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Hamlet Problem Essay

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The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark: Why did Gertrude Marry Claudius?

Claudius classified his marriage to Gertrude as an "equal scale weighing delight and dole" (1.2.12). However, the audience of William Shakespeare's play, The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, has a hard time comprehending exactly what drove Gertrude to her hasty marriage a mere two months after the death of her husband. Character analysis along with evidence taken from the play makes the answer obvious. Gertrude married Claudius because she needed a powerful man to control her life. After King Hamlet died, Claudius took advantage of Gertrude's grief and became that man.

Authoritative men easily dominated Gertrude. Thus, she became reliant on them to …show more content…

In addition Gertrude's love for King Hamlet was "as if increase of appetite had grown/By what it fed on" (1.2.144-145). Hamlet is an eyewitness to the love King Hamlet and Gertrude shared. Therefore it is illogical to conclude that Gertrude and Claudius were involved prior to King Hamlet's death.

Others believe that Gertrude helped kill her husband so that she would be able to wed Claudius. Her reaction to Hamlet when he informed her of the murder plot leads one to believe differently. Gertrude claims that Hamlet's "words like daggers enter her ears (3.4.95). Gertrude was clearly shocked and unaware of the murder of her husband until Hamlet informed her of the plot. Gertrude was bewildered out of words, she could only manage to repeat the words Hamlet spoke to her—"[a]s kill a king?" (3.4.29).

The hasty marriage between Gertrude and Claudius was the result of Gertrude's vital need for male supremacy and Claudius' commanding nature. Gertrude's feeble disposition made her simple prey for Claudius' dictator-like character. Because Gertrude needed someone to rule her life, she wed Claudius "[w]ith an auspicious, and a dropping eye" (1.2.11).

Shakespeare, William. The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. Literature: An Introduction to Reading and Writing, Ed. Edgar V. Roberts and Henry E. Jacobs. 7th ed. Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall.

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