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So as to make Ophelia the star of her own narrative is an irresistible fancy, even if it might be as ill-fated as its subject matter. It’s a beautiful role derived from a different time and different set of values. The doomed waif of generations of male writers’ admiring pity, she is almost always cast as the poor dear driven to madness and suicide due to the vacillating whims of a poor excuse for a hero. Set in the medieval-if a stage director is so inclined-Danish castle of Elsinore, Hamlet’s great halls are populated by a dozen ambiguous and mostly tragic players. It is also the conundrum faced by any attempts to reinterpret or revisit William Shakespeare’s hallowed Hamlet text from a different vantage. That is the question that has fascinated and bedeviled centuries of theatergoers and one eternally waffling prince. Shakespeare’s depiction of Gertrude and Ophelia presents them as dependent on men as Ophelia goes mad and commits suicide after she loses her father and Gertrude remarries after her first husband’s death.To be or not to be. Hamlet sees both women as deceiving and being defined by their morals because of what he sees as Gertrude being unfaithful to his father by marrying Claudius. In Shakespeare’s play, Hamlet, the two women in the play, Gertrude and Ophelia share similarities with each other in both Hamlet’s view of them and Shakespeare’s depiction of them. Through such actions, Shakespeare depicts Gertrude and Ophelia as dependent on men as Ophelia goes mad and commits suicide and Gertrude remarries right after they lose the men that they depended on in their lives. (III.4.197-199)īut right after, she goes back to Claudius and tells him that Hamlet is as “mad as the sea and wind when both contend” (IV.1.7). After Hamlet’s angry confrontation with Gertrude, Gertrude agrees to take Hamlet’s advice that she won’t “let the bloat king tempt again to bed” (III.4.182) and not to tell anyone what Hamlet has told her by saying:īe thou assured, if words be made of breathĪnd breath of life, I have no life to breathe Gertrude is also dependent on men as seen when she marries Claudius right after her first husband was murdered. As a result she becomes mad and Claudius describes her as becoming “divided from herself and her fair judgment” (IV.4.85). Ophelia was reliant on her father and she loses him when he dies. She is obedient and does what the men in her life, her brother Laertes and her father Polonius tells her to do, such as when she replies “I shall obey my lord” (I.3.135) when Polonius tells her to avoid Hamlet by saying:īe somewhat scanter of your maiden presence. Ophelia is easily manipulated and influenced by men. Shakespeare’s description of Gertrude and Ophelia depicts them as dependent on men. Hamlet expresses a lot of concern regarding both Gertrude and Ophelia’s morality and views women in general as deceitful because of Gertrude’s quick marriage to Claudius after the death of his father. I have heard of your paintings too, well enough. He also tells Ophelia that he is aware of her deceit by telling her: He says that when he was alive “she would hang on him/as if increase of appetite had grown by what it fed on” (1.2.143-144) but “yet, within a month” (1.2.145) she marries Claudius and that “a beast that wants discourse of reason/would have mourned longer” (I.2.150-151). He doubts whether Gertrude had really loved his father due to her quick remarriage after his death and insufficient mourning. Hamlet also views Ophelia and Gertrude as deceiving. Hamlet also tells Ophelia to “get thee to a nunnery” (III.3.121) so that she wouldn’t “be a breeder of sinners” (III.3.122). Hamlet is disgusted with Gertrude’s quick marriage to Claudius which he views as morally wrong and describes as “most wicked speed, to post/with such dexterity to incestuous sheets” (I.2.156-157) and “an act/that blurs the grace and blush of modesty” (III.4.41-42). Hamlet views Gertrude and Ophelia as deceiving and being defined by their morals. Hamlet views both women by their morals and Shakespeare depicts both Gertrude and Ophelia as dependent on men. Gertrude and Ophelia share similarities in both Hamlet’s view of them and in Shakespeare’s description of them. In Shakespeare’s play Hamlet, the only two women in the play are Hamlet’s mother Gertrude and Hamlet’s love interest Ophelia.