Speech Analysis On Henry Iv, Part One – Act 3, Scene 2 Essay, Research Paper
Henry IV’s lecture to Hal in 3.2 provides the audience with much more than an example
of Henry’s relationship with his son. It also serves as an examination of the kingship and its
changing role. Henry’s attempts to criticize Hal inadvertently draw many parallels between him;
his son, and his predecessor, Richard II, and while he intends to reveal Hal’s shortcomings, he
primarily reveals his own.
He begins by criticizing Hal’s choice of associates, namely the rogues who inhabit the
tavern. He claims that if he had been close friends with such people, Richard would still be King
of England. In fact, he blames Richard’s poor choices of advisors for his downfall. By flattering
Richard for their own ends, instead of letting him know the true state of affairs in England, they
kept him oblivious to the growing dissatisfaction of the populace.
With shallow jesters and rash bavin wits,
Soon kindled and soon burnt; carded his state;
Mingled his royalty with cap’ring fools;
Had his great name profan d with their scorns
And gave his countenance, against his name,
To laugh at gibing boys and stand the push
Of every beardless vain comparative (3.2.61-67);
While Falstaff and his companions may be “vulgar company” (3.2.41), however, they are, in fact,
exactly the type of company with which Henry was associated by Richard, who greatly feared
Henry’s “courtship to the common people” (Richard II, 1.4.24). Rather than avoiding people like
Falstaff, he sought them out and won their hearts. This disparity serves to undermine Henry’s
argument that Hal should separate himself from the common people as much as possible.
The contradiction between Henry’s elevation to the throne by public opinion and his
suggestion that Hal avoid becoming involved with the lower classes can be interpreted in a
number of ways. One cynical view might claim that Henry subconsciously fears his son becoming
popular enough with the people to be able to overthrow his own father, but this is unlikely when
we consider that Hal has shown no desire to take on the responsibilities and power of the kingship
thus far in the play. Another possibility is that Henry is seeking to legitimize his son’s future
kingship by returning the role of the king to that of an isolated god. While he was forced to revert
to other means to ascend to the crown, he desires that his son and the rest of his line will be
viewed as elevated nobles who are fit to rule England. The most likely possibility, however, given
the rest of the speech, is that Henry, like Richard before him, is blind to his true situation.
Richard refused to acknowledge, until it was too late, that it might be possible to rule without
divine authority, and while Henry, by necessity, realizes that it is possible, he ignores the true
implications of this and clings to the notion that the king must be somehow different from the rest
of the populace.
Once again, however, his own words deny what he is saying. Immediately after arguing
that Hal must, in order to prove himself a king, set himself apart from people such as Falstaff, the
king acknowledges that it was only the opinion of such people that prevented him from being left
. . . in reputeless banishment,
A fellow of no mark nor likelihood (3.2.44-45).
Had he tried to keep himself isolated from the lower classes, he would have been forced to join
them, because, at heart, he is no different from any other person, regardless of their social status.
As Richard eventually realized at the end of Richard II, the king, just like a peasant, is no more,
and no less, than a human being.
Henry then addresses his own personal history with a passage which closely mirrors Hal’s
earlier speech in 1.2. Yet a comparison between the two speeches reveals many differences which
help to distinguish Henry from Hal. Both speeches place great importance on, “being seldom
seen” (3.2.46), but they do this in different ways. Henry cites this as another reason for Richard’s
downfall, claiming that his overexposure to the public forced them to become, “glutted, gorged,
and full” (3.2.84) of him. On the contrary, Henry, by remaining out of general sight, was able to
remain, “fresh and new . . . ne’er seen but wond’red at” (3.2.55,57). Henry was limited,
however, by his failure to realize the extent to which the kingship was changing. It was no longer
determined by the will of God, but by the skill of an actor. Henry, however, clings to the one,
accepted role of God’s chosen messenger and refuses to accept the possibility of a king with many
faces. Hal, on the other hand, has realized the potential to use many roles to increase his power.
His father was forced to leave the country in order to be seldom seen, but Hal is able to create
different roles to hide himself behind. Thus, his “Henry V” self is seldom seen behind the “Hal”
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