
(Header image “Mary” by the Drifter and “Drifter” by the Drifter)
Thinkings Upon Hermione, Shakespeare’s Queen; Or
A Phantom of Delight
“She was a phantom of delight / When first she gleamed
upon my sight; / A lovely apparition, sent / To be a moment’s
ornament…” – William Wordsworth
This week The Drifter offers thoughts upon one of Shakespeare’s heroines in honor of Leila Allison, a poet who keeps a large picture of Shakespeare in a prominent spot in her workspace, and sometimes can feel The Bard’s eyes following her around the room as she creates.
Such a fact is not paranoia nor hubris; it is a full-on engagement with The Bard that is a rare thing these days, despite The Bard’s continuing presence seemingly everywhere. Despite the fact that he is “everywhere” as the Western World’s preeminent writer, there are few creative writers these days who have the courage, the ability, or the dedication to engage with The Bard in the way Leila Allison has, and does.
The following reflections concern one of Shakespeare’s lesser known major characters (overshadowed by Cleopatra and Juliet, among others) who would have won her author immortal literary fame of a certain species all on her own, even if Will had never written a line about Juliet, or Cleopatra.
Now bring on the Queen.
Specifically, Queen Hermione.
Shakespeare’s Hermione is a beautiful queen, and a beauty
queen, filled with virtue (overflowing goodness), steady and true (and pregnant).
But her goodness makes her vulnerable to other, less good, people.
She becomes a total victim of her husband’s crazed jealousy.
She does him a favor. Talks his friend into staying over, like he asked her to.
Next, because he got his wish, the king gets paranoid.
He starts thinking the two of them (best friend and wife) must be up to
something together, if the friend agreed that fast.
The king’s paranoia undergoes the snowball effect.
Her odor and her very beauty begin to scream inside him; soon he even starts believing that his friend is the father of his own child; which may be as twisted as it gets on that level.
This king’s self-centered, power-hungry delusions (believing things that
aren’t true) lead him to the basest cruelty.
To wanting to crush whoever won’t do what he says. And so he does all kinds of nasty things to Queen Hermione. Up to and including putting her in chains, throwing her in prison, killing her son, and taking away her daughter right after she’s born. The Queen dies from grief.
But at the end of the play, William Shakespeare gives his good queen her due, as if he couldn’t let her go just yet.
Some of her fans and followers have constructed a statue of her. She rises from this statue of herself, in front of everyone: resurrected, which means brought back from the dead.
Brought back to life.
This is how she said goodbye to the King when he sent her to prison:
Adieu, my Lord:
I never wished to see you sorry; now
I trust I shall.
Anyone who can remain that calm when falsely accused and sent to prison for it has got style in Bukowski’s sense of the term; and can stand out; is one of the best.
We all get falsely accused at times (maybe not sent to prison for it; maybe so).
Someone like Queen Hermione can show you how to act when “they”
are coming down on you.
This is one thing Jesus meant when he said to turn the other cheek.
When they’ve got you, whether you did it or not, your best bet is to play it cool.
Both inside yourself AND with them.
Shakespeare is also saying there are resurrections that happen to us WHILE WE ARE STILL ALIVE, IN THIS WORLD, LIVING OUR NORMAL LIFE.
We get reborn every single day (we have another chance tomorrow) or even every second that ticks by in some cases.
(Sometimes time speeds up; other times, it goes way more slowly…but who here has ever seen it stop…)
And the gentle Bard surely seems to be implying there will likely be another,
very different, resurrection at the end of our own earthly lives.
Crucial END NOTE from The Drifter: This bare bones retelling of Queen Hermione’s life was written from memory; as such, The Drifter takes no responsibility for any minor (and likely meaningless) little things he may have gotten wrong in briefly recounting this narrative.
The Drifter first read THE WINTER’S TALE, by The Bard, well over thirty years ago, when he was a student at Columbia College Chicago, in a class conducted by the great Shakespeare scholar Peter Christensen.
Thirty years later almost to the day, The Drifter espied Professor Christensen, an old man now, sitting alone in a coffee shop in a northside Chicago neighborhood not far from the lake, intensely engaged in the reading of Shakespeare’s Sonnets. (The Drifter waited around until he could see what the book was, without ever approaching the professor.)
Since The Drifter read the play over thirty years ago (twice) and hasn’t looked at it since, he takes no responsibility for the tiny meaningless things he may have gotten wrong, but he does thank Professor Christensen, for reading The Sonnets alone in a coffee shop as an old man; and for his dramatic readings from Shakespeare’s HAMLET, THE MERCHANT OF VENICE and THE WINTER’S TALE well over thirty years ago, in a seventh-story, industrial-looking classroom on Columbia College Chicago’s downtown campus.
I don’t know if you are still here with us; but I remember looking out the high windows, watching the blues of Lake Michigan, and listening to your voice bringing Shakespeare alive.
