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Hamlet

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Hamlet

Hamlet. Is he an insane madman or a revengeful, scheming, genius? There

are many conflicting ideas and theories on this subject, and hopefully this

paper may be of some assistance in clearing up the confusion. The paper is

divided into three separate analytic sections beginning with the beginning of

Hamlet's so called madness, and why it may have occurred. Next, is an analysis

of why Hamlet delays revenging his father's death. To conclude the paper,

Hamlet's incestuous acts towards his mother are discussed, in William

Shakespeare's Hamlet.

In the first act Hamlet seems to be in a perfectly sane state of mind

throughout all five scenes. It is in the second scene where the audience begins

to see a change in his character. Ophelia meets with Polonius and recalls the

meeting she had previously with Hamlet. She tells her father that Hamlet came

to her disheveled and in a shaken state of mind, speaking of "horrors." (Act 2

Scene 2 line 94). Her father immediately believes that he is "Mad for thy

love?" (Act 2 Scene 2 line 95). Opelia answers a question posed by Polonius by

which she replied that she had told Hamlet that she could not see or communicate

with him any more. Her father makes reference to Hamlet's madness once again by

proclaiming that what his daughter said, "... hath made him (Hamlet) mad." (Act

2 Scene 2 line 123).

The argument of whether Hamlet is insane because of his love for Ophelia is

often debated, but a more confusing and complex situation is the struggle within

Hamlet's mind. His personal struggle is revealed to the audience in scene one

of the third act. In this scene Hamlet recites his famous "To be or not to be-

that is the question:" (Act 3 Scene 1 line 64) speech. Here the the audience

truly realizes that Hamlet is torn two ways in his life. To be or not to be,

essentially is Hamlet debating on whether he should toil the pains of living in

such a harsh world and fight to avenge his father's murder or take his own life.

Hamlet is confused as to whether he should avenge his father's death when he

himself, as Sigmund Freud's "Oedipus Rex Complex" suggests, wished to murder his

father to gain all of his mother's attention. But, in the back of Hamlet's mind,

which keeps him in constant turmoil, is his loyalty to his family and moreover

his father.

Hamlet, in act four scene two, meets with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern and

he seems to be breaking down into insanity. Hamlet had just killed Polonius,

and his two friends were questioning him as to where he placed the body of the

dead man. The strange thing about this scene is that Hamlet seems to play with

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern and does not give them a straight answer. Hamlet

has practically transformed into a different person and doesn't seem to be

completely sane.

Next is another situation that cannot be totally explained. The situation

being Hamlet's delays in avenging his father's death. The first that Hamlet

learns

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