preview

Essay On Frailty In Hamlet

Decent Essays

Due to Hamlet’s psychological state, he felt confused and betrayed by his mother. His mother marrying his dead father’s brother opened gates to his madness. To Hamlet’s mind, women represent frailty; they are weak and regard them as an embodiment of weakness. He referred to his mother as a morally and spiritually weak woman as her incestuous inconstancy drove her to remarry immediately after her husband’s death and that she committed a sin. The most notable frailty of Gertrude seems to be that, whether by nature or nurture, she cannot exist without men. He recorded saying that Gertrude, “a little month or ere those shoes were old, with which she followed mo poor father’s body” (1.2.147-148). She needs a man as her guide to her perception …show more content…

This represents that Gertrude has married a man who is as inferior to Hamlet’s late father as Hamlet is to the great hero of antiquity, Hercules. This revelation indicates an incestuous marriage and Hamlet thinks that it can have no positive outcome, “It is not, nor it cannot come to good” (1.2.163). Near the ending of this session, Hamlet insisted that next time the discussion should revolve around Ophelia and not his mother as he wants to make sure she receives the eternal love he has for her. Hamlet confirmed that he did love Ophelia when he told her to go to a nunnery. Although it is a harsh statement, he tried to throw everyone else off so he had to make it seem like he never loved her. Throughout his letter he mentioned that everything else around her may not be true but his love is real. Hamlet explained that Ophelia was too naive and if Polonius read the letters, he had to act mad to protect her. Near the end of the session, Hamlet described the scene in the graveyard and how he still proved his love for Ophelia. His behaviour changed from extremely upset to more relaxed and reasoned. Hamlet: When I found out that she was dead, I truly mourned for her. I remember I told Laertes that I loved her and that forty thousand brothers could not with all their quantity of love make up my sum (Act 5, line 285) Hamlet had no reason to defend his love for Ophelia now that she was dead but he still did and he even told Laertes, “Be buried quick with her and so will I” (Act

Get Access