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The Consequences Of Ophelia In William Shakespeare's Hamlet

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William Shakespeare’s Hamlet is a compelling story filled with suffering, revenge, and manipulation. While these are all aspects that come together to create a memorable and thought-provoking play, they also result in the downfall of various characters. With these unfortunate individuals, Shakespeare shows that it is not necessarily one’s actions, but their situation that decides whether they lose it all. In this play, the victims’ suffering is not their own doing, but instead it is caused by the situations they were manipulated into by other individuals. Ophelia, Gertrude, and even Hamlet himself are all victims that have these sorts of situations imposed on them by characters who mean only to benefit themselves.
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She is one of the first people he meets when he starts to put on the act, and in their interactions he emotionally traumatises her. The first time they meet Hamlet acts so out of hand that Ophelia claims that Hamlet acted “as if he had been loose’d out of hell” (II. i. 93). Moreover, Hamlet persists to play with her emotions when he tells “get thee to a nunnery” (III. i. 131), and it is all done to present a believable madness. It is evident that Hamlet’s discarding of Ophelia likely plays a role in her madness throughout her singing:
Quoth she ‘Before you tumbled me,
You promised me to wed
He answers:
‘So would I’a done, by younder sun,
An thou hadst not come to my bed’ (IV. v. 67-71).
Hamlet’s façade is meant to convince everyone that he is mad, yet in the end it does not end up helping him to enact his revenge. Instead it puts Ophelia into an emotional state that causes her to lose her mind, and consequently drives her to end her own life.
The queen Gertrude is also an example of a character who is forced into difficult, and even deadly positions. She is a character who is kind to her son, loyal to her new husband, and does nothing out of line. Despite all this Hamlet faults her for marrying his uncle. Hamlet is struggling to deal with his grief, and his solution is to take it out on his mother. He calls her marriage immoral by saying, “She married. O, most wicked speed, to post / With such dexterity to incestuous sheets!” (I. ii. 161-162). Additionally,

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