Why do people care where Horatio is from? The first few times I read the play that question never occurred to me, and I’m kind of unsure how it came into being.
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Originally Posted by Virgil
When Hamlet is sent off to England, doesn't Horatio stay behind?
Most likely because Claudius doesn’t see the need to kill or exile Horatio. The less witnesses, the better – the neater the better.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Virgil
And why do the guards ask for Horatio to see the ghost before Hamlet?
They aren’t friendly enough with Hamlet to approach him directly. Horatio is a similarly educated scholar, and a more common man. He is, for lack of a better term, a “good substitute” for Hamlet to them. Asking Horatio is also a preliminary, almost cautionsary step. They wanted yet another person to observe the strange appearance of the Ghost – perhaps they needed Horatio to talk to Hamlet as well, he wouldn’t have trusted them.
I assumed Horatio was a Dane simply because of the events in Act 1 scene 1 – Marcellus openly asks Barnardo and Horatio who can tell him why they have been having to watch the perimeter every night, why the country has been making weapons and training warriors, making the night “joint labourer” with the day, etc. Horatio responds with the following:
That can I.
At least the whisper goes so: our last king,
whose image even but now appeared to us,
and forward. He proceeds to draw upon his education for a little coloring of his explanation of the “rummage” in the land. However, it is merely the “our” above that leads me to believe he is a native.