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How Does Shakespeare Present Ophelia's Madness In Hamlet

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To find out the truth about the late king, Hamlet feigns his madness to fool the characters. Since his father has just passed away, everyone is thinking that he is going insane due to all the drama that is going on within the family. His mother getting married to his uncle, and on top of all that, his feelings for Ophelia have been rejected. In the beginning Hamlet seems to have crossed the line into madness to trick the kingdom to think he was crazy, when in reality he wanted to investigate the murder of his father, because the ghost of the king keeps appearing to him to reveal the truth. Another character who seems to show signs of madness is Ophelia. Her madness is portrayed as real and that is what the character’s think drove her to her death. In Shakespeare’s Hamlet, it appears that the madness Hamlet portrays is feigned; Shakespeare does this to create a dramatic effect for the characters and audience to react to.

Hamlet shows signs of madness, and then there are other …show more content…

Her brother, Laertes looks out for Ophelia; he does not like her and Hamlet together. Polonius and Laertes try to talk her out of her love for Hamlet. Ophelia feels guilty for her romance with Hamlet even though her father ordered her not to be involved with him. Then in the event when Polonius dies she feels even worse, since she did not listen to her father which drives her into complete insanity. In the scene when Ophelia sings a song, “‘to-morrow is Saint Valentine’s Day,/ ...To be your Valentine./ ‘Then up he rose and donn’d his clo’es,/ And dupp’d the chamber-door,/...Young men will do’t if they come to’t,/ By Cock, they are to blame.” (Act IV, Scene V). Her song is about Hamlet, as he persuaded her into a romantic relationship and then left her. Her song also touches on her guilt from not obeying her father and the moral consequences she now

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