Hamnet Shakespeare
by KRM
Papa comes home, smiling, whistling,
He tells us stories of London
And
Perhaps performs a skit or two
He picks me up
Tells me I’m more handsome
Than the last time
He saw me
Was that six months hence?
Susanna and prissy Judith
Both tease me as we set the places
Mother chides us,
Our father is home, be on your
Best Behavior
Papa tells us he could
Care less, He loves us
As we are
I wonder secretly to
Mother,
‘Why isn’t Papa home more?’
Mother has no good answer. She smiles
Tells me what I’ve heard before
“Work”
Other Papas have work
Here in Stratford.
Why does our Papa
Work in London?
He’s an actor, Mother says
He writes plays,
He’s a player, he acts
For the public, the king, the queen
Sometimes.
Papa and Mother sit before
The fire, talking about
Us
I think.
My twin, Judith
Tells me it’s
Rude to listen, to work on my
Latin like a good boy
I stick my tongue out
At her.
She’s a prissy girl,
What does she know?
Papa and Mother argue
She says for him to come
Home more often
He says it can’t be done
She says others manage it
He says he loves her very much
There’s writing he must get to
She says ‘The children
Need a father’
He says, ‘they more need a mother’
He smiles at me, peering from behind the door
Curiosity getting the
Better of me
Mother doesn’t see me
She’s angry
Angrier than
She is at me
Sometimes, when I
Don’t do my schoolwork.
Papa sits by the fire, writing.
Feather scratches the paper, I wonder
What he writes.
He tells me to come to him, to
Listen to a scene.
He writes other things, too
Things about “Anne”
My mother.
He crumples that up
And tosses it into the fire
I watch the flames envelope
The paper
He tells me about the stage
I tell him about Susanna and Prissy Judith
He tells me I’d be a great actor
Stealing the stage
I say
I want to go with him to London
He says maybe one day, Hamnet.
It’s August,
I’m sicker than sick
Mother says she’s called for
Papa,
But I don’t want Papa
I want to be well
Prissy Judith, and Susanna are
Reverent by my bedside
I think about Papa
Maybe I’ll go to London
With him after
I’m well
I tell Mother this
She cries.
I think about Papa
The way they’d argue
How he’d write about her
I tell her this
She cries again. She tells
Me I’ll be well again
Soon, soon, soon
But by then
I knew
I wouldn’t be
Hamnet Shakespeare died in August 1596 from unknown causes. It's also unknown if his father was present at the time.
Friday, November 19, 2010
A Shakespeare Poem on Friday
No, not a poem by Shakespeare, one about him. You see, my 13-year-old daughter is supposed to be writing a research paper. The topic she chose was about the debate some people go into about who "really" wrote Shakespeare's plays. (For the record she thinks he wrote them, and I agree.)
Anyway, while she was supposed to be busily typing up her paper, she got to thinking about Shakespeare's son, Hamnet and this is what she came up with.
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1 comment:
WOW!
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