Thursday, May 14, 2020

Hamlet - Character Analysis and Relationships

Hamlet is the melancholy prince of Denmark and grieving son to the recently deceased King in William Shakespeares monumental tragedy Hamlet. Thanks to Shakespeare’s skillful and psychologically astute characterization, Hamlet now is considered to be the greatest dramatic character ever created. Grief From our first encounter with Hamlet, he is consumed by grief and obsessed with death. Although he is dressed in black to signify his mourning, his emotions run deeper than his appearance or words can convey. In Act 1, Scene 2, he says to his mother: Tis not alone my inky cloak, good mother,Nor customary suits of solemn black ...Together with all forms, moods, shapes of griefThat can denote me truly. These indeed ‘seem,’For they are actions that a man might play;But I have that within which passeth show—These but the trappings and the suits of woe. The depth of Hamlet’s emotional turmoil can be measured against the high spirits displayed by the rest of the court. Hamlet is pained to think that everyone has forgotten his father so quickly—especially his mother Gertrude. Within a month of her husband’s death, Gertrude married her brother-in-law, the late kings brother. Hamlet cannot comprehend his mother’s actions and considers them to be an act of treachery. Claudius Hamlet idealizes his father in death and describes him as â€Å"so excellent a king† in his â€Å"O that this too solid flesh would melt† speech in Act 1, Scene 2. It is, therefore, impossible for the new king, Claudius, to live up to Hamlet’s expectations. In the same scene, he pleads with Hamlet to think upon him as a father, an idea that furthers Hamlet’s contempt: We pray you to throw to EarthThis unprevailing woe, and think of usAs of a father When the ghost of Hamlets father reveals that Claudius killed him to take the throne, Hamlet vows to avenge his father’s murder. However, Hamlet is emotionally disorientated and finds it difficult to take action. He cannot balance his overwhelming hatred for Claudius, his all-encompassing grief, and the evil required to carry out his revenge. Hamlet’s desperate philosophizing leads him into a moral paradox: He must commit murder to avenge murder. Hamlet’s act of revenge is inevitably delayed amid his emotional turmoil. Change After Exile We see a different Hamlet return from exile in Act 5. His emotional chaos has been replaced by perspective, and his anxiety traded for cool rationality. By the final scene, Hamlet has come to the realization that killing Claudius is his destiny: Theres a divinity that shapes our ends,Rough-hew them how we will. Perhaps Hamlet’s new-found confidence in fate is little more than a form of self-justification, a way to rationally and morally distance himself from the murder he is about to commit. It is the complexity of Hamlet’s characterization that has made him so enduring. Today, it is difficult to appreciate how revolutionary Shakespeare’s approach to Hamlet was because his contemporaries were still penning two-dimensional characters. Hamlet’s psychological subtlety emerged in a time before the concept of psychology had been invented—a truly remarkable feat.

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