preview

Aspects of Life in Hamlet, Prince of Denmark and Trifles Essay

Better Essays

Aspects of Life in Hamlet, Prince of Denmark and Trifles

In William Shakespeare’s play, Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, the protagonist, Hamlet, has arrived “from his university studies to find Claudius, his uncle, ruling Denmark and married to his mother, Gertrude. Her remarriage within two months of his father’s death has left Hamlet disillusioned, confused, and suspicious about Claudius” (DiYanni 1394). These types of crimes do not only happen in a person’s imagination, or in a made-up play, but also in our society today. Our society is just as immoral as Claudius and Gertrude. On the other hand, in Susan Gaspell’s contemporary play, Trifles, women are strong in character, protective of one another, and in charge of the situation, …show more content…

“And if a man shall take his brother’s wife, it is an unclean thing…they shall be childless” (Holy Bible, Leviticus 20.21). “And if a man shall take his sister, his father’s daughter…it is a wicked thing; and they shall be cut off in the sight of their people…he shall bear his iniquity” (Holy Bible, Leviticus 20.17). Consequently, marriage within one’s family shall and will be punished. An online article written by Nick O’Dell states, “Allen and Patty Muth were sentenced to eight and five years in prison, …for choosing each other as lovers…They are also brother and sister, whose sexual relationship began as adults - he is now 46 and she 31. They were convicted of felony incest.” Their immorality is the same, if not worse than Gertrude and Claudius’s immorality; however, Gertrude and Claudius are not punished by the law but by Hamlet, himself, which is the only difference.

In addition, his mother is not the only one who is weak, in Hamlet’s eyes; he considers all females weak-minded and corruptible. He thinks if an adult woman like his mother has behaved in such a way under the influence of her desires, then, a young woman could not be trusted by her husband, and perhaps, this is why he later declines Ophelia’s love, because Hamlet considers all women the same. Ophelia is also a character who is depicted as frail, compliant, and emotional. She automatically does what the males in the play, her father, Polonius, and her brother, Laertes tell her, and

Get Access