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Madness By William Shakespeare 's Hamlet

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What Seems Madness, Creates Madness Shakespeare’s Hamlet plays with the idea of madness throughout the story. Hamlet appears at times to be mad and at other times to be entirely sane, and then Ophelia begins sane and delves into madness by Hamlet’s actions. But Hamlet takes his actions most often through reason. He knows the ghost he saw is true because of the witnesses alongside him. He even takes precautions to confirm his uncle’s guilt by means of a play. While Hamlet may be prone to inaction, he is not truly mad. On the other hand Ophelia represents true madness after the death of her father by Hamlet’s hand. Hamlet presents two characters that contrast with each other on the play’s frequent mention of madness: Hamlet, who is filled with grief and is enraged by his situation to the point of seeming mad but truly being insightful though selfish in his actions, and Ophelia who begins hopeful and level-minded, but then loses herself to true madness as she is influenced by Hamlet’s behavior. The key to Hamlet’s quest for revenge starts with his meeting with his father’s ghost. Before Hamlet himself ever sees the ghost, four others on watch make contact first, including his trusted friend Horatio. If Hamlet had met the ghost alone, it would be easy to question the legitimacy of his meeting. However the audience is shown four men who encounter the ghost, confirming its existence, and then Hamlet himself with two others are present as the ghost confers the truth of his own

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