Ophelia's Madness In Hamlet

1073 Words3 Pages

In William Shakespeare's Hamlet, madness proves to be an important theme. The reason madness results to be such a strong reoccurrence is due to its deeper meaning behind mere delusional characters. One of the main characters that highlights this theme is Ophelia. Ophelia’s breakdown begins with her singing about her misery due to Hamlet and her father. She becomes mad after Polonius' death, which eventually is the cause of her death. Her death provokes Hamlet’s unstable state to clear, the uncloaking of Hamlet sets a break in the play where the audience discovers Hamlet’s true feelings.
Ophelia becomes distraught due to Polonius’, Laertes’ and Hamlet’s hurtful words piling up on her. Polonius and Laertes tell Ophelia how Hamlet’s love isn’t …show more content…

On top of being rejected by the one she loves, Hamlet was the one who murdered her father. Laertes’ is away in France and Ophelia finds herself alone in the world which leads to her madness. In Act 4, scene 5, Gertrude tells Horatio, Ophelia has gone insane and won’t stop singing about her father. Laertes returns from France and finds Ophelia in a distress state. She begins singing about her father’s death and love over Hamlet. Ophelia sings “He is dead and gone, lady, He is dead and gone” and by doing so she is processing her emotions subconsciously (4. 5. 26-27). Her madness is her subconscious releasing itself. She believes she has no one and feels alone, yet she feels a freedom within her madness. Ophelia is finally free to say how she feels over her Hamlet and her father. Her singing concerns Claudius and Gertrude as they both decided she isn’t mentally or physically stable. In Act 4, Scene 7, Gertrude returns with news about Ophelia’s death. She tells Claudius and Laertes, she was picking flowers and fell in the water. Gertrude goes on to say “her garments, heavy with their drink, pull’d the poor wretch from her melodious lay to muddy death” and Ophelia let it happened (4. 7. 179). Her madness proved to be the cause of death in her situation as she was “incapable of her own distress” (4. 7. 176). Although she was alone at the moment, Ophelia still had Laertes to look forward to which insinuates her …show more content…

Laertes is filled with rage against Hamlet, since Hamlet is the one to blame for the murder of Polonius and the reason Ophelia went mad and committed suicide. During Ophelia’s funeral, Hamlet is found hiding with Horatio and watches Laertes speak about his sister. Hamlet is forced to face Laertes as Hamlet wants Laertes to forgive him. Hamlet tell Laertes “[he] lov'd Ophelia; forty thousand brothers, Could not, with all their quantity of love” for her as his (5. 1. 147). He was only truthful after her death and fully aware of what he was doing now that she was gone. His state of delusion clears and asks for Laertes to “give [him his] pardon, [he has] done [him] wrong” (5. 2. 112). Hamlet realizes how much this has affected Laertes, leaving him the one to be alone. Laertes is now without his little sister and father, and Hamlet recognizes his actions have hurt others. He did not mean to kill Polonius or have his death affect Ophelia, which is why he doesn’t believe it’s directly his

Open Document