Analysis Of Ophelia In Shakespeare's 'Hamlet'

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You can use her; you can leave her; she never fights back. Throughout Shakespeare’s play Hamlet, Ophelia is repeatedly used like an object. She never tries to defend herself, just stands there and takes what is thrown at her. Ophelia’s obedience has morphed her into a toy, used by her own father, Hamlet, and even nature itself.
After being verbally abused by the man she loves, there is no sympathy from her own father. Polonius just tells his daughter he and the King heard it all, that she should not worry about explaining: "—How now, Ophelia? You need not tell us what Lord Hamlet said, we heard it all—My Lord do as you please..." (3.1.174-176). The little concern Polonius shows towards his daughter 's feelings, not only shows his selfishness, …show more content…

In act three, he tells her to go to a nunnery because a woman like her should not have children who would just be sinners: "Get thee to a nunnery. Why wouldst thou be a breeder of sinners?" (3.1.119-120), Hamlet chooses to turn his anger on Ophelia most likely because she returned the gifts he gave her and denied his love. Throughout these accusations, Ophelia simply seems to feel worried towards his way of acting. She chooses to not talk back to Hamlet in a rude manner much, less defend herself.____ Any other girl would say something back if told she is not worthy of having children, but she does not because she is doing what her father ordered her to. Doing as she always has in the past, Ophelia absorbs like a sponge what people tell her while holding her emotions. “I found Ophelia… more tangible as I stopped seeing her as a mental washtag and started seeing her as an emotional sponge” (Resetarits). Her father and the person she loves have used and in a way abused of her and now even nature has taken its …show more content…

Gertrude explained that Ophelia 's heavy clothes pulled her down deep into the stream:"...her garments, heavy with their drink, pulled the poor wretch from her melodious lay to muddy death" (4.7. 178-181). Even in her last moments, Ophelia lets a greater power do as it pleases with herself. Instead of screaming for help and struggling to breath, she just sings a song while she is still floating on the surface. Nature chooses when she can take her last breath. Every time Ophelia has been used and verbally abused, her father was behind it. Grieving her father’s death, Ophelia had no idea what to do and became mad. “Grief at her father’s sudden and unexplained death has unbalanced her mind” (Schücking). With no father to tell her what to do, whether to freak out or call for help, Ophelia does what her father had always taught her. She lets the water do as it wishes with her regardless if it takes her last breath. Ophelia only does what she knows it

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