The Weakness Of Ophelia In Shakespeare's Hamlet

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"People are created and turned into who they are through their life experiences. Even if we do not realize it, the people who surround us influence our each and every move. In many cases, the positive influences that enter our lives change us for the better and we become kind, confident, strong-minded people. In the case of Ophelia in Hamlet, however, only madness and sorrow come from her experiences. Ophelia’s madness originates from a broken mind and a broken heart, both caused by her combative love for Hamlet, fraternal love for Laertes, and obedience towards Polonius. Throughout the play, one can see how Ophelia slowly breaks from her experiences with the closest people in her life. In act one, Ophelia is the strongest that the reader ever sees her in the play. The first time we see Ophelia with her brother, Laertes, we can see the concern that he holds for her. “For Hamlet, and the trifling of his favor,/Hold it a
Her lover kills her father; that is enough to drive most people mad. In this scene, Ophelia uses nature as a coping device, referencing and giving flowers. “Nature is fine in love, and where ‘tis fine/It sends some precious instance of itself/After the thing it loves.” Ophelia truly loses part of herself when her father dies, and her madness becomes visible. We can see Ophelia’s love for Polonius as the trigger for her insanity. “Polonius is a fool in his handling of Ophelia, but there is no doubt of his paternal concern, even if it can be overlaid with ulterior interests at the same time. Ophelia’s evident heartbreak at his death… testifies to his adequacy as a parent.” (Boyce) From what we have seen, Polonius may not have been the bringer of confidence or even a father figure, but Ophelia still loves him. Now that she has lost two loves and her only other family has been absent, Ophelia’s mind cannot take anymore and she, in her madness, is presumably sent to

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