Hamlet Madness Analysis

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Madness feeds on people’s greed, taking hostage of their desires and controlling them. It drives people into doing things they otherwise wouldn’t have even thought about doing when they were sane. In Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Hamlet had overwhelming depression over the death of his father and his mother’s overly excitable attitude combined with the soon known knowledge of his father’s killer; he is fueled with hatred for both his mother and his uncle. Hamlet’s madness is indeed justified by the morbid disasters that are going on around him in the play.
Hamlet starts with the King dead and Hamlet is already in a miserable mood. The first step that pushes him over the border into madness is his meeting with the ghost and even Horatio can see it as …show more content…

At the graveyard while talking to the gravedigger, he comes across Yorick. He talks of his memory of him, “I knew him, Horatio, a fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy” (5.1) and asks the worth of him now “Where be your gibes now? Your gambols? Your songs?” (5.1). He talks about the many different types of people there are and how they are all common and could be used to “patch a wall t ' expel the winter’s flaw” (5.1). He also doesn’t seem to care what happens to him which is seen at the beginning of the play, “I do not set my life in a pin’s fee” (1.4). This means that he has thought about suicide and doesn’t care about the consequences of killing someone …show more content…

His madness also acted as a cover so that he could execute his plan to take revenge and kill Claudius. In many instances in the play, Hamlet is seen as mad by many and even Hamlet himself confesses of being “mad north-north-west” (2.2). His madness infected others such as Ophelia, Laertes, and Claudius with madness. In the end, it was his madness that led to the death of himself and everyone else except Horatio who lives to tell his crazy

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