Throughout William Shakespeare’s play Hamlet, Ophelia has fallen in love, lost her father, and has gone crazy which has led her to kill herself. Ophelia is a young woman who is in love with Hamlet at the beginning of the play. Hamlet, the protagonist of the play, within his feigning madness, finds himself becoming just that. And in turn, drives Ophelia past the point of sanity and into a madness of her own. Ophelia is ultimately a pawn to her father - He uses her to spy on Hamlet and sets up a meeting for the two while he watches on from the side. Depressed and driven mad by her father’s death, who was stabbed by Hamlet, she goes insane and drowns in the river. Ophelia is a key character in the play of Hamlet that moved the plot forward before …show more content…
They are always seen together and have strong feelings for each other. Hamlet's father has recently died and Claudius is now the king. The Ghost of King Hamlet says that “The serpent that did sting thy father's life Now wears his crown” (Act I, scene v, 39-40). Which is the Ghost identifying Claudius as King Hamlet’s killer, and through his marriage to Gertrude is the only reason he is now King. At the funeral, his mother does not show much emotion about it and everyone seems to have moved on besides him. Hamlet becomes preoccupied with handling his father's death, that the two lovers fall apart from each other for some time. They still seem to see each other but not as frequently. The decreased amount of time spent together seems to start the downfall of Ophelia’s sanity, which is only worsened by future events. Hamlet is thought to be insane by everyone and they want to figure out why. This is when Ophelia becomes a key role. They plan to watch how Hamlet acts around Ophelia, and then Ophelia is asked by Polonius to go and hang out with Hamlet while Polonius and Claudius observe him. She is a pawn in their game of chess to figure out what made Hamlet
Throughout the play, Hamlet and Ophelia have a very strong love connection. They loved each other and wanted to eventually get married. Hamlet and Ophelia hit some bumps in the road in their relationship but they always secretly wanted to be together. In Act 1, Scene 3, It was hard for Ophelia to comprehend when Polonius told her that he thought Hamlet's love for her wasn’t real, but she didn’t know what to believe. When Hamlet could no longer see Ophelia he began to get mad a frustrated, to add on also that he was going crazy over his own father's death.
Ophelia describes Hamlet as 'the courtier's soldier, scholar's eye, tongue and sword, Th'expectancy and rose of fair state, the glass of fashion and the mould of form, Th'observed of all observers (Act 3 Scene 1) He is the ideal man. But, after his madness and the death of her father she sees him as 'a noble mind o'er thrown!' (Act 3 Scene 1). Ophelia suffers from Hamlet's disillusionment; his attitude to her in Act 3 Scene 1 is hard to explain. His faith in women was shattered by his mother's marriage and it is also possible that Hamlet knows that Ophelia has been ordered to seek him out- yet how strong could their love have been as there is little excuse for the
Ophelia is a very interesting and confused character in William Shakespeare's play Hamlet. She has so many moments where she is hanging onto her sanity by a thread, and one small thing could set her off. Ophelia illustrates character traits leading to her tragic downfall, including innocence, ignorance, and distraught actions.
Ophelia is painted as a weak character by Shakespeare and doesn't know what to believe. Hamlet killed her father which causes a larger rift between Hamlet and Ophelia. She spirals downward and eventually goes insane and kills herself. Ophelia's words are not listened to and believed which helps to pave the way for her eventual mental health breakdown.
The story of Hamlet is a morbid tale of tragedy, commitment, and manipulation; this is especially evident within the character of Ophelia. Throughout the play, Ophelia is torn between obeying and following the different commitments that she has to men in her life. She is constantly torn between the choice of obeying the decisions and wishes of her family or that of Hamlet. She is a constant subject of manipulation and brain washing from both her father and brother. Ophelia is not only subject to the torture of others using her for their intentions but she is also susceptible to abuse from Hamlet. Both her father and her brother believe that Hamlet is using her to achieve his own personal goals.
Ophelia, ever since her introduction, has been introduced to be a sweet and sympathetic person, providing the play with emotional moments, but her death was used as a bait and switch by Shakespeare towards audience members who had expected her to change the play’s somber mood to more hopeful one, which in turn makes the play even more tragic. After she had been visited by an apparently crazed Hamlet, she tells Polonius about the visit, prompting him to believe that the young prince is crazy in love, and goes out to tell the king. After it was explained to Claudius, and Hamlet’s former friends Rosencrantz and Guildenstern failed to find the underlying cause of his madness, Polonius makes Ophelia approach Hamlet while he and the king hide and monitor his behavior.
Ophelia allowed herself to become a sort of marionette in Polonius' schemes toward understanding the seemingly mad prince. While her relationship with Hamlet was on the line, she allowed Polonius to commandeer the strings that determined her actions. Polonius was determined that Hamlet's supposed madness stemmed from lovesickness for Ophelia. He convinced Ophelia that her betrayal of Hamlet was a necessary evil and she began to relay all of Hamlet's messages and attempts at communication to him. He told the king and queen:
In William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Ophelia is the most static character in the play. Instead of changing through the course of the play, she remains suffering in the misfortunes perpetrated upon her. She falls into insanity and dies a tragic death. Ophelia has issues surviving without a male influence, and her downfall is when all the men in her life abandon her. Hamlet’s Ophelia, is a tragic, insane character that cannot exist on her own.
The character of Ophelia is an excellent element of drama used to develop interpretations of Shakespeare’s text. At the beginning of the play, she is happy and in love with Hamlet, who first notices her beauty and then falls in love with her. The development of Ophelia’s madness and the many factors that contributed to her suicide are significant parts of the plot. “Her madness was attributed to the extremity of her emotions, which in such a frail person led to melancholy and eventual breakdown” (Teker, par. 3). The character of Ophelia in Zieffirelli’s version is the personification of a young innocent girl. “Her innocence is mixed with intelligence, keen perception, and erotic awareness” (Teker, par. 13). This Ophelia is a victim
Ophelia's downfall continues throughout the play, and her final plunge into the waters of madness and suicide culminate around her father's death. Hamlet, while talking threateningly to his mother, accidentally slays Polonius who was hiding behind the curtain in his mother's room. Hamlet thought it was Claudius he heard coming to his mother's aid when she cried for help and lunged at the curtain with his sword, killing Polonius. "O, I am slain!" were his final words. After Ophelia learns of her father's death at the hands of her estranged lover, she goes
Overwhelmed by outside forces and her repressed love for Hamlet, Ophelia is truly a sad and remorseful character in this play, an innocent victim with little essence or depth. An evident victimized woman, ruled by her Renaissance sense of romantic love, it can further be argued that Ophelia was extremely ambiguous. She was too incompetent to decide what she really desired in life. Because she falls in love with Hamlet at a very young age she cannot truly comprehend what love is all about, even though there is strong evidence that Ophelia had sexual relations with Hamlet. Hamlet emphasizes the hypocrisy of his words
William Shakespeare’s Hamlet is written in a way such that many aspects of the play are left open to interpretation. There is one particular character that is left a mystery in this play and that is Ophelia. She is often seen as the pretty, young maiden who is overcome by madness after Hamlet’s love for her is not reciprocated and her father is murdered leaving her alone. However, she is quite possibly one of the most manipulated and dynamic characters in the play but is so often overshadowed by characters like Hamlet, Claudius, and even Gertrude, that no one notices how much of a role her character truly has in the play.
The character Ophelia in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet is seen as an important character in the play due to her extreme violent reactions that can be seen as bizarre and peculiar. In the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare, Ophelia can be seen as to have obviously gone mad, and she is treated sympathetically, and her death is also treated with respect. Ophelia’s madness in the play consists of a mad language, violent reactions and distraught behaviour. Ophelia is a subject of long time mental and emotional abuse at the hands of her father Polonius, Claudius and Hamlet, a character who is suffering from mental illness himself. Thus her deranged language might be considered reasonable, as through it, she reveals her unusually painful situation
Ophelia was known as a sweet, innocent, and more importantly obedient girl. Yet, being the obedient, daughter she was, she separated from Hamlet by orders of her father and helped him spy on Hamlet for the King. Being in love with Hamlet, this was a difficult thing for Ophelia to do, although, not until her father’s death does the reader really see Ophelia in a state of madness. When she talks to Gertrude she begins to sing, “He is dead and gone, lady, / He is dead and gone;/ At his head a grass-green turf, / At his heels a stone” (4.5.29-32). The way Ophelia acted seemed obviously uncharacteristic of her, and portrayed a mental breakdown that ultimately leads her to take her own life. This tragic event marked a turning point in the play due to the fact that she wasn’t murdered, but a casualty of the feud between Hamlet and Claudius. Both of them bared responsibility for the murder of her father, which lead to her decision to commit suicide. Additionally, losing the love of Hamlet may have caused her to feel alone and in such a dark place it made her feel suicide was the only option. In conclusion, Ophelia’s death was caused due to the backlash of Hamlet and Claudius feud and the responsibility for her death should be placed on both of
As a result of spending her life under the protection of her father and his orders, due to her submissive nature, Ophelia remains naive and unaware of the deceit and bitterness surrounding her which renders her incapable of facing the harsh realities of life once her father dies and Hamlet leaves her. After the death of her father and with the absence of both Laertes and Hamlet from her life at the time, Ophelia is driven to madness and Gertrude explains it the King: “She speaks much of her father, says she hears there’s tricks i ' the ' world, and hems, and beats her heart, spurns enviously at straws, speaks things in doubt that carry but half sense.” Finally seeing the grim reality of her surroundings without her father to hide behind, Ophelia loses her sanity and eventually end her own life as she no longer knows how to lead an independent life. In conclusion, Ophelia is portrayed as a puppet on strings being pulled around by the males in her life, making all her decisions and controlling what she can and can’t do, and once all the men are gone, she no longer able to function on her own and she ends her life as a result.