get their armor on at all, but how one enterprising
individual, having succeeded to his satisfaction, came on to deliver a
message, with his sandals in his hand, his helmet on one foot, his
breast-plate on the other, and his leg-pieces strapped on his
shoulders—to tell how the <i>Ghost</i> got chilly and played the last scene
in an overcoat, and proved that he was a substantial Native American
Ghost, by making two extemporaneous speeches, in excellent English, to
the audience—to do full justice to the miscellaneous assortment of
<i>legs</i>, then and there congregated, and relate how some were bow-legs,
and some were shingle-legs, some were broomstick-legs, some were wiry
legs, and some were shoulder-of-mutton legs—to give an accurate
relation of the various expedients resorted to, to remedy the most
noticeable defects in those legs, and state that some were padded on the
sides, and some at the ankles, and how, in not a few instances, the
padding slipped away from its original position, thereby putting the
calves on the shins, and causing the knees to resemble deformed
india-rubber foot-balls—and to give a reliable history of the
unheard-of antics indulged in by the said fantastic legs, after their
symmetry had been perfected by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</SPAN></span> the means just written—how some went
crooked, some sideways, and some wouldn't go at all; how some minced
with short steps, like a racking pony, and others stepped along as if
they had seven-league boots on; how some moved with convulsive hitches,
as if they were clockwork legs, and the springs were out of order; how
some worked spasmodically up and down in the same place, and didn't get
along at all, as if they were legs which had struck for higher wages;
and how others dashed ahead, as if they did not intend to stop until
they had transported their bewildered proprietors out of sight of the
audience, as if they were machine legs, with the steam turned on, and
weights on the safety-valve; how some went on the stage and wouldn't go
off, and how others went off and wouldn't go on, until they were coaxed
on by their agonized owners, a long time after the cue came—to tell how
the red fire burned green, and the blue fire would not burn at all—how
the call-boy got tipsy, and was not forthcoming—how the property-man
fell over the sheet-iron thunder, and stuck his head into a pot of red
paint, which made him look like a modern edition of Charles the First
with his head cut off—how the grave-diggers got into the grave and
couldn't get out—how <i>Hamlet</i> and <i>Laertes</i> could hardly get<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</SPAN></span> in at
all; and how, when they did get in, they made the gravel fly—how the
wrong men came on at the wrong time, and how, as a general thing, the
right men didn't ever come on—how <i>Guildenstern</i> spoke <i>Ophelia's</i>
lines, how <i>Horatio</i> tried to speak one of Hamlet's speeches, and danced
a frantic hornpipe with rage because he couldn't think how it began, and
how <i>Polonius</i> couldn't speak at all, and so went home—how nobody could
remember what Shakspeare said, and so everybody said what Shakspeare
didn't say, and hadn't said, and wouldn't have said, under any
circumstances—how some of the men swore, and some of the women wanted
to, but postponed it, and how the butchery proceeded, with many mishaps
and multitudinous mistakes, and how the audience applauded, and cheered,
and laughed at the dismal tragedy, evidently considering it the
liveliest farce of the season, are facts, falsehoods, and circumstances,
both real and supposititious, which could not be compressed within the
limits of a single volume.</p>
<p>Hamlet was personated by an aspiring youth, whose physical dimensions
were not up to the army standard, and who couldn't have gathered fruit
from a currant-bush without high-heeled boots on; while the lady who
represented his mother would have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</SPAN></span> been compelled to stoop in order to
pick pippins from the tallest apple-tree that ever grew. By the side of
her illustrious son, she looked perfectly capable of taking him up in
her arms, giving him his dinner after the usual maternal fashion, and
afterwards disposing of him in the trundle-bed, to complete his infant
slumbers.</p>
<p>Overdale explained that they had tried to get a bigger <i>Hamlet</i>, but
that, upon the whole, he thought the little fellow would "speak his
piece" pretty well, taking into consideration the fact, that in the
dying groans, he was supposed to have no superior.</p>
<p>Wagstaff was totally ignorant of the plot, and as from the obfuscation
of the performers, no one could have formed the slightest idea of what
they were all talking about, he seemed in no very fair way to find out
anything about it.</p>
<p>The peculiar rendition of the story of the King of Denmark was so
uncertain, that even John Spout found it exceedingly difficult to tell
where they were or how they would come out, or what they intended to do
next. He was a little uncertain whether the queen would finally subdue
<i>Hamlet</i>, or <i>Hamlet</i> succeed in thrashing the queen. In the closet
scene, especially, the battle was conducted with such varying success
that it was impossible to bet, with any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</SPAN></span> kind of certainty, on the
result, or to prognosticate, with reliability, whether <i>Hamlet</i> would
knock his mother down with a chair, and damage her maternal countenance
with the heels of his boots, or whether the old lady would succeed in
<i>her</i> design, which was evidently to conquer her rebellious offspring,
and give him a good spanking. Neither could he tell whether <i>Laertes</i>
would kill <i>Horatio</i>, <i>Hamlet</i>, or the <i>Second Grave-digger</i>, who stood
behind the wing, with his hands in his pockets, and his breeches in his
boots. He was also a little undecided as to which was <i>Polonius</i>, and
which was the king, and when the player queen came on, he thought it was
only <i>Ophelia</i>, with a different-colored petticoat on. John swore the
<i>Ghost</i> looked as if he hadn't had any dinner, and said he was perfectly
certain his ghostship had been refreshing his invisible bowels with a
mug of ale, behind the scenes, because when he came on the last time,
with the broomstick in his hand, he could see the foam on his whiskers.</p>
<p>One of the richest and most incomprehensible scenes ever witnessed on
the modern stage was the final one between <i>Hamlet</i> and the <i>Ghost</i>,
who, finding the weather chilly, had done his best to mitigate his
sufferings by putting on an overcoat. <i>Hamlet</i>, trying to look fierce,
holding his sword at arm's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</SPAN></span> length, performing a kind of original
fancy-dance, as he followed the spiritual remains of his ghostly father
across the stage—<i>Hamlet</i>, the mortal, being about the size of a
mutton-ham, while his father, the immortal, supposed to be exceedingly
ethereal, was tall enough and stout enough for a professional
coal-heaver, instead of an amateur ghost—the intangible spirit,
moreover, having one hand in his overcoat pocket, to keep his fingers
warm, while in the other he flourished a short broomstick, as if to keep
his degenerate scion at a respectful distance, were so ludicrous, that
John Spout seized Wagstaff's book, and produced the sketch to be found
at the beginning of this chapter.</p>
<p>And in the last death-scene <i>Hamlet</i> really won such honors as were
never before accorded to mortal tragedian; being by this time a little
doubtful whom to kill, he made an end of the entire company in rotation.
First, he stabbed the <i>King</i>, who rolled over once or twice, and died
with his legs so tangled up in the <i>Queen's</i> train that <i>she</i> had to
expire in a hard knot; then he stabbed <i>Laertes</i>, who died cross-legged;
then he stabbed <i>Osric</i>; and not content with this, he tripped up his
heels and stood on his stomach, till he died in an agony of indigestion;
then he tried to stick <i>Horatio</i>, but only succeeded in knocking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</SPAN></span> his
wig off; and then, turning up stage, made extensive preparations for
terminating his own existence.</p>
<p>First, as everybody was dead, and everybody's legs were lying round
loose, he had to lay them out of the way carefully, so as not to
interfere with the comfort of the corpses; then he picked up all the
swords and laid them cautiously in a corner, so that the points
shouldn't stick in him when he fell; then he looked up at the curtain to
see that he was clear of that, then he looked down at the traps to see
that he was clear of them, and having at last arranged everything to his
satisfaction, he proceeded to go systematically through his dying
agonies, to the great satisfaction of the audience. Suffice it to say,
that when the spasms were ended, and he had finally become a "cold
corpus," his black tights were very dirty and had holes in the knees.</p>
<p>When the curtain went down <i>Hamlet</i> was too exhausted to get up, and
instantly everybody rushed to the rescue; those he had slaughtered but a
few minutes before, forgot their mortal wounds, and hastened to the
murderer with something to drink. The <i>King</i> rushed up with a pewter mug
of beer; <i>Horatio</i> presented the brandy-bottle; the <i>Ghost</i> handed him a
glass of gin and sugar; the <i>Queen</i><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</SPAN></span> gave him the little end of a
Bologna sausage and a piece of cheese; the stage carpenter, in his
bewilderment, could think of nothing but the glue-pot; the property man
hastened to his aid with a tin cup full of rose-pink, and a plate-full
of property apple-dumplings (ingeniously but deceptively constructed out
of canvas and bran), while an insane scene-shifter first deluged him
with water, and then offered him the bucket to dry himself with.</p>
<p>John Spout, who had been behind the curtain, and witnessed this last
performance, immediately came out, borrowed Wagstaff's notebook, and
left therein his pictorial reminiscence of this scene as follows:</p>
<p class="center"><ANTIMG src="images/illus058.jpg" alt="play" /></p>
<p>Overdale had been profuse in his explanations of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</SPAN></span> the many curious
scenes, and Wagstaff had noted down his words carefully in his
memorandum-book. Once when the <i>Ghost</i> tripped and fell through the
scenery, caving in the side of a brick house, and kicking his spiritual
heels through the belfry of a church in the background, Overdale said
that this was <i>Ophelia</i>, who had been taken suddenly crazy, and in her
frenzy had imagined it necessary to hasten to the nearest grocery for a
bar of soap to saw her leg off with. <i>Polonius</i>, he explained, was
<i>Horatio</i>, and <i>Hamlet</i> was a little boy who run on errands for the cook
of the palace, by which culinary appellation he designated the Queen of
Denmark. He said the plot of the piece was, that the king wanted to
marry the cook, but her relatives objected to the alliance, because his
majesty hadn't got shirts enough for a change.</p>
<p>All of which was carefully written down by Wagstaff, with divers
alterations, emendations, additions, and extemporaneous illustrations,
by John Spout.</p>
<p>This last-named individual asserts to the present time that he cannot
tell who were the most humbugged—the people who paid their money, and
laughed at the play under the impression that it was a farce, or the
unfortunates who performed the play,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</SPAN></span> laboring under the hallucination
that they were acting tragedy.</p>
<p>All were, however, satisfied, that it was a kink of the Elephant's tail,
which he has not yet uncurled in any city of America—save Gotham.</p>
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