In William Shakespeare's Hamlet, madness proves to be an important theme. The reason madness results to be such a strong reoccurrence is due to its deeper meaning behind mere delusional characters. One of the main characters that highlights this theme is Ophelia. Ophelia’s breakdown begins with her singing about her misery due to Hamlet and her father. She becomes mad after Polonius' death, which eventually is the cause of her death. Her death provokes Hamlet’s unstable state to clear, the uncloaking of Hamlet sets a break in the play where the audience discovers Hamlet’s true feelings.
Ophelia becomes distraught due to Polonius’, Laertes’ and Hamlet’s hurtful words piling up on her. Polonius and Laertes tell Ophelia how Hamlet’s love isn’t
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as genuine as hers. They shelter Ophelia from getting hurt, but by doing so they’re hurting her too. Laertes’ inserts fear onto Ophelia and Polonius restricts her from continuing to see Hamlet if he’s not the man she’s going to marry. She is torn between siding with the love she has for Hamlet and the respect of her father and brother. As the obedient girl she is, she decides to respect her father’s orders and stops seeing Hamlet. Ophelia remains in a fragile state after she is rejected by Hamlet. Polonius had banned Ophelia from continuing to see Hamlet. She’s been told repeatedly by her father and brother that Hamlet was only using her, only to find out in that instance they were right all along. Hamlet verbally abuses Ophelia, knowing she’s spying on him for her father. Ophelia is hurt by Hamlet due to her confusion on why he’s being insulting. Hamlet’s feelings about his mother get in the way of his view on women, which includes Ophelia. He’s angered by his mother’s betrayal, marrying Claudius, his father’s brother. His anger is taken out on Ophelia and tells her what he wishes to tell his mother. He begins by saying she isn’t pure and how his love for her was all a lie. Ophelia’s responds calmly to Hamlet and tells him how she “was the more deceived” in this situation, since she was the one who believed him all this time (3. 1. 122). Hamlet’s feelings can be seen clearly now as he tell Ophelia to “get thee to a nunnery: why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners?” (3. 1. 123-124). His remark could only apply to what he thinks of this mother. He finds it hard to deal with her new relationship with Claudius and calls her a sinner by it. Ophelia is ordered around, she perseveres through the crippling words. She is forced to follow orders from Polonius, even when she wants to go against it. Ophelia accepts what she is told and obeys. She’s done nothing wrong, yet is treated badly by the people she loves and she can do is keep it in. Polonius’ death became the last straw to Ophelia’s mental breakdown.
On top of being rejected by the one she loves, Hamlet was the one who murdered her father. Laertes’ is away in France and Ophelia finds herself alone in the world which leads to her madness. In Act 4, scene 5, Gertrude tells Horatio, Ophelia has gone insane and won’t stop singing about her father. Laertes returns from France and finds Ophelia in a distress state. She begins singing about her father’s death and love over Hamlet. Ophelia sings “He is dead and gone, lady, He is dead and gone” and by doing so she is processing her emotions subconsciously (4. 5. 26-27). Her madness is her subconscious releasing itself. She believes she has no one and feels alone, yet she feels a freedom within her madness. Ophelia is finally free to say how she feels over her Hamlet and her father. Her singing concerns Claudius and Gertrude as they both decided she isn’t mentally or physically stable. In Act 4, Scene 7, Gertrude returns with news about Ophelia’s death. She tells Claudius and Laertes, she was picking flowers and fell in the water. Gertrude goes on to say “her garments, heavy with their drink, pull’d the poor wretch from her melodious lay to muddy death” and Ophelia let it happened (4. 7. 179). Her madness proved to be the cause of death in her situation as she was “incapable of her own distress” (4. 7. 176). Although she was alone at the moment, Ophelia still had Laertes to look forward to which insinuates her …show more content…
death to be pure accidental. When Ophelia fell into the water being in her state of delusion, she was unable to recognize the danger she was in and drowned due to it. After Ophelia’s suicide, Laertes’ returns only to find that he has been the one left along with no one.
Laertes is filled with rage against Hamlet, since Hamlet is the one to blame for the murder of Polonius and the reason Ophelia went mad and committed suicide. During Ophelia’s funeral, Hamlet is found hiding with Horatio and watches Laertes speak about his sister. Hamlet is forced to face Laertes as Hamlet wants Laertes to forgive him. Hamlet tell Laertes “[he] lov'd Ophelia; forty thousand brothers, Could not, with all their quantity of love” for her as his (5. 1. 147). He was only truthful after her death and fully aware of what he was doing now that she was gone. His state of delusion clears and asks for Laertes to “give [him his] pardon, [he has] done [him] wrong” (5. 2. 112). Hamlet realizes how much this has affected Laertes, leaving him the one to be alone. Laertes is now without his little sister and father, and Hamlet recognizes his actions have hurt others. He did not mean to kill Polonius or have his death affect Ophelia, which is why he doesn’t believe it’s directly his
fault. Hamlet is forced to face his feelings. He realizes how much he did truly love Ophelia, but was blinded by his revenge against Claudius and his disgust for his mother. The terms he has to come towards are to understand what Laertes is feeling and what is left for him to do with his plan. Ophelia’s madness played into Hamlet’s unraveling as a character from the beginning to the end the play, leading to everyone’s tragic demise. Through her singing and death, Hamlet’s character is provoked to set a new direction. The audience needs Ophelia to completely understand Hamlet’s story.
The play Hamlet is known for its eccentric plot and warped sense of reality as well as its fanatical characters. Hamlet himself created all the drama in the play with his pretend “madness” and his emotional outbursts, which lead to the destruction of almost all of the characters in the play. The most notable self destruction came from Ophelia, Hamlet’s object of affection. During the play, Ophelia had undergone a lot of stress which lead her character to metamorphous.
The life of Hamlet is without a doubt very interesting, he suffers from unfortunate events in his time that are often major blows to his ego. His father dies while he’s away at college, Hamlet is next in line to be king until his “uncle-father” steals it from him; but it is to be known his “uncle-father” would not have stolen it if his “aunt-mother” hadn’t allowed it. It’s very apparent from the beginning of the play that he is very well obsessed with his mother and her doings. He harasses, humiliates, and abuses her because she has done such an unforgivable act by marrying Claudius. His thoughts and feelings towards his mother are very strong and well known, he even describes the odd pair as “little more than kin and less than kind.” That’s not all with Hamlet; his mother remarrying is just the tip of the iceberg so deeply rooted in the ocean of his emotions. His relationship with Ophelia is twisted, Hamlet goes through episodes of
Ophelia is portrayed as a sensitive, fragile woman. Easily overpowered and controlled by her brother and father, Ophelia is destined to be weak. Ophelia’s brother, Laertes, warns and pushes Ophelia to stay away from Hamlet and is further supported by their father Polonius. “Polonius enters and adds his warning to those of Laertes. He orders Ophelia not to spend time with Hamlet or even talk to him. Ophelia promises to obey” (“Hamlet” 95). Ophelia’s obedience to her father’s directions prove the side she
Ophelia was driven mad by the death of her father Polonius and how Hamlet betrayed her love with his own wave of madness which was just an act. In her madness, Ophelia talks about her father and his death and about the “Tricks in the world” (terrible things that happen to people). Ophelia’s madness was also the extent of her being used by her father so he could spy on Hamlet to see if he was truly crazy and then by Hamlet when he claimed he no longer loved her and that he didn’t send her any letters (remembrances). Ophelia’s speech and her fragments of songs are unsensible. Her song was about her father’s death “He is gone, He is gone” (4.5.220), and a maiden who is tricked into losing her virginity with a false promise of love and the possibility of marriage. “To be your valentine, then up he rose and donned his clothes and duped the chamber door” (4.5.56-58)
Upon learning that Ophelia has allied herself with Polonius and Claudius, he loses his head and has an incredibly dramatic episode. He is initially honest and open with Ophelia, but his mood quickly changes when he learns they are being spied on. He questioned Ophelia’s motives by asking whether she was honest and fair. He breaks her heart upon the realization she is not on his side. He tells her that he once loved her, then their conversation spirals into nothing more than Hamlet hurling insults at his former love before storming out.
In The Tragedy of Hamlet, Shakespeare developed the story of prince Hamlet, and the murder of his father by the king's brother, Claudius. Hamlet reacted to this event with an internal battle that harmed everyone around him. Ophelia was the character most greatly impacted by Hamlet's feigned and real madness - she first lost her father, her sanity, and then her life. Ophelia, obedient, weak-willed, and no feminist role model, deserves the most pity of any character in the play.
Hamlet, Ophelia’s lover, accidentally kills her father and “confesses” he never loved her, Hamlet toys with Ophelia's emotions intentionally and unintentionally to solidify his madness. Even though she was the who initiated the “breakup”, her sorrows of the relationship are much more public than Hamlets. Hamlet’s madness scares Ophelia away which he used as a defense mechanism to not be hurt anymore. His madness looks as though he had been "loosed out of hell to speak of horrors" (2.1.83-84) and she "truly [did] fear it"(2.1. 86). His insanity and rudeness suffocated any love she had for him. She admits that their "their perfume [has been] lost" (3.1. 99). This helped Hamlet solidify his insanity by cutting ties with the ones he loves, and having them tell others he is mad. This comes with the cost of discontinuing his relationships: especially with Ophelia. Both have hinted around in the text of an intimate affair. This makes the emotions and breakup even more difficult for both of them. Their relationship was a love, not an innocent crush or courtship. Poor Ophelia initially thought she caused Hamlet's madness due to the abrupt ending of their affair. But because of her naivety, she lacks to see his other internal struggles. Ophelia’s trust in Hamlet left her heartbroken. Hamlet’s agenda of or getting justice for his father occupied his mind more than Ophelia did. Which left her feeling
During Hamlet, Polonius and Laertes use Ophelia for their own self-gain not taking her feelings in consideration. In the article “Jephthah's Daughter's Daughter: Ophelia,” Cameron Hunt reveals that Polonius disregards Ophelia’s wants for his ...
Hamlet and Laertes share a different but deep love and concern for Ophelia. Laertes advises her to retain from seeing and being involved with Hamlet because of his social status. He didn’t want her to get her heart broken by Hamlet, since he believed that his marriage would be arranged to someone of his social status, and that he would only use and hurt Ophelia. Hamlet on the other hand, was madly in love with Ophelia but it languishes after she rejects him. Ophelia’s death caused distress in both Hamlet and Laertes and it also made Laertes more hostile towards Hamlet.
The reader is left guessing on Hamlet’s true feelings for Ophelia through his various insults, sexual innuendos, and admitted desire. Hamlet’s claim, “God hath given you one face, and you / Make yourselves another.” (3.1.155-156) is laced with irony and hypocrisy given Hamlet’s own deception regarding true feelings. This proclamation comes at the end of a lengthy tirade against Ophelia and womankind in general for their conniving deceit leading men astray. The fact that Hamlet cannot see this duplicity in his very own actions shows the double standard he holds for females. Ophelia’s immediate reaction is one of shock and defense due to the aggressive nature of Hamlet’s attack. She calls out “O, woe is me!” (3.1.174) in distress to the ferocity of Hamlet and is unable to form a particularly coherent response akin to the ones seen against Laertes and Polonius. She does show her intelligence and rebellion from this assumption of power by Hamlet in her songs while Hamlet is gone. While many attribute her madness to the death of her father, a large portion of her instability should be attributed to Hamlet and his earlier actions. In her first introduction as insane she sings, “And I a maid at your window, / To be your Valentine. / Then up he rose and donned his clothes / And dropped the chamber door, / Let in the maid, that out a maid / Never departed more.” (4.5.55-60). Due to her references to sexuality and deceit the
This can be proven by the change in Ophelia’s actions and behavior. Ophelia starts to sing strange songs in front of Gertrude about her father’s death and Hamlet’s madness. Ophelia sings to Gertrude and sings, “He is dead and gone, lady, he is dead and gone, at his head a grass-green turf, at his heels a stone” (4.5.26-29).This tells us that Ophelia is a very soft and is a very weak character and can easily get heart broken. She cares about her family and the death of her father has shattered her into pieces, it may cause problems for her to
Ophelia’s madness is because of what she encounters throughout the play by everyone around her. Her character is often looked past, people really don’t give her a second thought, and her emotions and wellbeing are almost entirely forgotten about. When her father and brother are telling her to stay away from Hamlet, she tries to speak up and tell them that she knows that Hamlet truly loves her. She tells them her feelings, but they say no, she is not to speak to Hamlet again and must obey. They didn’t take a second to try and look things over from her perspective.
Sweet and innocent, faithful and obedient, Ophelia is the truly tragic figure in William Shakespeare's Hamlet. "Her nature invites us to pity her misfortune caused not by any of her own self-initiated deeds or strategies"(Lidz 138). Laertes tells us convincingly how young and vulnerable Ophelia is, (act I. iii.10) likening her budding womanhood's destruction from Hamlet to a process as "the canker galls the infants of the spring,/ Too oft before their buttons be disclosed, /And in the morn and liquid dew of youth / Contagious blastments are most imminent". "He advises her to stay away and she lovingly banters back, typically like a young teen, reminding him to act as he advises" (Campbell 104). We then learn more of how pure and innocent she is as her father counsels her (Act I.iii.90). Telling her that she is a "green girl" and to think of herself as "a baby" in this matter, he insists that she must stop seeing him.
(Hamlet: IV.v.51). It is clear that the corruption in the kingdom causes Ophelia to become insane. She cannot cope with or overcome her father’s unfortunate death because it was committed by her love, Hamlet. As Ophelia becomes insane due to her father’s death, she is also affected by Hamlet’s treatment of her. Ophelia wants to trust Hamlet and does not understand his antic disposition, but still tries to be loyal to him.
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.