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
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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
Hamlet’s madness is questioned by many readers. The truth is that Hamlet portrayed madness before he came up with the plan of acting madness. This madness is an important characteristic in the play with Hamlet’s actions revolving primarily around the idea he has because of his madness. There are several occasions further in the play when the audience sees Hamlet acting mad even though there is no one else in the room that he was aware of. In act three, scene four, when Hamlet is in his mother’s chamber and hears a noise behind the arras the rash decision to stab the noise behind the curtain shows exactly how erratic and unstable Hamlet is. His rash behaviour to kill without seeing what he is doing shows that his madness is real and not something he is faking to have revenge for his father. In act five scene two, Hamlet announces that he has switched the letter that ordered Hamlet to be killed in England; instead writing that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are to be killed. This is perhaps because he thought they were the ones who ordered his death when in fact they were just following Claudius’ instructions. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were Hamlet’s friends which show that he was perhaps paranoid in his madness. They were there to help yet his rash character after seeing the Ghost has yet again ended people’s lives. It is important to consider that in the Elizabethan era madness was defined differently than what the
People have mostly seen women inferior to men because women have been thought of as simple-minded and could not take care of themselves. Shakespeare’s Hamlet shows how men treated and thought of women during the 1500s. There was an order most did not interfere with; however, some did. In the 1500s, women were supposed to conform to men’s wishes. Throughout the play, Ophelia first obeyed her father and brother’s wishes, ignored the social norms later, and then went mad, which caused her to never gain her own identity.
When one refers to madness in Hamlet, most would think of Hamlet's madness, or at least that that he was pretending to possess. Although Ophelia does go insane and ultimately commits suicide, the central lunacy of the play revolves around Hamlet himself. Hamlet's plan to act mad is completely unexplained. It is safe to
Hamlet’s insanity can be thought of as a tragedy or misconception of reality. The death of his father had shaped the first few impressions of his own persona as well as a new experience with his new aunt. As a result of his genius insanity prince Hamlet has devised a plan to make things more clear to the audience. “Hamlet’s behavior strikes the audience as abnormal on several occasions. For example, Hamlet seems to be really mad when he is in front of Ophelia in disordered clothes. He behaves as if he had been loosed out of hell to speak of the horror”. As the progress of the play foreshadows a significant end to his insanity that he acts upon. As the play progresses throughout, Hamlet finds ways in order to give others the impression that he has lost his sanity from his “love” of Polonius’s daughter Ophelia. “(Ophelia)He grabbed me by the wrist and held me hard, then backed away an arm’s length and just looked at me, staring at me like an artist about to paint my
When someone refers to madness in Hamlet, most would think of just Hamlet’s madness, not everyone in the story. “O, that this too too sullied flesh would melt, thaw and resolve itself into a dew, or that the Everlasting had not fixed. His canon 'gainst self-slaughter! O God, God, how weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable. Seem to me all the uses of this world!” (I.II. 133-138). Hamlet is complaining about how depressed he is over his father's death and his mom remarrying, and wishing that his "flesh would melt,” wishing that he’d die. Hamlet sees betrayal from Gertrude, and he has no idea how to handle it correctly, without his madness kicking in. Ophelia also sees Hamlet twisting around. “My lord, as I was sewing in my closet, Lord Hamlet, with his doublet all unbraced; no hat upon his head, his stockings fouled, ungartered, and down-gyvèd to his ankle, pale as his shirt, his knees knocking each other, and with a look so piteous in purport, as if he had been loosèd out of hell to speak of horrors—he comes before me… He took me by the wrist and held me hard. Then goes he to the length of all his arm, and, with his other hand thus o'er his brow, he falls to such perusal of my face as he would draw it. Long stay'd he so. At last, a little shaking of mine arm, and thrice his head thus waving up and down, he raised a
In Shakespeare's tragedy, Hamlet, the character of Hamlet feigns insanity. For a person in his situation, having one's peers think of one as crazy can be quite beneficial. His father, the king, had just died, and he is visited by a ghost who appears to be his father's spirit. The ghost tells Hamlet that he was murdered by his brother Claudius, who is now the current king and who recently married the former king's wife. Hamlet vows revenge and, as a tool to aid him in that plan, convinces people that he is crazy. The fact that he is acting, as opposed to actually being insane, can be seen in Hamlet's conversations with a watchman, two childhood friends, and his mother. Also, there are many actions in the play that he would not have
Shakespeare's Hamlet is a master of deception. Hamlet decides to make Claudius believe that he is insane, but the scheme backfires when everyone, except Claudius, falls for it. Ophelia is one of those who believes Hamlet lost his mind, and when he does not return her love, she is so brokenhearted that she commits suicide. Near the end of the tragedy, Hamlet plays the part so well, that he convinces himself he is insane. Clearly, Hamlet's plan to put on an antic disposition is a tragic error.
Ophelia is subject to more manipulation, but now by the men in her own family as they try to further their own intentions. It is typical for family members to be protective of one another, but Ophelia's brother Laertes and her father Polonius are instead manipulative and demeaning to Ophelia, not in any way looking out for her. Instead of protecting her, Polonius is concerned with himself and his own image. At this point in the play, Ophelia describes her relationship with prince Hamlet. Polonius surely has strong opinions on the matter and stresses that she should have no more contact with him whatsoever.
In the play Hamlet written by William Shakespeare, Ophelia is the daughter of Polonius and the love interest of Hamlet. She is portrayed as a young and beautiful women who is innocent and virtuous. Although she is deeply in love with Hamlet, Ophelia is truly obedient and loyal to her father and she does everything he asks of her. In Act 1 Scene 3 of Hamlet, Polonius gives her a long speech about how Hamlet does not care about her and all he wants from Ophelia is her body and he commands her to end her relationship with Hamlet. Ophelia like the obedient daughter she is replies with “I shall obey, my lord”.
William Shakespeare’s Hamlet “is Shakespeare's most popular tragedy among critics as well as on stage and screen” (“Hamlet”, par. 1), it has a lot of twists and turns which makes it very exciting. Prince Hamlet is mourning the death of his father, and he is also trying to cope with his mother Queen Gertrude’s remarriage to Claudius. Throughout the play, there is constant confusion and for the most part all this confusion has something to do with the character Ophelia. Ophelia is the daughter of Polonius and the girl who has a crush or better yet an obsession with Hamlet. Throughout this story she turns everything around to make herself look like the victim, and she also is very sneaky.
While it is true that Hamlet was merely playing the role of someone who had gone mad, many people may say that Hamlet’s madness was brought upon himself simply by the fact that he was trying to fulfill the orders from his dead father yet couldn’t because of his lack of acting upon a plan. It is strongly possible that Hamlet became extremely frustrated because every chance he got to expose Claudius and capture him in this enormous secret, he failed to do so. Therefore, Hamlet’s madness could be judged as reasonable but most likely for different reasons than one may think. Rather than going mad over the concrete facts that his father died and his mother remarried his uncle less than two months afterwards, he drove himself mad over his own flaws. Hamlet’s tragic flaw absolutely led to his tragic downfall as a
To start, Hamlet shows his insanity through his blinding rage. While visiting his mother in her room to discuss his outrage with her marriage, Hamlet becomes destructive. He throws his mother around the room, grabbing her and screaming at her. All this commotion scares Gertrude, his mother, and causes her to scream out “What wilt thou do? Thou wilt not murder me? / Help, Ho!”(III.iv.23-33). Gertrude is so scared of her son and who he has become that she believes that he will kill her. This shows that Hamlet is delusional because he reaches a point in which he is threatening his mother, a woman who his fathers ghost warned him about mistreating. Hamlets rage takes over his mind and does not allow him to think clearly.
After this scene Hamlet acts insane and he often criticizes his mother for remarrying and even insults her, but gets away with his actions because at this point those around him are starting to believe there is something wrong with Hamlet. Hamlet is not crazy but if he were truly crazy then he would not internally realize that he is mad, a crazy person usually doesn't realize they are going crazy, but it is others who realize because of his or her actions. In Hamlet's case, Hamlet knows he is "crazy" and his acting is beneficial for him because he is able to talk freely without having to hold anything back. If Hamlet were truly insane it would have caused him his own death, because usually when an individual is insane they are unaware of what they are saying and their actions are usually always made hastily, a quality that Hamlet does not seem to have.
His madness was argued to be an act to confuse Claudius. He acted crazy to cover his plans of seeking revenge on Claudius, when talking to Polonius he acted completely mad, “For in the sun breed maggots in a dead dog, being a good kissing carrion-Have you a daughter?”(Hamlet 2.2.95) Hamlet used much blabber, such as this, when talking to anyone close to Claudius. As the play went on his madness was more and more liable. He started becoming very irrational and distracted by his plans. When Ophelia gives Hamlets letters back he goes into a rage, yelling “Get thee to a nunnery.”(Hamlet (3.1.131) The most well known action Hamlet committed was when he stabbed Polonius in a rash decision, hoping it was Claudius, “O, what a rash and bloody deed is this!“(Hamlet 3.4.171) One thing that brought him one step closer to going mad was Ophelia’s death. Hamlet may have been acting in the beginning but by the end of his devious plan to avenge his father, he lost himself and actually caused himself to go mad.
Hamlet portrayed extreme madness that recurred throughout the book. It started off with simply acting to be crazy, but eventually leads to true madness. Hamlet tells the queen “a beast… would have mourned longer, married with my uncle my father’s brother, but no more like my father” (1.2). Hamlet refers to his mother as a beast implying she is not human. Problems with Hamlet’s mother are not a huge contributing factor to his madness, but still fuel the problem. It also leads readers to believe Claudius could be a problem later on. This turns out to be true as he is one of the main sources to Hamlet’s madness. Another tremendous source is the ghost driving Hamlet to get revenge on Claudius. When the Ghost of Hamlet’s father comes back, he tells Hamlet “so art thou to revenge, when thou shalt hear”(1.5). The Ghost explains what really happened to try to convince Hamlet to avenge his death. This drives him to insanity with the stress and pressure of should he, or should he not kill