Why Wouldst Thou Be A Breeder Of Sinners Analysis

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Hamlet's madness was real. His actions and words were of true madness and craze. The man had lost his mind and the woman he loved, his actions showed how he felt but his words told his emotions and they could not be fully understood unless they had been truly heard. Hamlet had fought for love and he had a love to fight the intelligence of others showing how poisoned his brain was.
The loving of a woman in its own is down right madness. Hamlet had feelings for Ophelia who was also in a sort of way crazy by herself for letting hamlet take her virginity before they were wedded. Hamlet shows his craziness for Ophelia when he tells her to go to a nunnery. “Get thee to a nunnery. Why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners? I am myself indifferent …show more content…

Being crazy as he was he spoke about how he had wished for death hoping that he would die. Hamlet soon after expressing that he wanted to die he told everyone in the audience that he does not want to die do to him and others around him having their religious beliefs and he does not know where he will go or what will happen and that death may be ten times worse than life is right now, and the fear of not knowing is why we stay alive. It was in his soliloquy that he says this “But that the dread of something after death, The undiscovered country from whose bourn No traveler returns, puzzles the will And makes us rather bear those ills we have Than fly to others that we know not of?” (Act 3, Scene …show more content…

Hamlet learns of his father's death and that it was actually a murder that was done by his uncle who is the new king and so the ghost of his father tells him to exact revenge and he does try to do so. It does not bother Hamlet when he kills Polonius and the way that you can tell that is that after he stabs Polonius he continues to have a normal conversation with his mother like he was not dragging a body out of the same room about to hide it. “I’ll lug the guts into the neighbor room. Mother, good night indeed. This counselor Is now most still, most secret, and most grave, Who was in life a foolish prating knave.—Come, sir, to draw toward an end with you.—Good night, mother.” (Act 3, Scene 4) these are Hamlets actual words for when he is getting rid of the body “Ill lug the guts into the neighbor room” he says it as if after Polonius had died he had no more sentiment in his entire body he had no name nothing he was just a body of death that had to be hidden, he did this thinking it was the new king and he thought he had actually killed the new king and not Polonius. “Nay, I know not. Is it the King?”(Act 3, Scene

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