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Untitled Essay, Research Paper

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Ophelia and Gertrude. Two different women who seem to be trapped in the same

circumstances in relation to Hamlet.

Gertrude, Hamlet’s mother and the Queen of Denmark. She is married to the

present

King, Claudius, who is suspected by Hamlet to have killed his father, King

Hamlet, who also

happens to be Claudius’s brother. Gerturde has somehow ended up in the plot

of King Hamlet’s

death and in the eyes of her son, seems to be a monster and an aide to an

adulterating deed.

Ophelia, the daughter of Polonius who is the King’s trusted councilor and

is later killed

in the play and he forbids his daughter to see Hamlet because of the possibility

that he beseech

her name and her virginity. She truly loves Hamlet and is devastated when

he shuns her and

pretends to be mad.

Hamlet’s treatment towards these two women shapes and brings life to their

characters

and eventually bring s an end to their characters as well.

Gertrude is a kind and loving mother. The kind that guards after her son

through thick

and through thin and loves unconditionally. Hamlet had suspected her of aiding

in the killing of

King Hamlet. That will be discussed later.

Her character is the one character in the play that I believe does not develop

but rather

stays identical to the scene in which she is introduced(Act I, scene II).

She is shown to be a

quiet, “stand by your man” type individual who is easily influenced.

This is my belief because in the second scene of the play, Hamlet is shown

to be

crushed by his mother’s hasty remarriage. If marriage within the family was

common in the days

of Shakespeare, then this is understandable, but, in any other case, this

would be considered

an act of betrayal that was obviously brought on by some outside pressure,

probably from

Claudius.

There is, however, a slight change in her personality that is not quite

noticeable. At the

end of the play, the King and Laertes(Polonius’s son) have plotted to kill

Hamlet for reasons that

are irrelevant to my point. One part of the plot was to have Hamlet drink

out of a poisoned cup. It

so happens that, in some confusion, the Queen ends up with the cup in her

hand. Even after the

King’s warnings not to drink from the cup(she is unaware of the plot), she

does. She does in

complete defiance of her husband’s wishes. I have interpreted this in this

way because of the

line the Queen speaks before she drinks from the cup. “I will, my lord, I

pray you pardon me.”1

This shows that in the case that she might have lived on and not died from

the poison in

her cup, we(the readers) would see a completely different woman had she found

out about the

plot by Claudius to not only kill King Hamlet, but young Hamlet as well.

The one thing, I believe, that she would have stood up for is her son, if

only she had had

a chance.

There is a large part of this play that seems to be lacking in information

to provide

reason to this attitude.

Hamlet meets with a ghost(seemingly that of his father) who tells him of

Claudius’s plot

to kill him. After the ghost is done telling the story of his death, he

specifically tell s Hamlet to

punish only Claudius for his foul deed, but “Taint not thy mind nor let thy

soul contrive against

thy mother aught. Leave her to heaven,”.2 Generally, he’s trying to tell

him to punish Claudius

and only Claudius. I don’t understand this since earlier in the play he refers

to the Queen as a

“most seeming-virtuous queen”.3

Either I have misinterpreted the previous passage or there is a major flaw

in the attitude

toward Gertrude.

The one other time in the play that we see the Queen standing up for herself

or actually

giving some sort of argument is when she and Polonius decide to confront

Hamlet on his

behavior toward the King. Since the revealing of Claudius’s involvement in

Hamlet’s father’s

death, Hamlet has been putting on an act of madness.

After some very rude gestures on the part of Hamlet, Polonius and the Queen

decide to

confront him on his rudeness to the King. Here, the Queen is very strict

and domineering which

irritates Hamlet. He threatens her and after some confusion, Hamlet kills

Polonius who is hiding

behind the curtain listening to the conversation.

This brings on the involvement of Laertes(Polonius’s son) in the plot to

kill Hamlet.

In any case, Gertrude shows some backbone in this scene, but, even though

Hamlet

had threatened her, she still loved him and treated him the same way that

she had treated him

before the confrontation. This, though very unnoticeable, is a very large

character flaw.

Ophelia, a young lady born to the King’s faithful advisor, Polonius and sister

to Laertes.

The first time we see Ophelia in the play is in scene III, when she is saying

good-bye to

her brother who has been granted passage back to Paris.

She is warned, by her brother, that she should beware of Hamlet’s love, for,

it is not the

love of a regular man. Prince’s go about choosing their wives at random.

She is said to be

careful to protect her good name, and her virginity.

In this scene, Ophelia’s love still has no definition towards Hamlet. She

seems

indifferent when her brother is talking to her, but, when her father talks

to her, and she tells him

about the strong love in between them, Polonius ridicules the possibility

of such love. He orders

Ophelia to end the friendship, and, like the obedient daughter she is, she

does.

After some time in the play passes, Ophelia is suddenly strongly frightened

by an act by

Prince Hamlet.

He comes into her room, half naked(which was very uncommon at the time),

his

doublet unbuttoned and his stockings hung loose around his ankles. He didn’t

say what was

wrong but he was terribly upset. He left without making a stir.

As soon as Polonius heard of this occurrence, he decided that it was in mad

love for

Ophelia that Hamlet did this and he was even more upset after Ophelia had

told him that she

was refusing to see him or receive any on his letters.

Polonius, without hesitation, rushes to the King to tell him of the act committed

to

Ophelia.

As soon as Polonius sees the Queen and King he starts telling them about

Hamlet’s

love for Ophelia and how strong it is and he also reads a love letter, from

Hamlet to Ophelia,

that he has found:

“Doubt thou stars are fire,

Doubt that the sun doth move,

Doubt truth to be a liar,

But never doubt I love.

O dear Ophelia, I am ill at these numbers. I have not art

to beckon my groans. But that I love thee best, O most best,

believe it. Adieu.

Thine evermore, most dear lady, whilst this

machine is to him, Hamlet”.4

This establishes that, even though Hamlet cannot show it, he loves Ophelia

dearly

and it is known that if he did show her, then his cover as a madman would

be blown.

The King, unconvinced of his nephew’s madness, asks for some solid proof

of

Hamlet’s love. Polonius and the King agree that they will set up a meeting

between Hamlet and

Ophelia and will hide and watch.

Hamlet is surprised when he meets Ophelia. She hands back all of the little

presents that he had given her, and at this point, Hamlet loses it. He completely

blows up on

Ophelia and all of his bottled up anger since his mother’s remarriage is

burdened on her.

He even starts suspecting her, and that there might be others listening to

his

conversation with her.

In his madness, he utters a threat that the King must have heard: “I say

we will

have no mo marriage. Those that are married already – all but one – shall

live”.5

Not only had Hamlet mentioned a threat, but he treated Ophelia with very

little

respect in regards to their love. “Get thee to a nunnery: why wouldst thou

be a breeder of

sinners?”6

Ophelia is left terrified and quite convinced of Hamlet’s madness. Claudius

is still

unsure of the situation, but he is sure that the way that Hamlet behaved

cannot be excused for

love(at this time, Polonius decides he will set a meeting with Gertrude to

talk to Hamlet while he

hides behind the great tapestry that hangs in Gertrude’s room).

Quite some time has passed and in the confrontation between Hamlet and

Gertrude with Polonius hiding, had resulted in the death of Polonius by Hamlet.

This proved to

be the deed that completely threw Ophelia over the edge. She went mad that

her father was

murdered by the man she loves. Everyone had understood how she felt.

Word of Polonius’s murder had worked it’s way to Laertes who immediately

left for

Denmark and the threat is made even more dangerous by his sudden barging

into the room full

of fury. His situation is even worsened when he sees his sister madly singing

to herself of love

and death.

The Queen interrupts a conversation that Laertes and the King are having,

two

scenes later. Ophelia has drowned. She seemed to be drinking from a river

when she fell in and

made no attempt to get out. She is called a suicide and Laertes vows to get

revenge on Hamlet.

What seems peculiar is that no one questions the Queen as to how she knows

every single detail to Ophelia’s death. It seems strange to me that if the

Queen had been

witness to the death that she would have pulled her out, but didn’t. You’ve

already told me that it

was word-of-mouth that got word of the death to the Queen, but then how come

whoever did

see this death didn’t pull her out and watched her die?

This question is definitely a dent in the storyline that is quite vital to

the understanding of the

Queen’s position towards Ophelia. The Queen supposedly loved Ophelia and

wanted her to

marry Hamlet some day, so it seems strange to me that her reaction to the

death was not more

dire or severe than it was.

Ophelia’s funeral was held in a secluded place with a minimal amount of people

because of the way that she died, suicide. Because suicide was and to the

present day is a sin,

the departed died with a grave sin to their name and therefore could not

be buried in the same

area as the people who died without sin. It was because of this that there

was a small amount

of people at her funeral.

Hamlet is there, hiding and watching the funeral processions not knowing

who

they’re for. Only when he finds out that she had died had he realized how

much he really did

love her.

It is truly a shame that Hamlet had not treated the women in his life with

the

respect that they deserve.

Ophelia, a devoted and true love that died over the fact that the man she

loved so

dearly had also killed her father.

Gertrude, a loving mother that died at the hands of her husband through a

poisoned

cup intended for her son.

Both of these cases show that the downfall of the women was due only to Hamlet’s

actions and behavior and that if he hadn’t acted the way he did, the women

would still be alive,

as well as he.

“To be, or not to be, that is the question:

Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer

The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,

Or to take arms against a sea of troubles

And by opposing, end them.”7


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