Subject: "There are more things in Heaven and earth, Horatio,..."


Hamlet:
And therefore as a stranger give it welcome.
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
Hamlet Act 1, scene 5, 159–167 
Horatio and Marcellus, though advised against it, barge into Hamlet's 
conversation with his father's ghost [see SOMETHING IS ROTTEN IN THE STATE OF 
DENMARK]. Hamlet is a little unforthcoming with the news imparted by this 
spirit, who is still rustling about under the stage. So it's hard to figure 
what 
Horatio and Marcellus are being asked to keep quiet, though Hamlet and the 
burrowing ghost (a "pioner," or miner) insist.
Horatio, a model of rationality, is still having a hard time swallowing the 
whole business. Ghosts are not the sort of beings his "philosophy" easily takes 
into account. We know that Horatio is, like Hamlet, a student at the University 
of Wittenberg, a notable outpost of Protestant humanism. The philosophy he 
studies there is probably classical—a compound of ethics, logic, and natural 
science. The emphasis on everyday phenomena pretty much excludes speculation 
about talking ghosts.
Wittenberg, however, isn't just a place where sober-minded Horatios debate 
Aristotelian physics. In Christopher Marlowe's play of the late 1580s, Doctor 
Faustus, it is where the doctor lectures and, on the sideline, fraternizes with 
demons.
...
from enotes

Reply via email to