Millionth thought aboutĀ āBurnā Iāve had this month: Eliza goes for Hamiltonās jugular ā but not by repeating the insults weāve heard before, (arrogant, loud mouthed, obnoxious, son of a whore, bastard, etcā¦) She rips Hamilton up on the thing heās most known for, what heās most proud of ā his WRITING. His SENSELESS sentences, his SELF OBSESSED and PARANOID tone. Sheās tearing him up about not just the CONTENT of the Reynolds Pamphlet, but the way in which he wrote it. She takes the time in the middle of her rage to mock his style, which is such a rap battle move.Ā
And what is she going to do with all of the beautiful writing he gave her over the years, his letters?Ā
Burn them.Ā
I think about this LITERALLY of the time. About how she pushes the button she knows will kill him.
ānot only did you totally drag our names through the mud, and ruin our reputation, it wasnāt. even. your. best. work.ā
^^^^^^^^^ killedĀ āem ^^^^^^^^^
Okay but that isnāt even the most hardcore part:
The entire play is a fourth wall-breaking battle for narrative control of personal and professional legacy. Thatās what itās about. Conventional wisdom ā and basic logic ā states that history is written by the winners. Hamilton: An American Musical shows us the battle for that proverbial quill.
Literally the first song tells us āHis enemies destroyed his rep/America forgot himā because up until the release of this play, Alexander Hamiltonās legacy was mostly overlooked by the average American, largely thanks to folks like Jefferson and Madison underselling his contributions after he died.
(This is also why Jefferson isnāt shy and awkward in the play. While that would have been historically accurate, the point is that the modern perception of Jefferson is that heās a Big Fucking Deal. Because he made himself look that way.)
So the characters on stage are constantly fighting to make their version of events the version of events.
Burr is the narrator because this is his opportunity to tell his side of things. āHistory obliterates in every picture it paints, it paints me in all my mistakes.ā Heās saying that in the end he LOST the fight for narrative control. And yet ā and hereās the fucking amazing part ā the mere act of explaining this to the audience CHANGES OUR PERCEPTION OF BURR and alters his place in history. God Lin is too smart for his own goddamn good.
(āHistory has its eyes on you,ā Washington says, putting a very fine point on things. And if you donāt think he also means thereās an audience sitting watching this play, youāre not paying attention.)
So, letās talk about Alexander, his obsession with legacy, and his tried and true method for controlling the narrative:
Writing.
In āHurricaneā he says āIāll write my way out! Write everything down far as I can see! ā¦ Overwhelm them with honesty! This is the eye of the hurricane, this is the only way I can protect my legacy!ā
āIt doesnāt workā you might say, going by the contents of āThe Reynolds Pamphlet.ā Exceptā¦ it kinda does. āAt least he was honest with our money!ā the company sings. Which was really Alexanderās main concern, after all. Think of his priorities in āWe Knowā where his first instinct is to gloat because āYou have nothing!ā Itās not until a beat later that he even considers Eliza.
He published the Reynolds Pamphlet because he didnāt want people to think he was disloyal to the United States. His concern was with his professional legacy. And in that senseā¦ he succeeded.
(He succeeded in another way, too. Listen to āSay No To This.ā (God I could write a 40 page paper on that song alone.) This is where we actually hear the contents of the Reynolds Pamphlets. And how does the song begin? With Burr explicitlyĀ handing narrative control to Alexander Hamilton. āAnd Alexanderās by himself. Iāll let him tell it.ā
Every line of dialogue from Maria is prefaced with Hamilton saying āshe said.ā Thatās because HAMILTON IS WRITING HER DIALOGUE. Hamilton is creating this character of a sultry seductress in red, coming to him when he was weak and luring him to adultery. Maria Reynolds in the play not a character, sheās a fantasy, created to excuse Hamiltonās transgressions.
Itās worth noting at this juncture that Maria Reynolds, the real woman, wrote her own pamphlet. No one would publish it. She was silenced. And Hamiltonās depiction of her as a morally corrupt temptress became the dominant narrative.
So suck on that literally any time you want to fucking blame Maria for Hamiltonās affair: good job, youāve bought into a serial adultererās lies about a battered woman. Also donāt do that, I swear to god I will come for you.)
SO. What does any of this have to do with Burn?
In the very end, itās revealed that it wasnāt Jefferson or Burr or Hamilton in control of the Almighty Narrative.
It was Eliza.
The very last second of the play is Alexander Hamilton turning Eliza to face the audience. She sees the people watching, and she gasps. Because she did this. Sheās the reason this play exists. Sheās the reason Lin Manuel Miranda is telling us a damn thing about Alexander Hamilton, sheās the reason Hamilton got a massively popular zeitgeist musical.
Now. Throughout the course of the play Eliza sees all these people weaving their important stories and she thinks sheās somehowā¦ outside. Sheās not a statesman, sheās not brilliant like Angelica, sheās just a wife and a mother and she has no place among these giants. At one point she LITERALLY ASKS HER HUSBAND TO BE INCLUDED IāM GONNA SCREAM.
And yet she never had to ask. She was in control the whole time.
And how, how did she do it? How did she ākeepā Alexanderās āflame?ā By collecting and preserving everything he WROTE, of course. Making sense of it all. She spent fifty years on the project. Everything she collected BECAME THE NARRATIVE.
But you know what wasnāt in there?
Thatās right: those letters she burned.
So she didnāt just insult him, oh noooo. Eliza WHOLESALE OBLITERATED A PIECE OF ALEXANDER HAMILTON FROM THE NARRATIVE.
And not just any piece. āYou built me palaces out of paragraphs, you built cathedrals,ā she sings. In āHurricaneā Hamilton lists his letters to Eliza among his greatest accomplishments, (conflating his writing them with actually BEING HER HUSBAND, god what a self-centered prick). āI wrote Eliza love letters until she fell.ā
Eliza says: āIām burning the memories, burning the letters that might have redeemed you.ā
The best pieces of Alexander Hamilton: gone.
God Iām gonna go curl up in a ball and freak out about this some more. FUCK.
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