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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