Ophelia's Madness

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I’m Just as Sane as You
“Sanity is a madness put to good uses,” George Santayana stated in his The Essential Santayana: Selected Writings. Sometimes one must go mad in order to be sane, or the sane world they live in is surrounded by madness. Once one reaches rock bottom, reality becomes so much clearer. For example, in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, one of the main characters, Ophelia, is under the influence of many powerful men in the Danish Court. She has loved, obeyed and trusted these men who have always influenced her life. Unfortunately, for Ophelia, once she realizes the sincerity about these men, it leads to madness and ultimately destroys her. Yet, it finally opens up her eyes to see the ugly truth and her madness to make her actually very sane.

Ophelia is a beautiful disaster. She is simply two faced, wearing a mask on the outside to elongate her delicateness and niceness, yet on the inside, she has a dark and twisted beauty to her showing that she has everyone fooled and is very much sane. Submissive, naive, and disturbed, seem to represent Ophelia perfectly. She stands in marked contrast to the schemings and manipulations of the Danish court. Polonius, her father, has shielded Ophelia with his love and compassion. She tells her overbearing father, "I shall obey my Lord" (1.4.10) when he tells her she can no longer see Hamlet, her lover. Ophelia has been in love with Hamlet before any of Hamlet's numerous tragedies occur, yet her father comes first. She is obedient to him because she places family above others. Since she is naive and innocent, she is frightened and disillusioned by Hamlet's inexplicable behavior and persuaded by her father's urgency in the need for her to help establish what Hamlet's condition and motives are...

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...e turn to? Her brother is in France, her father is dead, her mother is not around and Hamlet is across seas. She could turn to Gertrude, the only other female in the play, but Gertrude only thinks about her external pleasures. Ophelia is very alone, playing a big measure in her insanity. Seeing how she evolved from the storm of insanity that rained upon her.
The madness around the court dominates Ophelia's world as well as men do. But they are men who want too much and who represent too many contradictions. She can not comply with their wills, and she cannot assert her own. She can not live because her selfhood does not exist. When madness seems to take over her mind, she realizes and sees the truth much more clearly. Making Ophelia’s madness be just as sane as the others around her. Concluding, that one must put on a cape of insanity in order to reach saneness.

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