high and dry... (Rapidly.) Has it ever happened to you that all of a sudden and for no reason at all you haven't the faintest idea how to spell the word - "wife" - or "house" - because when you write it down you just can't remember ever having seen those letters in that order before...? ROS: I remember... GUIL: Yes? ROS: I remember there were no questions. GUIL: There were always questions. To exchange one set for another is no great matter. ROS: Answers, yes. There were answers to everything. GUIL: You've forgotten. ROS (flaring): I haven't forgotten - how I used to remember my own name - and yours, oh ): I haven't forgotten - how I used to remember my own name - and yours, oh yes! There were answers everywhere you looked. There was no question about it - people knew who I was and if they didn't they asked and I told them. GUIL: You did, the trouble is each of them is... plausible, without being instinctive. All your life you live so close to truth, it becomes a permanent blur in the corner of your eye, and when something nudges it into outline it is like being ambushed by a grotesque. A man standing in his saddle in the half-lit half-alive dawn banged on the shutters and called two names. He was just a hat and the cloak levitating in the grey plume of his own breath, but when he called we came. That much is certain - we came. ROS: Well I can tell you I'm sick to death of it. I don't care one way or another, so why don't you make up your mind. GUIL: We can't afford anything quite so arbitrary. Nor did we come all this way for a christening. All that - preceded us. But we are comparatively fortunate; we might have been left to sift the whole field of human nomenclature, like two blind men looting a bazaar for their own portraits... At least we are presented with alternatives. ROS: Well as from now - GUIL: - But not choice. ROS: You made me look ridiculous in there. GUIL: I looked as ridiculous as you did. ROS (an anguished cry): Consistency is all I ask! GUIL (low, wry rhetoric): Give us this day our daily mask. ROS (a dying fall): I want to go home. (Moves.) Which way did we come in? I've lost my sense of direction. GUIL: The only beginning is birth and the only end is death - if you can't count on that, what can you count on? (They connect again.) ROS: We don't owe anything to anyone. GUIL: We've been caught up. Your smallest action sets off another somewhere else, and is set off by it. Keep an eye open, an ear cocked. Tread warily, follow instructions. We'll be all right. ROS: For how long? GUIL: Till events have played themselves out. There's a logic at work - it's all done for you, don't worry. Enjoy it. Relax. To be taken in hand and led, like being a child again, even without the innocence, a child - It's like being given a prize, an extra slice of childhood when you least expect it, as a prize for being good, or a compensation for never having had one... Do I contradict myself? ROS: I don't remember. What have we got to go on? GUIL: We have been briefed. Hamlet's transformation. What do you recollect? ROS: Well, he's changed, hasn't he? The exterior and inward man fails to resemble - GUIL: Draw him on to pleasures - glean what afflicts him. ROS: Something more than his father's death - GUIL: He's always talking about us - there aren't two people living whom he dotes on more than us. ROS: We cheer him up - find out what's the matter - GUIL: Exactly, it's the matter of asking the right questions and giving away as little as we can. It's a game. ROS: And then we can go? GUIL: And receive such thanks as fits a king's remembrance. ROS: I like the sound of that. What do you think he means by remembrance? GUIL: He doesn't forget his friends. ROS: Wouldn't you care to estimate? GUIL: Difficult to say, really - come kings tend to be amnesiac, others I suppose - the opposite, whatever that is... ROS: Yes - but - GUIL: Elephantine...? ROS: Hot how long - how much? GUIL: Retentive - he's a very retentive king, a royal retainer... ROS: What are you playing at? GUIL: Words, words. They're all we have to go on. (Pause.) ROS: Shouldn't we be doing something - constructive? GUIL: What did you have in mind?... A short, blunt human pyramid...? ROS: We could go. GUIL: Where? ROS: After him. GUIL: Why? They've got us placed now - if we start moving around, we'll all be chasing each other all night. (Hiatus.) ROS (at footlights): How very intriguing! (Turns.) I feel like a spectator - an appalling business. The only thing that makes it bearable is the irrational belief that somebody interesting will come on in a minute... GUIL: See anyone? ROS: No. You? GUIL: No. (At footlights.) What a fine persecution - to be kept intrigued without ever quite being enlightened... (Pause.) We've had no practice. ROS: We could play at questions. GUIL: What good would that do? ROS: Practice! GUIL: Statement! One-love. ROS: Cheating! GUIL: How? ROS: I hadn't started yet. GUIL: Statement. Two-love. ROS: Are you counting that? GUIL: What? ROS: Are you counting that? GUIL: Foul! No repetitions. Three-love. First game to... ROS: I'm not going to play if you're going to be like that. GUIL: Whose serve? ROS: Hah? GUIL: Foul! No grunts. Love-one. ROS: Whose go? GUIL: Why? ROS: Why not? GUIL: What for? ROS: Foul! No synonyms! One-all. GUIL: What in God's name is going all? ROS: Foul! No rhetoric. Two-one. GUIL: What does it all add up to? ROS: Can't you guess? GUIL: Were you addressing me? ROS: Is there anyone else? GUIL: Who? ROS: How would I know? GUIL: Why do you ask? ROS: Are you serious? GUIL: Was that rhetoric? ROS: No. GUIL: Statement! Two-all. Game point. ROS: What's the matter with you today? GUIL: When? ROS: What? GUIL: Are you deaf? ROS: Am I dead? GUIL: Yes or no? ROS: Is there a choice? GUIL: Is there a God? ROS: Foul! No non sequiturs, three-two, one game all. GUIL (seriously): What's your name? ROS: What's yours? GUIL: I asked you first. ROS: Statement. One-love. GUIL: What's your name when you're at home? ROS: What's yours? GUIL: When I'm at home? ROS: Is it different at home? GUIL: What home? ROS: Haven't you got one? GUIL: Why do you ask? ROS: What are you driving at? GUIL (with emphasis): What's your name?! ROS: Repetition. Two-love. Match point to me. GUIL (seizing him violently): WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE? ROS: Rhetoric! Game and match! (Pause.) Where's it going to end? GUIL: That's the question. ROS: It's all questions. GUIL: Do you think it matters? ROS: Doesn't it matter to you? GUIL: Why should it matter? ROS: What does it matter why? GUIL (teasing gently): Doesn't it matter why it matters? ROS (rounding on him): What's the matter with you? (Pause.) GUIL: It doesn't matter. ROS (voice in the wilderness): ... What's the game? GUIL: What are the rules? (Enter HAMLET behind, crossing the stage, reading a book - as he is about to disappear GUIL notices him.) GUIL (sharply): Rosencrantz! ROS (jumps): What? (HAMLET goes. Triumph dawns on them, they smile.) GUIL: There! How was that? ROS: Clever! GUIL: Natural? ROS: Instinctive. GUIL: Got it in your head? ROS: I take my hat off you. GUIL: Shake hands. (They do.) ROS: Now I'll try you - Guil - ! GUIL: - Not yet - catch me unawares. ROS: Right. (They separate. Pause. Aside to GUIL.) Ready? GUIL (explodes): Don't be stupid. ROS: Sorry. (Pause.) GUIL (snaps): Guildenstern! ROS (jumps): What? (He is immediately crestfallen, GUIL is disgusted.) GUIL: Consistency is all I ask! ROS (guilty): Give us this day our daily week... (Beat.) ROS: Who was that? GUIL: Didn't you know him? ROS: He didn't know me. GUIL: He didn't see you. ROS: I didn't see him. GUIL: We shall see. I hardly knew him, he's changed. ROS: You could see that? GUIL: Transformed. ROS: How do you know? GUIL: Inside and out. ROS: I see. GUIL: He's not himself. ROS: He's changed. GUIL: I could see that. (Beat.) Glean what afflicts him. ROS: Me? GUIL: Him. ROS: How? GUIL: Question and answer. Old ways are the best ways. ROS: He's afflicted. GUIL: You question, I'll answer. ROS: He's not himself, you know. GUIL: I'm him, you see. (Beat.) ROS: Who am I then? GUIL: You're yourself. ROS: And he's you? GUIL: Not a bit of it. ROS: Are you afflicted? GUIL: That's the idea. Are you ready? ROS: Let's go back a bit. GUIL: I'm afflicted. ROS: I see. GUIL: Glean what afflicts me. ROS: Right. GUIL: Question and answer. ROS: How should I begin? GUIL: Address me. ROS: My dear Guildenstern! GUIL (quietly): You've forgotten - haven't you? ROS: My dear Rosencrantz! GUIL (great control): I don't think you quite understand. What we are attempting is a hypothesis in which I answer for him, while you ask me questions. ROS: Ah! Ready? GUIL: You know what to do? ROS: What? GUIL: Are you stupid? ROS: Pardon? GUIL: Are you deaf? ROS: Did you speak? GUIL (admonishing): Not now - ROS: Statement. GUIL (shouts): Not now! (Pause.) If I had my doubts, or rather hopes, they are dispelled. What could we possibly have in common except our situation? (They separate and sit.) Perhaps he'll come back this way. ROS: Should we go? GUIL: Why? (Pause.) ROS (starts up. Snaps fingers.): Oh! You mean - you pretend to be him, and I ask you questions! GUIL (dry): Very good. ROS: You had me confused. GUIL: I could see I had. ROS: How should I begin? GUIL: Address me. (They stand and face each other, posing.) ROS: My honoured Lord! GUIL: My dear Rosencrantz! (Pause.) ROS: Am I pretending to be you, then? GUIL: Certainly not. If you like. Shall we continue? ROS: Question and answer. GUIL: Right. ROS: Right. My honoured Lord! GUIL: My dear fellow! ROS: How are you? GUIL: Afflicted! ROS: Really? In what way? GUIL: Transformed. ROS: Inside or out? GUIL: Both. ROS: I see. (Pause.) No much new there. GUIL: Go into details. Delve. Probe the background, establish the situation. ROS: So - so your uncle is the king of Denmark? GUIL: And my father before him. ROS: But surely - GUIL: You might well ask. ROS: Let me get it straight. Your father was king. You were his only son. Your father dies. You are of age. Your uncle becomes king. GUIL: Yes. ROS: Unorthodox. GUIL: Undid me. ROS: Undeniable. Where were you? GUIL: In Germany. ROS: Usurpation, then. GUIL: He slipped in. ROS: Which reminds me. GUIL: Well, it would. ROS: I don't want to be personal. GUIL: It's common knowledge. ROS: Your mother's marriage. GUIL: He slipped in. (Beat.) ROS (lugubriously): His body was still warm. GUIL: So was hers. ROS: Extraordinary. GUIL: Indecent. ROS: Hasty. GUIL: Suspicious. ROS: It makes you think. GUIL: Don't think I haven't though of it. ROS: And with her husband's brother. GUIL: They were close. ROS: She went to him - GUIL: - Too close - ROS: - for comfort. GUIL: It looks bad. ROS: It adds up. GUIL: Incest and adultery. ROS: Would you go so far? GUIL: Never. ROS: To sum up: your father, whom you love, dies, you are his heir, you come back to find that hardly was the corpse cold before his young brother popped on to his throne and into his sheets, thereby offending both legal and natural practice. Now, why exactly you behaving in this extraordinary manner? GUIL: I can't imagine. (Pause.) But all that is well known, common property. Yet he sent for us. And we did come. ROS (alert, ear cocked): I say! I heard music - GUIL: We're here. ROS: - Like a band - I thought I heard a band. GUIL: Rosencrantz... ROS (absently, still listening): What? (Pause, short.) GUIL (gently wry): Guildenstern... ROS (irritated by the repetition): What? GUIL: Don't you discriminate at all? ROS (turning dumbly): What? (Pause.) GUIL: Go and see if he's there. ROS: Who? GUIL: There. (ROS goes to an upstage wing, looks, returns, formally making his report.) ROS: Yes. GUIL: What is he doing? (ROS repeats movement.) ROS: Talking. GUIL: To himself? (ROS starts to move. GUIL cuts him impatiently.) Is he alone? ROS: No. GUIL: Then he's not talking to himself, is he? ROS: Not by himself... Coming this way, I think. (Shiftily.) Should we go? GUIL: Why? We're marked now. (HAMLET enters, backwards, talking, followed by POLONIUS, upstage. ROS and GUIL occupy the two downstage corners looking upstage.) HAMLET: ... for you yourself, sir, should be as old as I am if like a crab you could go backwards. POLONIUS (aside): Though this be madness, yet there is method in it. Will you walk out of air, my Lord? HAMLET: Into my grave. POLONIUS: Indeed, that's out of air. (HAMLET crosses to upstage exit, POLONIUS asiding unintelligibly until -) My lord, I will take my leave of you. HAMLET: You cannot take from me anything that I will more willingly part withal - except my life, except my life, except my life... POLONIUS (crossing downstage): Fare you well, my lord. (To ROS.) You go to seek Lord HAMLET? There he is. ROS (to POLONIUS) God save you, sir. (POLONIUS goes.) GUIL (calls upstage to HAMLET): My honoured Lord! ROS: My most dear Lord! (HAMLET centred upstage, turns to them.) HAMLET: My excellent good friends! How dost thou Guildenstern? (Coming downstage with am arm raised to ROS, GUIL meanwhile bowing to no greeting. HAMLET corrects himself. Still to ROS.) Ah Rosencrantz! (They laugh good naturedly at the mistake. They all meet midstage, turn upside to walk, HAMLET in the middle, arm over each shoulder.) HAMLET: Good lads, how do you both? (A fade out. That is to say, the conversation - see Shakespeare, Act II, Scene ii - runs down quickly; it is still animated and interspersed with laughter, but it is overtaken by rising music and fading light.) Act Two. HAMLET, ROS and GUIL talking, the continuation of the previous scene. Their conversation, on the move, is indecipherable at first. The first illegible line is HAMLET's, coming at the end of a short speech ? see Shakespeare Act II, scene ii. HAMLET: S'blood, there is something in this more than natural, if philosophy could take it out. (A flourish from the TRAGEDIANS' band.) GUIL: There are the players. HAMLET: Gentlemen, you are welcome in Elsinore. Your hands, come then. (He takes their hands.) The appurtenance of welcome is fashion and ceremony. Let me comply with you in this garb, lest my extent to the players (which I tell you must show fairly outwards) should more appear like entertainment than yours. You are welcome. (About to leave.) But my uncle-father and aunt-mother are deceived. GUIL: In what, my dear lord? HAMLET: I am but mad north north-west; when the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw. (POLUNIUS enters, as GUIL turns away.) POLONIUS: Well be you gentlemen. HAMLET (to ROS): Mark you, Guildenstern (uncertainly to GUIL) and you too; at each ear a hearer. That great baby you see there is not yet out of swaddling clouts... (He takes ROS upstage with him, talking together.) POLONIUS: My Lord! I have news to tell you. HAMLET (releasing ROS and mimicking): My lord, I have news to tell you... When Rocius was an actor in Rome... (ROS comes down to re-join GUIL.) POLONIUS (as he follows HAMLET out): The actors are come hither my lord. HAMLET: Buzz, buzz. (Exeunt HAMLET and POLONIUS.) (ROS and GUIL ponder. Each reluctant to speak first.) GUIL: Hm? ROS: Yes? GUIL: What? ROS: I thought you... GUIL: No. ROS: Ah. (Pause.) GUIL: I think we can say we made some headway. ROS: You think so? GUIL: I think we can say that. ROS: I think we can say he made us look ridiculous. GUIL: We played it close to the chest of course. ROS (derisively): "Question and answer. Old ways are the best ways"! He was scoring off us all down the line. GUIL: He caught us on the wrong foot once or twice, perhaps, but I thought we gained some ground. ROS (simply): He murdered us. GUIL: He might have had the edge. ROS (roused): Twenty-seven - three, and you think he might have had the edge?! He murdered us. GUIL: What about our evasions? ROS: Oh, our evasions were lovely. "Were you sent for?" he says. "My lord, we were sent for..." I didn't where to put myself. GUIL: He had six rhetoricals - ROS: It was question and answer, all right. Twenty-seven questions he got out in ten minutes, and answered three. I was waiting for you to delve. "When is he going to start delving?" I asked myself. GUIL: - And two repetitions. ROS: Hardly a leading question between us. GUIL: We got his symptoms, didn't we? ROS: Half of what he said meant something else, and the other half didn't mean anything at all. GUIL: Thwarted ambition - a sense of grievance, that's my diagnosis. ROS: Six rhetorical and two repetitions, leaving nineteen of which we answered fifteen. And what did we get in return? He's depressed!... Denmark's a prison and he'd rather live in a nutshell; some shadow-play about the nature of ambition, which never got down to cases, and finally one direct question which might have led somewhere, and led in fact to his illuminating claim to tell a hawk from a handsaw. (Pause.) GUIL: When the wind is southerly. ROS: And when the weather is clear. GUIL: And when it isn't he can't. ROS: He's at the mercy of the elements. (Licks his finger and holds it up - facing audience.) Is that southerly? (They stare at the audience.) GUIL: It doesn't look southerly. What made you think so? ROS: I didn't say I think so. It could be northerly for all I know. GUIL: I wouldn't have thought so. ROS: Well, if you're going to be dogmatic. GUIL: Wait a minute - we came from roughly south according to a rough map. ROS: I see. Well, which way did we come in? (GUIL looks around vaguely.) Roughly. GUIL (clears his throat): In the morning the sun would be easterly. I think we can assume that. ROS: That it's morning? GUIL: If it is, and the sun is over there (his right as he faces the audience) for instance, that (front) would be northerly. On the other hand, if it's not morning and the sun is over there (his left)... that... (lamely) would still be northerly. (Picking up.) To put it another way, if we came from down there (front) and it is morning, the sun would be up there (his left), and if it is actually over there (his right) and it's still morning, we must have come from up there (behind him), and if that is southerly (his left) and the sun is really over there (front), then it's afternoon. However, if none of these is the case - ROS: Why don't you go and have a look? GUIL: Pragmatism?! - is that all you have to offer? You seem to have no conception of where we stand! You won't find the answer written down for you in the bowl of a compass - I can tell you that. (Pause.) Besides, you can never tell this far north - it's probably dark out there. ROS: I merely suggest that the position of the sun, if it is out, would give you a rough idea of the time; alternatively, the clock, if it is going, would give you a rough idea of the position of the sun. I forget which you're trying to establish. GUIL: I'm trying to establish the direction of the wind. ROS: There isn't any wind. Draught, yes. GUIL: In that case, the origin. Trace it to the source and it might give us a rough idea of the way we came in - which might give us a rough idea of south, for further reference. ROS: It's coming up through the floor. (He studies the floor.) That can't be south, can it? GUIL: That's not direction. Lick your toe and wave it around a bit. (ROS considers the distance to his foot.) ROS: No, I think you'd have to lick it for me. (Pause.) GUIL: I'm prepared to let the whole matter drop. ROS: Or I could lick yours, of course. GUIL: No thank you. ROS: I'll even wave it around for you. GUIL (down ROS's throat): What in God's name is the matter with you? ROS: Just being friendly. GUIL (retiring): Somebody might come in. It's what we're counting on, after all. Ultimately. (Good pause.) ROS: Perhaps they've all trampled each other to death in the rush. Give them a shout. Something provocative. Intrigue them. GUIL: Wheels have been set in motion, and they have their own pace, to which we are... condemned. Each move is dictated by the previous one - that is the meaning of order. If we start being arbitrary it'll just be a shambles: at least, let us hope so. Because if we happened, just happened to discover, or even suspect, that our spontaneity was part of their order, we'd know that we were lost. (He sits.) A Chinaman of the T'ang Dynasty - and, by which definition, a philosopher - dreamed he was a butterfly, and from that moment he was never quite sure that he was not a butterfly dreaming it was a Chinese philosopher. Envy him, in his two-fold security. (A good pause. ROS leaps up and bellows at the audience.) ROS: Fire! (GUIL jumps up.) GUIL: Where? ROS: It's all right - I'm demonstrating the misuse of free speech. To prove that it exists. (He regards the audience, that is the direction, with contempt - and other directions, then front again.) Not a move. They should burn to death in their shoes. (ROS takes out one of his coins. Spins it. Catches it. Looks at it. Replaces it.) GUIL: What was it? ROS: What? GUIL: Heads or tails? ROS: Oh. I didn't look. GUIL: Yes you did. ROS: Oh, did I? (He takes a coin, studies it.) Quite right - it rings a bell. GUIL: What's the last thing you remember? ROS: I don't wish to be reminded of it. GUIL: We cross our bridges when we come to them and burn them behind us, with nothing to show our progress except a memory of the smell of smoke, and a presumption that once our eyes watered. (ROS approaches him brightly, holding a coin between finger and thumb. He covers it with the other hand, draws his fist apart and holds them for GUIL. GUIL considers them. Indicates the left hand, ROS opens it to show it empty.) ROS: No. (Repeat process. GUIL indicates left hand again. ROS shows it empty.) Double bluff! (Repeat process - GUIL taps one hand, then the other hand, quickly. ROS inadvertently shows that both are empty. ROS laughs as GUIL turns upstage. ROS stops laughing, looks around his left, pats his clothes, puzzled.) (POLONIUS breaks that up by entering upstage followed by the TRAGEDIANS and HAMLET.) POLONIUS (entering): Come, sirs. HAMLET: Follow him, friends. We'll hear a play tomorrow. (Aside to the PLAYER, who is the last of the TRAGEDIANS.) Dost thou hear me, old friend? Can you play "The Murder of Gonzago"? PLAYER: Ay, my lord. HAMLET: We'll ha't tomorrow night. You could for a need study a speech of some dozen or sixteen lines which I would set down and insert in't, could you not? PLAYER: Ay, my lord. HAMLET: Very well. Follow that lord, and look you mock him not. (The PLAYER crossing downstage, notes ROS and GUIL. Stops. HAMLET crossing downstage addresses them without a pause.) HAMLET: My good friends, I'll leave you till tonight. You are welcome to Elsinore. ROS: Good, my lord. (HAMLET goes.) GUIL: So you've caught up. PLAYER (coldly): Not yet, sir. GUIL: Now mind your tongue, or we'll have it out and throw the rest of you away, like a nightingale at a Roman feast. PLAYER: Took the very words out of my mouth. GUIL: You'd be lost for words. ROS: You'd be tongue-tied. GUIL: Like a mute in a monologue. ROS: Like a nightingale at a Roman feast. GUIL: Your diction will go to pieces. ROS: Your lines will be cut. GUIL: To dumbshows. ROS: And dramatic pauses. GUIL: You'll never find your tongue. ROS: Lick your lips. GUIL: Taste your tears. ROS: Your breakfast. GUIL: You won't know the difference. ROS: There won't be any. GUIL: We'll take the very words out of your mouth. ROS: So you've caught up. GUIL: So you've caught up. PLAYER (tops): Not yet! (Bitterly.) You left us. GUIL: Ah! I'd forgotten - you performed a dramatic spectacle by the wayside - a thing much thought of in the New Testament. How did yours compare as an impromptu? PLAYER: Badly - neither witnessed nor reported. GUIL: Yes, I'm sorry we had to miss it. I hope you didn't leave anything out - I'd be furious to think I didn't miss all of it. (The PLAYER, progressively aggrieved, now burst out.) PLAYER: We can't look each other in the face! (Pause, more in control.) You don't understand the humiliation of it - to be tricked out of a single assumption, which makes our existence viable - that somebody is watching... The plot was two corpses gone before we caught sight of ourselves, stripped naked in the middle of nowhere and pouring ourselves down a bottomless well. ROS: Is that thirty eight? PLAYER (lost): There we are - demented children mincing about in clothes that no one ever wore, speaking as no man ever spoke, swearing love in wigs and rhymed couplets, killing each other with wooden swords, hollow protestations of faith hurled after empty promises of vengeance - and every gesture, every pose, vanishing into the thin unpopulated air. We ransomed our dignity to the clouds, and the uncomprehending birds listened. (He rounds on them.) Don't you see?! We're actors - we're the opposite of people! (They recoil nonplussed, his voice calms.) Think, in your head, now, think of the most... private... secret... intimate... thing you have ever done secure in the knowledge of its privacy... (He gives them - and the audience - a good pause. ROS takes a shifty look.) Are you thinking of it? (He strikes with his voice and his head.) Well, I saw you do it! (ROS leaps up, dissembling madly.) ROS: You never! It's a lie! (He catches himself with a giggle in a vacuum and sits down again.) PLAYER: We're actors... We pledged our identities, secure in the conventions of our trade; that someone would be watching. And than, gradually, no one was. We were caught, high and dry. It was not until the murder's long soliloquy that we were able to look around; frozen we were in the profil, our eyes searched you out, first confidently, then hesitantly, then desperately as each patch of turf, each log, each exposed corned in every direction proved uninhabited, and all the while the murderous King addressed the horizon with his dreary interminable guilt... Our heads began to move, wary as lizards, the corpse of unsullied Rosalinda peeped through his fingers, and the King faltered. Even then, habit and a stubborn trust that our audience spied upon us from behind the nearest bush, forced our bodies to blunder on long after they had emptied of meaning, until like runaway carts they dragged to a halt. No one came forward. No one shouted at us. The silence was unbreakable, it imposed itself upon us; it was obscene. We took off our crowns and swords and cloth of gold and moved silent on the road to Elsinore. (Silence. Then GUIL claps solo with slow measured irony.) GUIL: Brilliantly re-created - if these eyes could weep!... Rather strong on metaphor, mind you. No criticism - only a matter of taste. And so here you are - with a vengeance. That's a figure of speech... isn't it? Well let's say we've made up for it, for you may have no doubt whom to thank for your performance at the court. ROS: We are counting on you to take him out of himself. You are the pleasures which we draw him on to - (he escapes a fractional giggle but recovers immediately) and by that I don't mean your usual filth; you can't . treat royalty like people with normal perverted desires. They know nothing of that and you know nothing of them, to your mutual survival. So give him a good clean show suitable for all the family, or you can rest assured you'll be playing the tavern tonight. GUIL: Or the night, after. ROS: Or not. PLAYER: We already have an entry here. And always have had. GUIL: You've played for him before? PLAYER: Yes, sir. ROS: And what's his bent? PLAYER: Classical. ROS: Saucy! GUIL: What will you play? PLAYER: "The Murder of Gonzago". GUIL: Full of fine cadence and corpses. PLAYER: Pirated from the Italian.... ROS: What is it about? PLAYER: It's about a King and Queen.... GUIL: Escapism! What else? PLAYER: Blood - - GUIL: - Love and rhetoric. PLAYER: Yes. (Going.) GUIL: Where are you going? PLAYER: I can come and go as I please. GUIL: You're evidently a man who knows his way around. PLAYER: I've been here before. GUIL: We're still finding our feet. PLAYER: I should concentrate on not losing your heads. GUIL: Do you speak from knowledge? PLAYER: Precedent. GUIL: You've been here before. PLAYER: And I know which way the wind is blowing. GUIL: Operating on two levels, are we?! How clever! I expect it comes naturally to you, being in the business so to speak. (The PLAYER's grave face does not change. He makes to move off again. GUIL for the second time cuts him off.) The truth is, we value your company, for want of any other. We have been left so much to our own devices - after a while one welcomes the uncertainty of being left to other people's. PLAYER: Uncertainty is the normal state. You're nobody special. (He makes to leave again. GUIL loses his cool.) GUIL: But for God's sake what are we supposed to do? PLAYER: Relax. Respond. That's what people do. You can't go through life questioning your situation at every turn. GUIL: But we don't know what's going on, or what to do with ourselves. We don't know how to act. PLAYER: Act natural. You know why you're here at least. GUIL: We only know what we're told, and that's little enough. And for all we know it isn't even true. PLAYER: For all anyone knows, nothing is. Everything has to be taken on trust; truth is only that which is taken to be true. It's the currency of living. There may be nothing behind it, but it doesn't make any difference so long as it is honoured. One acts on assumptions. What do you assume? ROS: Hamlet is not himself, outside or in. We have to glean what afflicts him. GUIL: He doesn't give much away. PLAYER: Who does, nowadays? GUIL: He's - melancholy. PLAYER: Melancholy? ROS: Mad. PLAYER: How is he mad? ROS: Ah. (To GUIL.) How is he mad? GUIL: More morose than mad, perhaps. PLAYER: Melancholy. GUIL: Moody. ROS: He has moods. PLAYER: Of moroseness? GUIL: Madness. And yet. ROS: Quite. GUIL: For instance. ROS: He talks to himself, which might be madness. GUIL: If he didn't talk sense, which he does. ROS: Which suggests the opposite. PLAYER: Of what? (Small pause.) GUIL: I think I have it. A man talking sense to himself is no madder than a man talking nonsense not to himself. ROS: Or just as mad. GUIL: Or just as mad. ROS: And he does both. GUIL: So there you are. ROS: Stark raving sane. (Pause.) PLAYER: Why? GUIL: Ah. (To ROS.) Why? ROS: Exactly. GUIL: Exactly what? . ROS: Exactly why. GUIL: Exactly why what? ROS: What? GUIL: Why? ROS: Why what, exactly? GUIL: Why is he mad?! ROS: I don't know! (Beat.) PLAYER: The old man thinks he's in love with his daughter. ROS (appalled): Good God! We're out of our depth here. PLAYER: No, no, no - he hasn't got a daughter - the old man thinks he's in love with his daughter. ROS: The old man is? PLAYER: Hamlet, in love with the old man's daughter, the old man thinks. ROS: Ha! It's beginning to make sense! Unrequited passion! (The PLAYER moves.) GUIL (Fascist): Nobody leaves this room! (Pause, lamely.) Without a very good reason. PLAYER: Why not? GUIL: All this strolling about is getting too arbitrary by half - I'm rapidly losing my grip. From now on reason will prevail. PLAYER: I have lines to learn. GUIL: Pass! (The PLAYER passes into one of the wings. ROS cups his hands and shouts into the opposite one.) ROS: Next! (But no one comes.) GUIL: What did you expect? ROS: Something ... someone ... nothing. (They sit facing front.) Are you hungry? GUIL: No, are you? ROS (thinks): No. You remember that coin? GUIL: No. ROS: I think I lost it. GUIL: What coin? ROS: I don't remember exactly. (Pause.) GUIL: Oh, that coin ... clever. ROS: I can't remember how I did it. GUIL: It probably comes natural to you. ROS: Yes, I've got a show-stopper there. GUIL: Do it again. (Slight pause.) ROS: We can't afford it. GUIL: Yes, one must think of the future. ROS: It's the normal thing. GUIL: To have one. One is, after all, having it all the time... now... and now... and now.... ROS: It could go on for ever. Well, not for ever, I suppose. (Pause.) Do you ever think of yourself as actually dead, lying in a box with a lid on it? GUIL: No. ROS: Nor do I, really.... It's silly to be depressed by it. I mean one thinks of it like being alive in a box, one keeps forg