Melancholic Essays

  • Melancholic Hamlet

    1095 Words  | 3 Pages

    Melancholic Hamlet Hamlet is a melancholic young man who does not value human life; however, he will do anything it takes to accomplish his main goal: revenge on Claudius for the death of his father. In his seven soliloquies we learn that Hamlet has become melancholic, violent, and suicidal. There are several incidences where these emotions are expressed. His melancholic attitude is very apparent in the second scene of Act I, when he suggests that his mother, in mourning his fathers death, is simply

  • Ancient Greek Health Theories: Understanding the Melancholic Mean in Aristotelian Problema XXX.1

    5206 Words  | 11 Pages

    the Melancholic Mean in Aristotelian Problema XXX.1 ABSTRACT: In ancient Greek theories of health, it was the equal balance or mixing of the humors or elements (i.e., the isonomic mean) that comprised the ideal healthy state. In the Aristotelian Problema XXX.1, however, there is a description of a form of melancholic constitution that is both 1) itself characterized as a mean, and 2) thought to lead to intellectual outstandingness. This is theoretically problematic since the melancholic constitution

  • David And Hamlet

    1453 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hamlet and David                                         In Hamlet and The Mountain and the Valley, both literary pieces present us with two melancholic characters who live in conflict due to the dichotomy of their natures . Both Hamlet and David are similar because they are conflicted by foils and similar in the nature of this tragedy. Each has deep inner problems of conflict. Hamlet is first tormented by the death of his father, the king of Denmark. Then he is cast into utter agony when Gertrude

  • The Many Faces of Hamlet

    1591 Words  | 4 Pages

    deaths, deceit, and interference in his personal life,) it would be very odd if Hamlet's personality and beliefs did not fit the description above. Hamlet is also thought to possess a melancholic temperament. According to the Elizabethans, a melancholic temperament was marked by its instability. The melancholic person, in this case Hamlet, is prone to sudden bouts of nervousness along with other sporatic mental changes. Also, Hamlet is subject to an erratic type of demeaner characterized by extreme

  • An Analysis of Tennyson’s The Princess

    859 Words  | 2 Pages

    of the death of his love. This causes the sad tone of the poem which is something typical for Tennyson and his works.par I chose to analyze this poem because it is about something that many people have experienced, even I. Everybody has had such melancholic moments and feelings of nostalgia when he or she remembers a person who is dead. There is one more cause for choosing this particular work of Tennyson and it is the figurative language and the way the poem sounds. The use of alliteration, imagery

  • Realization of Life

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    directions. Persons can usually be associated with one of the traditional temperaments, which are phlegmatic, choleric, sanguine, and melancholic. These temperaments are representative of the four humors; phlegm, yellow bile, blood and black vile respectively. One will view and translate events based upon their own personal temperament. I find myself to be melancholic and in that, I find the most significance in seemingly insignificant events. During my freshman year, I was writing a paper for

  • Melancholy in Hamlet

    1043 Words  | 3 Pages

    Melancholy in Hamlet Melancholy has caused many to look down on the world and themselves, driving themselves to suicide or treating their life like it has no meaning. Hamlet is a lonely and melancholic soul who doesn't think highly of women or his own life. Melancholy forms the basis of Hamlet's character starting with the moment he arrives in Denmark and hitting a low note when Ophelia dies. Thoughts of suicide loomed throughout the play commencing with the news of old Hamlet's death and showing

  • Kurt Cobain

    584 Words  | 2 Pages

    that came with it (Kurt Kobain's Obituary). Kurt had secretly suffered from an illness that caused severe stomach pains for more that seven years, which caused him to contemplate suicide almost everyday. This constant abdominal pain led to deep "melancholic depression verging of schizophrenia, and frequent bouts of narcolepsy" (Kurt Kobain's Obituary). Doctors were of no help to him, so he found escape in heroin. For years he fought his addiction, but compared to the severe stomach pains, heroin was

  • To Be Mad Or To Be Melancholic

    660 Words  | 2 Pages

    (2.2.8). The play Hamlet written by William Shakespeare is the story of young Hamlet whose father was killed by his uncle, Claudius, then his uncle took the throne and married Hamlet’s mother, Gertrude, which ultimately caused hamlet to become melancholic or ‘mad’. In the essay ‘Madness and Melancholy in Hamlet’ written by Kate Flint she explores the idea of madness and melancholy in the Elizabethan time in reference to the actions of Hamlet. She states that Hamlet is neither mad nor melancholy but

  • Images of Life and Death in Bavarian Gentians

    1597 Words  | 4 Pages

    with its intoxicating and life-giving breath.  Like the days that separate summer from autumn, Lawrence's poem, one of his last, is a sad and dreamy read.  It seduces audiences with its slow dance with blue death.  It speaks to students with its melancholic passion.  It breathes life into the last days before death. A death that comes from tuberculosis is never sudden.  The disease progresses slowly until it gradually overcomes its victim, who must wait with a tragic patience for that final moment

  • Themes of Love and Revenge in Shakespeare's Hamlet

    1141 Words  | 3 Pages

    Themes of Love and Revenge in Shakespeare's Hamlet Love is one of the most powerful themes in Hamlet, but a superior force - REVENGE, drives Hamlet's love. Revenge of his father's murder. Hamlet is confused and melancholic over the fact that his mother married his own uncle and so quickly after his father's death. Even though he does not immediately suspect foul play in his father's untimely death, he is in a state of shock. As Kenneth Muir states, "He (Hamlet) is profoundly shocked by Gertrude's

  • Christopher Marlowe's The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus

    1683 Words  | 4 Pages

    Doctor Faustus himself, and the demon Mephistophilis, one finds almost the entirety of the play. Doctor Faustus “…is a man who of his own conscious willfulness brings tragedy and torment crashing down on his head…”(Cole 191). Faustus finds himself melancholic with the pursuit of knowledge he has thus far attained, commenting: “Be a physician, Faustus; heap up gold, And be eternized for some wonderous cure… Why, Faustus, hast thou not attained that end? Is it not thy common talk sound aphorisms

  • Society vs. Heart in Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn

    2117 Words  | 5 Pages

    Society has always denounced the acts of death and children running away from their homes. Huck can be seen as a morbid child as he is always talking about death and murder. Society would rather not have anything to do with people who have such a melancholic outlook on life. Living with years of torment by his drunkard father, Pap, Huck feared the day he would return to daunt his life. When Pap does return, he seizes Huck and drags him to a secluded cabin where Huck is boarded inside and unable to leave:

  • The invention of the Human

    2074 Words  | 5 Pages

    of life. Prior to Shakespeare’s ascendancy on the English stage, Bloom argues, there was no concept of the individual self, just types. These types persist in Shakespeare’s plays as residual stock characters displaying humours, like Malvolio (melancholic) and Hotspur (choleric). In Shakespeare these crude concepts of personality give way to major and minor characters who evolve and grow almost within themselves. They possess a special energy that touches all other characters within the play. But

  • Joseph Conrad's Background and Heart of Darkness Plot Summary

    2315 Words  | 5 Pages

    Orphaned at twelve years old due to his father's untimely death, Conrad entered a state of deep emotional stress ("Conrad, Joseph"). With the break of the strong bond shared by Conrad and his father, his writings as an adult would later convey a melancholic attitude. After receiving a good education in Cracow, Poland, and spending time traveling, Conrad decided to leave Poland. At the age of sixteen, he left the grip of Russian-occupied Poland and set out for Marseilles, France to pursue the

  • Chaucer's Canterbury Tales - Suppression and Silence in The Reeve’s Tale

    3047 Words  | 7 Pages

    unaccountable. The Reeve is continually si-lenced by other pilgrims and himself, which is paralleled in his tale, and in turn suppresses his emotions, which leads to even more explosive conduct. I. Characterization In order to appreciate the melancholic and serious temperament of the Reeve, it is nec-essary to view him in comparison to other characters, as Chaucer intended. The identities of the pilgrims are relative. They are characterized by their description in the General Prologue, but not

  • The Lost Chapter Of Mice And Men

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    "You hadda do it, he never meant any meanness, but you hadda do what u hadda do." said Crooks. Very slowly Slim put his hands over Georges shoulder while they all sat in melancholic mood. As once again moment settled and hovered and remained for much more than a moment. Along it sound stopped for much more than a moment. Then, gradually, time awakened and moved sluggishly on. The wind hammered on Georges face

  • Man's Need For Woman in the Works of Edgar Allen Poe

    2192 Words  | 5 Pages

    ephemeral, always melancholic" (2760).  With this idea in mind, Poe shows the consequences of losing the love of one's life through his short stories and his poetry, and also tries to bring reason to his own troubled life.  In the works of Poe, a man without his love becomes a man without the most vital part of his spirit and collapses in a horrifying manner. "For Poe, the most notable glimpse of eternity available to man is in the beauty of woman, always ephemeral, always melancholic" (Graham 2760)

  • Edgar Allen Poe: The Raven

    1150 Words  | 3 Pages

    Edgar Allen Poe: The Raven Creating the Melancholic Tone in “The Raven” Edgar Allan Poe’s "The Raven," representing Poe’s own introverted crisis of hell, is unusually moving and attractive to the reader. In his essay entitled "The Philosophy of Composition," Poe reveals his purpose in writing “The Raven” and also describes the work of composing the poem as being carefully calculated in all aspects. Of all melancholy topics, Poe wished to use the one that was universally understood, death; specifically

  • Female Dominance Or Male Failure?

    1205 Words  | 3 Pages

    Female Dominance or Male Failure? James Thurber illustrates the male species' status with respect to, “ Courtship Through The Ages” with a humorous and melancholic tone. He emphasizes the lack of success males experience through courtship rituals and the constant rejection we endure. Our determination of courting the female with all our “ love displays” may be pointless as it is evident in the repetitive failures of courtship by all male creatures. Thurber shares his problems with courtship and