Work has been a little busy--it happens from time to time. Don't wait for me if I lag behind, though, because there's no telling how long it will be before I can post. I know I pushed the thread a lot at the beginning, but I'm not so much its leader as I am its advocate. I'd like to help out here and there, but we need more than one person leading the conversation.
That's a good point. The sun and moon imagery shows the different allegiances that each character has. Falstaff belongs to the moon and the sublunary. His world revolves around theft, self-indulgence, and the tavern, while Hal's centers on honor, self-image, and the court. Hal sees himself at the end of scene ii as an obscured sun which implies that he doesn't take any of Falstaff's moon/tavern life seriously. I don't know how much the audience is supposed to believe that exactly. Clearly, Hal's future takes him to the court and kingship, but something about Hal completely disregarding Falstaff is unsatisfying. It would make this scene just comic relief--it wouldn't have any of those serious moments you were talking about earlier. On top of that, the scenes wouldn't have any substance. We wouldn't be learning anything in scene ii other than that Falstaff is a dissolute slob who Hal is using for political reasons, but Falstaff seems like more than that. I don't know, then, how we're supposed to take that final speech by Hal about the sun. Maybe the ostensible reason why these characters are together is that each is using the other, but that doesn't completely cover what's going on in these scenes so that last speech seems to be covering up more than it's revealing.
I tend to think of their relationship less in terms of each other use of the other (which seems like just the playwright's way of getting them in the same room), and more as what I called earlier a "running commentary" on what it's like to live by either the sun or the moon, in the tavern or in the court:
"Their conversation in this play is a running commentary about the strengths and weakness of the realities represented by court and tavern, sun and moon. Falstaff will point out how insubstantial honor and valor are--that they're just words--and Hal shows how foolish self-interest can be. At the very introduction of these characters, they're already commenting on each other's position. Falstaff says he belongs to the moon, and Hal replies that "Thou sayest well, and it holds well too; for the/ fortune of us that are the moon's men doth ebb and/ flow like the sea
Hal is showing that those who steal under the moon are not in control of their fortune. Anything you gain while the moon is out can be lost just as easily. This little observation starts off what becomes a long conversation on whether it's better to live under the sun or the moon. In Henry V, though, the clever back-and-forth is replaced by a synthesis. The character Henry V combines both the court's respectability and Falstaff's worldly awareness. Not only does he unite England, but he combines the two poles you mentioned. Henry V, the play (the italics are hardly noticeable), takes up the discussion in the previous play and moves beyond it--just as Henry IV continues the story of Richard II."
Do you think the plays use sleep differently, though? Do you think Hamlet's idea of sleep is different from Hal's?
There is something weary about Henry IV in these first scenes. He comes off as a little impotent since he doesn't really do anything but bluster at his subordinates. Even when he goes to war we don't see him doing particularly much. Everything we see of the war is from Hal's perspective which downplays the king.
That's an interesting connection. I think it does show the difference between the king's occupation and Falstaff's. It might also point to the different state of mind that the king and Falstaff have. The king feels that his position is unstable and that he constantly has to act to avoid disaster. Hence, he feels hurried. Meanwhile, Falstaff is relaxed and unconcerned. He has plenty of time because he doesn't have the enemies closing around him that Henry IV does. His only concern is that the new king will impose a tighter grip than the current one--a fate which is rather distant.



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"It's so mysterious, the land of tears." 
