Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Death
- Hamlets ideas of death
become more and real
and personal and
develop
- ‘Infinite jest, of
most xellent
fancy’
- infinite and ‘excellent’- Very hyperbolic language-
The concept of death suddenly becomes much
more personal- Alas poor Yorick’ - More dramatic
as seen as emodiment of joy. In a sense he has
become he court jester, as throughout the play
he makes many jokes- the shared role perhaps
makes him realise he also shares the same fate.
- ‘My gorge rises at it’
- Disusted and horrified that
someone he had so much physical
contact with has now been reduced
to a lifeless object- - shows some
fear to death in general-face to
face- literally- realisation of the
actuality of death
- ‘Your gambols, your
songs, your flashes of
merriment’ Listing
- Listing- describes yorick as the
embodiment of joy and happiness- Idea
he is mourning what is lost- and by
describing it h mourns it too.- better
understanding of his grief-
- ‘Let her paint an inch
thick, to this favour
she must come’
- Doesn’t matter what face she paints- this is
how she will end up- in the end we are all
equal- bitterness towards Gertrude –
provides a stark contrast to joy. Imperatives
like ‘GET to my Lady’s tble and MAKE’ show
this anger- Idea he hself s now angry at what
has happened- not just reciprocating his
fathers anger out of loyalty. – Also links
again to his mysogyniatic attack on women-
and his feelings about cosmetics
- When we first see Hamlet afterPs
murder- not reflective or sensitive to his
actins- rather he is more preoccupied
with his own selfish endeavours- almost
making him an incomplete hero.
- 'Compund it with dust,
whereto tis kin'
- His ambiguity woith everything he says-
especially when trying to find P's body- is
surprisingly dismissive of the dead- shows a
disrespect to Christian beliefs on burial.
Perhaps he feels he is now above God's law. or
his desire for revenge has taken over him. Fact
that his speech is also in prose- in 4.2 adds to
this disarray and links to the lack of control he
now has on his overwhelming emotions.
- His language, referring to the body as an
'it' suggests he is not only comfortable
with what he did but willing to find
amusement in it. - Does this make hims
slightly hypocritical as he had jsut
murdered someone despite his anger
ant losing someone himself.
- Fact that his speech is also in
prose- in 4.2 adds to this
disarray and links to the lack
of control he now has on his
overwhelming emotions.
- 'not where he eats but
where he is 'a eaten' (4.3)
- Such a graphic description of P's
body shows H ants Claudius to feel
uncomfortable- no qualms about
using his dead body to do it .
Speaks in prose throughout this
convo showing he has no restraint-
and denying the king any
satisfaction of being spoken to
respectfully
- The eccentricity of Hmalets behaviour mimics
his emotion ofter the 'mousetrap and the
appearance of the ghost- lends the scene a
drakly comic tone. Acts to lighten the moosd
after the strain scene of Hamlet and Gerrude
in the closet and tense convo between King
and Queen. Hamlet's satirical mood is a
devlopment to his flippant attitude to P's
death. He riddles R G with hostile contempt
and send them on a wildgoose chase
- WE see another father has been murdered and
so by default will compare the childrens
reactions to Hamlets. Shakespeare develops
Polonius’ children as stylised foils to two aspects
of the Princes behaviour- Where Hamlet was
overcome with melancholy and contemplated
suicide- Ophelia goes mad and kills herself.
Where Hamlet was commanded by the ghost to
take revenge – Laertes plays the conventional
revenge hero- free from all ethical scruples
which could complicate this role. The naeivity
and simplicity of Polonius; children’s behaviour
brings out the complexity of Hamlet’s.
- Hamlet chooses salvation of
people over unecessary death.
His ideas of death develop.
- 'twenty thousand souls and
twenty thousand ducats
- Hyperbollic anger that so much
blood will be spilt for a little plot of
land that 'hath in it no profit but
the name. Hamlet confirms that
too much wealth and peace lead
to war and trouble- dark outlook
as though nothing stays peaceful.
Links Fortinbras' actions as yet
another disease in the world.
- ‘That might be the pate of a
politician… Or of a courtier’
- Hamlet recognises how death
reverses social order- enters into
reflectiveness- Everyone meets the
same end- death becomes less of an
idea and philosophical matter and
moe real for him.
- The fact that all the skulls are treated the
same shows that everyone is equal in the
end. Throughout the play he has been
more concerned with the spiritual side of
death- this scene allows him to develop
the physical side- realising everyone
turns to 'dust' even 'Alexander'
- Aexander looked o’this
fashion I’th’ ‘earth?
- to Alexander the Great- Idea someone
so great could amount to something so
insignificant- -Speaks in prose
throughout this scene- fits with theme-
ery close to him- not trying to separate
himself through language.
- Alexader died, Alexander
was buried, Alexander
returneth to dust’
- Listing in this manner shows it is a natural
unavoidable process -Idea warriors far greater
than his father are really gone- appreaciates
their insignificance- Marks a release from the
obligation to that ‘warrior’ he compared to
god at the beginning of the play.
- Such is a common theme in a
revenge tragedy- Shakespeare
involse two revenge tragedies
encouraging us to compare our
heroes(4.5)
- 2nd Revenge tragedy-allowing us to
counterpoint the language, values,
behaviour of Ham;et and Laertes- the
revenge heroes. The two heroes’ collisions
in Act V represent Shakespeares critique of
the inherited Revenge tragedy formula. He
transforms a confused set of conventions
into a challenging Drama. -Almost a parody
exposition-
- ‘Forty thousand brothers
/ Could not with all ther
quantity of love /Make up
my sum’
- Hyperbollic- whole confrontation
introduces tension between H and
L- Ophelias death angers them
both. Idea his grief cannot match
hamlet’s true affections.
- Woul’t weep, woul’t fight,
woul’t fast, woul’t drink up
eisel’
- Such strong claims- I’ll do’t’ –
Contrast to way he acted to hr
vs decleration of love.
- GRAVEDIGGERS
- ‘If this had not been a
gentlewoman she should
have been buried outside a
Christian burial’
- Important ideas about the
class system- aain links to
abuse of power- and double
standards- also relates to
Ophelias death being
suicide- contrary to how
Gertrude described it.
- ‘the houses he makes last till doomsday’
- represented ordinary folks. - constant ontact
with death- real sense of reality- everyman
figure- Gravedigger- is relatable -colloquial prose
of the first half of the scene provides a welcome
change of tone and pace- the humour is
profoundly serious as well as funny- represent a
different way of exploring the themes of suicide,
appearance vs reality, fame and thining- which
utol now have been the subjext of a very
sophisticated debate
- that day when our
last King Hamlet
o’ercame Fortinbras’
- Hamlet was born- He has buried Yorick-
Ophelia and will berry the K, Q, H- idea he
has outlived all of them- shown to be an
immprtal presence—sings about the
stages of human life that lead everyone
into his rough indiscriminate care. –
Refers familiarly to Adam and the Day
judgement as if he was around since the
beginning of time and will be around till
the last trumpet is blown- idea death will
always be.
- Gravedigger outlives all the
high-born characters he
serves. Against perspective of
death all the claims to
superiority through hierarchy
are nullified-
economic/politacl and moral
systems become the objects
of laughter- in the GD view-
doomsday corresponds to
the overthrow of social
inequality
- 'for none
neither'
- claims he is diging no
uman's rave- makes an
important point about
death- rank/material
posessions do not matter-
weall end up in the same
place.