Sunday, September 29, 2019
Hamletââ¬â¢s Characterisation Essay
The aspect of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s Hamlet that is most interesting to me is the playwrightââ¬â¢s intimate depiction of Hamletââ¬â¢s daily struggle againt the world. Through soliloquies and characterisation, we see that Hamletââ¬â¢s world is a cold, political one, unreceptive to his grief, and this fundamental incompatibility is ultimately what creates and drives the playââ¬â¢s great drama behind his struggle, his murderous plot, uncertainty, and finally his thoughtful, accepting resolve at the end of the play. Early in the play we see this great incompatibility between Hamlet and his society emerging, as he, stricken with grief, is surrounded by cold political plotters. Shakespeare revels in his use of irony, as Claudius utters the oxymoron ââ¬Å"lawful espialsâ⬠, and Polonius, evangelising that ââ¬Å"this above all else: to thine own self be trueâ⬠, endeavours with ââ¬Å"this bait of falsehoodâ⬠to ââ¬Å"by indirections find directions outâ⬠and thus ââ¬Å"take this carp of truthâ⬠. Hamlet continues this tradition of fish-related metaphors in accusing Polonius of being a ââ¬Å"fishmongerâ⬠, a claim which reflects his own struggle to comprehend how cold and contriving his society is. Hamlet even wonders how ââ¬Å"a beast that wants discourse of reason would have mourned longerâ⬠than his mother, Gertrude, the ââ¬Å"pernicious womanâ⬠whose ââ¬Å"salt of most unrighteous tearsâ⬠falls from merely ââ¬Å"galled eyesâ⬠. That she could be ââ¬Å"like Niobeâ⬠is a twisted classical allusion which adds to the sentiment of tension which Hamlet feels against his society, which, in the disillusioned wake of his grief, he has found is superficial and immoral, especially as ââ¬Å"one may smile, and smile, and be a villainâ⬠, while ââ¬Å"virtue itself of vice must begâ⬠and ââ¬Å"rank corruptionâ⬠¦mining withinâ⬠¦infects unseenâ⬠. Thus this great tension forms an integral part of the early part of the play and drives the drama which underlies Hamletââ¬â¢s characterisation, and his struggle to find where he belongs in this morally void society. Hamletââ¬â¢s soililoquy at the end of Act II reveals how this tension has acted upon his soul. He questions his own sanity, asking if it is, in fact, the ââ¬Å"pleasing shapeâ⬠of the devil, which ââ¬Å"abuses me to damn meâ⬠. This particular tension between Hamlet and his world is what reveals several important character elements in Hamlet. That the Player could invoke such passion in such a superficial ââ¬Å"fictionâ⬠, and ââ¬Å"for Hecubaâ⬠at that, while Hamlet sits statically racked with indecision, is reflective of the superficiality which frustrates him and drives him to see imself as a ââ¬Å"dull and muddy-mettled rascalâ⬠. It drives him inwards to consider what kind of person he is, and how best to resolve the tension which has evolved as a result of his societyââ¬â¢s immorality. Yet as the soliloquy changes tone dramatically, and marked by Hamletââ¬â¢s cry of ââ¬Å"Oh, vengeance! â⬠, the apostrophic appeal to Nemesis herself reve als an early attempt to break free from these chains of indecision and uncertainty set upon him due to his struggle. Thus the tension between him and his immoral peers is what ultimately produces this first change of heart, from ââ¬Å"pigeon-liveredâ⬠to the successful invocation of the mythical figure, the ââ¬Å"rugged Pyrrhusâ⬠, out to ââ¬Å"drink hot bloodâ⬠, whom he struggled to portray and rehearse earlier in the scene. That the tension is so central to this first episode of self-realisation, and subsequent ascents to personal conviction, reflects how truly crucial his struggle and journey towards self-understanding is to Hamletââ¬â¢s textual integrity. Hamletââ¬â¢s obsession with death, beginning with the Act III soliloquy not long after, is another seeming affliction brought on by this grievous tension with the world around our hero. That the world could so easily forget a human life, and that this life was that of a king, brings on a deep sense of aporia for the young prince, as he struggles to reconcile the significance of life with the great ease with which it is forgotten when lost. His turn to ââ¬Å"what dreams may come when we have shuffled off this mortal coilâ⬠forms part of the plaintive introspection revealed by this soliloquy as he searches for truth, away from the ââ¬Å"pangs of disprized loveâ⬠for which he was informed that ââ¬Å"to persever in obstinate condolement isâ⬠¦unmanly griefâ⬠. His obsession with death throughout the play and in this soliloquy is hence marked as a decided escape from the constant tension with his society and its many unknowable uncertainties, as portrayed by a play whose opening line is ââ¬Å"whoââ¬â¢s there! â⬠. Death plays the role of the only certain, pure truth, as symbolised by the memento mori of Act V, the skull held in Hamletââ¬â¢s hand which in all its graspable physicality and feeble perishability becomes a source of finality, and certainty for the young prince. His tension with society is characterised by great inaction and uncertain angst, but in death, all souls return to absolute dust. Whether they bear the ââ¬Å"pate of a politicianâ⬠or the ââ¬Å"skull of a lawyerâ⬠is insignificant in this regard, for ââ¬Å"eââ¬â¢en soâ⬠, even the great Alexander ââ¬Å"looked oââ¬â¢ this fashion iââ¬â¢thââ¬â¢earthâ⬠. He finds great solace in the promise of this finality away from the contrarious moods of his ââ¬Å"comradesâ⬠. This characterises the self-reckoning which ultimately leads him to his final resolvel and faith by which he stands ready to once more face his society and his fate, whatever it may be. With this sentiment he remarks ââ¬Å"there is Providence in the fall of a sparrowâ⬠¦let beâ⬠. Lastly, Hamlet and Opheliaââ¬â¢s relationship with the world reveal analogous tensions which manifest in different ways and provide interesting insights into the dramatic consequences of this tension. Ophelia and Hamletââ¬â¢s relationship is torn apart by Poloniusââ¬â¢ meddling. Hamletââ¬â¢s proclamation that ââ¬Å"frailty, thy name is woman! â⬠foreshadows the way that we soon see Ophelia being influenced to a great extent by her filial, obedient devotion to Polonius, so much so that, struggling to reconcile her personal integrity and her duty to her family, she descends into her own madness, ââ¬Å"divided from herself and her fair judgment, without the which we are pictures, or mere beastsâ⬠. Polonius, the ââ¬Å"fishmongerâ⬠, tells her that her love is that of ââ¬Å"a green girlâ⬠, and her submission to such worldly expectations is what begets her destruction. Yet even in her insanity she finds a resolve which, though markedly more frenzied, mirrors Hamletââ¬â¢s own. Her flowers are each symbols of denouncement of the courtââ¬â¢s treacherous figures, whose ââ¬Å"rue with a differenceâ⬠Ophelia insists they must acknowledge for their most distressing actions. There is thus a great tension which arises out of the persistent degradation of the loversââ¬â¢ relationship, and their final destruction at the hands of Laertes for Hamlet, and in the river for Ophelia. These elements are undeniably integral elements of the play which drive its enduring drama and converge to form a crucial part of Hamletââ¬â¢s textual integrity. Thus we can see that the tension of the world, manipulative, cold and immoral, as it acts on the fundamentally honest, if perhaps naive prince, is the source of the great drama which underpins Hamletââ¬â¢s struggle through the play to pit his own psyche against that of his peers. This tension time and time again proves to be central to a true consideration and understanding of Hamletââ¬â¢s episodes of character evolution which sees him descend into the murky depths of his worldââ¬â¢s uncertainty. It is only with the realisation and grasping of truth, whether he finds this in the finality of death or the power of fate, that Hamlet ascends once more to the safe anchorage of sanity and resolve, and finds the courage and conviction needed to face his society once more, and finally his death.
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