Why Does Hamlet Use Of Ophelia

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In Act III.II.I-XLVII of Hamlet by William Shakespeare, Hamlet gives the actors who are to star in the famous “mousetrap play” a list of advice: the to do’s and not to do’s. Hamlet’s advice, specifically lines XVII-XXXVII, serves as a mirror to nature as its purpose is to ensure that the play is a device for truth, and consequently an exposé for flaws. Hamlet’s advice appears to be for the good of the play, but, in actuality, its purpose is to reveal his feeling towards Claudius, Gertrude, and Ophelia.
Hamlet begins by referencing Ophelia in the line “to show virtue her own feature” (III.II.XXIV). Hamlet makes multiple references to Ophelia's relationship to virtue. This particular line references Ophelia as he is asking her to see the good in herself. By allowing Ophelia to see her own virtues it is Hamlet’s way of releasing her from the burden of the thought that “the origin and commencement of his grief sprung from neglected love,” (III.I. CXCI- CXCII) which weighs on Ophelia as she says “oh, what a noble mind is here o'erthrown!...And I, of ladies most deject and wretched” (III.I.CLXIII-CLXIX). This line also corresponds with the more archaic …show more content…

Here, Hamlet intends to remind Claudius that he is human, essentially bringing up Claudius’s mortality. He cannot escape his faults, his crimes, or the life that he leads. He is trapped by his role as king since he cannot afford to reveal his blackened secrets. He is not immortal and in no way better than his other human counterparts. In a way, this remark serves to degrade Claudius and make him seem lesser than his status: he is not above or anything else than a human, royal or not. Claudius too, will eventually be subject to the pattern and pressures of time and experience death whether it be by hand of Hamlet or other such

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