Saturday, May 25, 2019

Explanation of Hamlet’s Mystery (by: Ernest Jones)

pg. 101 Explanation of Hamlets Mystery by Ernest Jones Much as he hates him, he can never denounce him with the ardent indignation that boils heterosexual from his blood when he reproaches his mother, for the more vigorously he denounces his uncle the more powerfully does he stimulate to activity his feature unconscious and repressed complexes. He is there- ahead in a dilemma between on the one hand allowing his natural detestation of his uncle to have free play, a consum- mation which would make him aware of his own horrible ishes, and on the other ignoring the imperative call for ven- geance that his obvious duty demands. He must either realise his own evil in denouncing his uncles, or strive to ignore, to condone and if possible even to forget the latter in continuing to repress the former his moral fate is bound up with his uncles for goodish or ill. The call of duty to slay his uncle cannot be obeyed because it links itself with the call of his nature to slay his mothers husb and, whether this is the first or the second the latter call is strongly repressed, and therefore necessarily the former also.It is no mere chance that he says of himself that he is prompted to the revenge by heaven and hell, though the true significance of the expres- sion of melodic phrase quite escapes him. Hamlets dammed-up feeling finds a partial vent in other directions, the natural one being blocked. The petulant irascibility and explosive outbursts called forth by the vexa- tion of Guildenstern and Rosencrantz, and especially of Polo- nius, are evidently to be interpreted in this way, as also is in part the burning nature of his reproaches to his mother. In- deed towards the end of the consultation with his mother the hought of her misconduct expresses itself in that almost physical disgust which is so often the manifestation of in- tensely repressed sexual feeling. Let the bloat tycoon tempt you again to bed Pinch wanton on your cheek call you his mouse And let him, for a pair of reechy kisses, Or paddling in your lie with with his damnd fingers, Make you to ravel all this matter out. His attitude towards Polonius is highly instructive. Here the absence of family tie, and of other influences, enables him to indulge to a relatively unrestrained degree his dislike towards the prating and sententious dotard.

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