Prince Harry
The complex Prince Harry is at the
center of events in 1 Henry IV. As the only character to move between
the grave, serious world of King Henry and Hotspur and the rollicking, comical
world of Falstaff and the Boar’s Head Tavern, Harry serves as a bridge uniting
the play’s two major plotlines. An initially disreputable prince who eventually
wins back his honor and the king’s esteem, Harry undergoes the greatest
dramatic development in the play, deliberately transforming himself from the
wastrel he pretends to be into a noble leader. Additionally, as the character
whose sense of honor and leadership Shakespeare most directly endorses, Harry
is, at least by implication, the moral focus of the play.
Harry is nevertheless a complicated
character and one whose real nature is very difficult to pin down. As the play
opens, Harry has been idling away his time with Falstaff and earning the
displeasure of both his father and England as a whole. He then surprises
everyone by declaring that his dissolute lifestyle is all an act: he is simply
trying to lower the expectations that surround him so that, when he must, he
can emerge as his true, heroic self, shock the whole country, and win the
people’s love and his father’s admiration. Harry is clearly intelligent and
already capable of the psychological machinations required of kings.
But the heavy measure of deceit
involved in his plan seems to call his honor into question, and his treatment
of Falstaff further sullies his name: though there seems to be real affection
between the prince and the roguish knight, Harry is quite capable of tormenting
and humiliating his friend (and, when he becomes king in 2 Henry IV, of
disowning him altogether). Shakespeare seems to include these aspects of
Harry’s character in order to illustrate that Falstaff’s selfish bragging does
not fool Harry and to show that Harry is capable of making the difficult
personal choices that a king must make in order to rule a nation well. In any
case, Harry’s emergence here as a heroic young prince is probably 1 Henry IV’s
defining dynamic, and it opens the door for Prince Harry to become the great
King Henry V in the next two plays in Shakespeare’s sequence.
Old, fat, lazy, selfish, dishonest,
corrupt, thieving, manipulative, boastful, and lecherous, Falstaff is, despite
his many negative qualities, perhaps the most popular of all of Shakespeare’s
comic characters. Though he is technically a knight, Falstaff’s lifestyle
clearly renders him incompatible with the ideals of courtly chivalry that one
typically associates with knighthood. For instance, Falstaff is willing to
commit robbery for the money and entertainment of it. As Falstaff himself notes
at some length, honor is useless to him: “Can honour set-to a leg? No. Or an
arm? No. Or take away the grief of a wound? No. . . . What is honour? A word”
(V.i.130–133). He perceives honor as a mere “word,” an abstract concept that
has no relevance to practical matters. Nevertheless, though Falstaff mocks
honor by linking it to violence, to which it is intimately connected throughout
the play, he remains endearing and likable to Shakespeare’s audiences. Two
reasons that Falstaff retains this esteem are that he plays his scoundrel’s
role with such gusto and that he never enjoys enough success to become a real
villain; even his highway robbery ends in humiliation for him.
Falstaff seems to scorn morality
largely because he has such a hearty appetite for life and finds the niceties
of courtesy and honor useless when there are jokes to be told and feasts to be
eaten. Largely a creature of words, Falstaff has earned the admiration of some
Shakespearean scholars because of the self-creation he achieves through
language: Falstaff is constantly creating a myth of Falstaff, and this myth
defines his identity even when it is visibly revealed to be false. A master of
punning and wordplay, Falstaff provides most of the comedy in the play (just as
he does in 2 Henry IV, The Merry Wives of Windsor, and Henry V).
He redeems himself largely through his real affection for Prince Harry, whom,
despite everything, he seems to regard as a real friend. This affection makes
Harry’s decision, foreshadowed in 1 Henry IV, to abandon Falstaff when
he becomes king (in 2 Henry IV) seem all the more harsh.
The title character of 1 Henry IV
appears in Richard II as the ambitious, energetic, and capable
Bolingbroke, who seizes the throne from the inept Richard II after likely
arranging his murder. Though Henry is not yet truly an old man in 1 Henry
IV, his worries about his crumbling kingdom, guilt over his uprising
against Richard II, and the vagaries of his son’s behavior have diluted his
earlier energy and strength. Henry remains stern, aloof, and resolute, but he
is no longer the force of nature he appears to be in Richard II. Henry’s
trouble stems from his own uneasy conscience and his uncertainty about the
legitimacy of his rule. After all, he himself is a murderer who has illegally
usurped the throne from Richard II. Therefore, it is difficult to blame Hotspur
and the Percys for wanting to usurp his throne for themselves. Furthermore, it
is unclear how Henry’s kingship is any more legitimate than that of Richard II.
Henry thus lacks the moral legitimacy that every effective ruler needs.
With these concerns lurking at the
back of his reign, Henry is unable to rule as the magnificent leader his son
Harry will become. Throughout the play he retains his tight, tenuous hold on
the throne, and he never loses his majesty. But with an ethical sense clouded
by his own sense of compromised honor, it is clear that Henry can never be a
great king or anything more than a caretaker to the throne that awaits Henry V.
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