Henry IV, Part 2
Henry
IV, Part 2 is a history
play by William Shakespeare
believed to have been written between 1596 and 1599. It is the third part of a tetralogy, preceded by Richard II
and Henry IV, Part 1 and succeeded by Henry
V.
The
play is often seen as an extension of aspects of Henry IV, Part 1,
rather than a straightforward continuation of the historical narrative, placing
more emphasis on the highly popular character of Falstaff and introducing other comic figures as part of his
entourage, including Ancient
Pistol, Doll
Tearsheet, and Justice Robert
Shallow. Several scenes specifically
parallel episodes in Part 1.
Characters
Of
the King's party
Rebels
Recruits
Other
Mentioned
|
Synopsis
The
play picks up where Henry IV, Part 1 left off. Its focus is on Prince Hal's
journey toward kingship, and his ultimate rejection of Falstaff. However, unlike Part One, Hal's and Falstaff's
stories are almost entirely separate, as the two characters meet only twice and
very briefly. The tone of much of the play is elegiac, focusing on Falstaff's
age and his closeness to death, which parallels that of the increasingly sick
king.
Falstaff
is still drinking and engaging in petty criminality in the London underworld.
He first appears, followed by a new character, a young page whom Prince Hal has
assigned him as a joke. Falstaff enquires what the doctor has said about the
analysis of his urine,
and the page cryptically informs him that the urine is healthier than the
patient. Falstaff delivers one of his most characteristic lines: "I am not
only witty in myself, but the cause that wit is in other men." Falstaff
promises to outfit the page in "vile apparel" (ragged clothing). He
then complains of his insolvency, blaming it on "consumption of the
purse." They go off, Falstaff vowing to find a wife "in the
stews" (i.e., the local brothels).
The
Lord Chief Justice enters, looking for Falstaff. Falstaff at first feigns
deafness in order to avoid conversing with him, and when this tactic fails
pretends to mistake him for someone else. As the Chief Justice attempts to
question Falstaff about a recent robbery, Falstaff insists on turning the
subject of the conversation to the nature of the illness afflicting the King.
He then adopts the pretense of being a much younger man than the Chief Justice:
"You that are old consider not the capacities of us that are young."
Finally, he asks the Chief Justice for one thousand pounds to help outfit a
military expedition, but is denied.
He
has a relationship with Doll
Tearsheet, a prostitute, who gets into a
fight with Ancient Pistol,
Falstaff's ensign. After Falstaff ejects Pistol, Doll asks him about the
Prince. Falstaff is embarrassed when his derogatory remarks are overheard by
Hal, who is present disguised as a musician. Falstaff tries to talk his way out
of it, but Hal is unconvinced. When news of a second rebellion arrives,
Falstaff joins the army again, and goes to the country to raise forces. There
he encounters an old school friend, Justice Shallow, and they reminisce about
their youthful follies. Shallow brings forward potential recruits for the
loyalist army: Mouldy, Bullcalf, Feeble, Shadow and Wart, a motley collection
of rustic yokels. Falstaff and his cronies accept bribes from two of them,
Mouldy and Bullcalf, not to be conscripted.
In
the other storyline, Hal remains an acquaintance of London lowlife and seems
unsuited to kingship. His father, King Henry IV
is again disappointed in the young prince because of that, despite reassurances
from the court. Another rebellion is launched against Henry IV, but this time
it is defeated, not by a battle, but by the duplicitous political machinations
of Hal's brother, Prince John. King Henry then sickens and appears to die. Hal,
seeing this, believes he is King and exits with the crown. King Henry,
awakening, is devastated, thinking Hal cares only about becoming King. Hal
convinces him otherwise and the old king subsequently dies contentedly.
The
two story-lines meet in the final scene, in which Falstaff, having learned from
Pistol that Hal is now King, travels to London in expectation of great rewards.
But Hal rejects him, saying that he has now changed, and can no longer
associate with such people. The London lowlifes, expecting a paradise of
thieves under Hal's governance, are instead purged and imprisoned by the
authorities.
Epilogue
At
the end of the play, an epilogue
thanks the audience and promises that the story will continue in a forthcoming
play "with Sir John in it, and make you merry with fair Katharine of France;
where, for all I know, Falstaff shall die of a sweat". In fact, Falstaff
does not appear on stage in the subsequent play, Henry
V, although his death is referred to.
The Merry Wives of Windsor does have "Sir John in it", but cannot be the
play referred to, since the passage clearly describes the forthcoming story of
Henry V and his wooing of Katherine of France. Falstaff does "die of a
sweat" in Henry V, but in London at the beginning of the play. His
death is offstage, described by another character and he never appears. His
role as a cowardly soldier looking out for himself is taken by Ancient Pistol,
his braggart sidekick in Henry IV, Part 2 and Merry Wives.
The
epilogue also assures the playgoer that Falstaff is not based on the
anti-Catholic rebel Sir
John Oldcastle, for "Oldcastle died martyr,
and this is not the man". Falstaff had originally been named Oldcastle,
following Shakespeare's main model, an earlier play The Famous Victories
of Henry V. Shakespeare was forced to change
the name after complaints from Oldcastle's descendants. While it is accepted by
modern critics that the name was originally Oldcastle in Part 1, it is disputed
whether or not Part 2 initially retained the name, or whether it was always
"Falstaff". According to René Weis, metrical analyses of the verse
passages containing Falstaff's name have been inconclusive.
Sources
Shakespeare's
primary source for Henry IV, Part 2, as for most of his chronicle
histories, was Raphael Holinshed's
Chronicles; the publication of the second edition in 1587 provides a terminus
a quo for the play. Edward
Hall's The Union of the Two
Illustrious Families of Lancaster and York appears also to have been
consulted, and scholars have also supposed Shakespeare to have been familiar
with Samuel Daniel's
poem on the civil wars.
Date and text
Henry
IV, Part 2 is believed to have been written
sometime between 1596 and 1599. It is possible that Shakespeare interrupted his
composition of Henry IV, Part 2 somewhere around Act 3–4, so as to
concentrate on writing The Merry Wives of Windsor, which may have been commissioned for an annual meeting of
the Order of the Garter,
possibly the one held on 23 April 1597.
The
play was entered into the Register
of the Stationers'
Company in 1600 by the booksellers Andrew
Wise and William
Aspley. The play was published in quarto the same year (printing by Valentine
Simmes). Less popular than Henry
IV, Part 1, this was the only quarto edition.
The play next saw print in the First
Folio in 1623.
The
quarto's title page states that the play had been "sundry times publicly
acted" before publication. Extant records suggest that both parts of Henry
IV were acted at Court in 1612—the records rather cryptically refer to the
plays as Sir John Falstaff and Hotspur. A defective record,
apparently to the Second part of Falstaff, may indicate a Court
performance in 1619.
The
earliest extant manuscript text of Henry IV, Part 2 is the Dering
Manuscript, redacted around 1623.
Criticism and analysis
Part
2 is generally seen as a less
successful play than Part 1. Its structure, in which Falstaff and Hal
barely meet, can be criticised as undramatic. Some critics believe that
Shakespeare never intended to write a sequel, and that he was hampered by a
lack of remaining historical material with the result that the comic scenes
come across as mere "filler". However, the scenes involving Falstaff
and Justice Shallow are admired for their touching elegiac comedy, and the
scene of Falstaff's rejection can be extremely powerful onstage.
The
critic Harold Bloom
has suggested the two parts of Henry IV along with the Hostess' elegy
for Sir John in Henry V may be Shakespeare's greatest achievement.
Adaptations
There
have been three BBC television films of Henry IV, Part 2. In the 1960
mini-series An Age of Kings,
Tom Fleming
starred as Henry IV, with Robert
Hardy as Prince Hal and Frank
Pettingell as Falstaff. The 1979 BBC Television Shakespeare version starred Jon
Finch as Henry IV, David
Gwillim as Prince Hal and Anthony
Quayle as Falstaff. In the 2012 series The Hollow Crown, Henry IV, Part I and
Part II were directed by Richard
Eyre and starred Jeremy
Irons as Henry IV, Tom
Hiddleston as Prince Hal and Simon Russell Beale
as Falstaff.
Orson
Welles' Chimes at Midnight (1965) compiles the two Henry IV plays into a
single, condensed storyline, while adding a handful of scenes from Henry
V and dialogue from Richard II
and The Merry Wives of Windsor. The film stars Welles himself as Falstaff, John
Gielgud as King Henry, Keith Baxter
as Hal, Margaret Rutherford
as Mistress Quickly and Norman
Rodway as Hotspur.
BBC
Television's 1995 Henry IV also combines the two Parts into one
adaptation. Ronald Pickup
played the King, David Calder
Falstaff, and Jonathan Firth
Hal.
In
2015, the Michigan Shakespeare Festival produced an award-winning combined
production, directed and adapted by Janice L. Blixt of the two plays, focusing
on the relationship between Henry IV and Prince Hal.
Pop culture
The
Ultimate Edition of Monty Python and the
Holy Grail features subtitles correlating
scenes in the film to lines from the play.
A
line from the play, "Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown", is
frequently quoted (and misquoted, as "Heavy lies the crown..."). It
appears in the opening frame of the movie The Queen.
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