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Hamlet

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... he planned the play to establish evidence against Claudius, the play he selected ... and suspicions of Hamlet might have been based on the prince's odd behavior, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hamlet


1
Hamlet
  • Act III Notes

2
Act III Notes
  • Hamlet is not being friendly he wants to entrap
    Claudius.
  • Hamlet is irresolute about what to do when faced
    with heavy problems to solve, and he wonders if
    death would not be preferable to living.

3
Act III Notes
  • 3. There is some possibility that Hamlet
    overheard the plan of Claudius and Polonius to
    use Ophelia and he has decided to turn the plot
    to his own advantage. The only textual reference
    supporting this explanation is that Hamlet asks
    her Wheres your father? When she answers with
    a lie, his treatment of her becomes increasingly
    rough.

4
Act III Notes
  • 3. His tirade against Ophelia may also be spurred
    by his general disgust with the world and with
    women in particular. In many ways his horror at
    his mothers behavior is reflected in his
    attitude toward Ophelia. Whatever his feelings
    toward her as an individual, she remains
    Polonius daughter and a member of Gertrudes
    treacherous sex.

5
Act III Notes
  • 3. It is also likely that he wants to sever the
    links between the girl and the contaminating
    world she inhabits. By putting her firmly out of
    his own cursed life, he may somehow protect her
    if brutal treatment is required, he will be cruel
    now in order to be kind in the end.

6
Act III Notes
  • After Claudius sees how strangely Hamlet acts
    toward Ophelia, he decides that Hamlet could well
    be a threat to him, should Hamlet remain in
    Denmark.
  • The dumb-show depicts the murder in pantomime a
    murderer pours poison in the sleeping kings ear
    and later woos the queen. The play-within-a-play
    shows the murder, but the queen vows never to
    remarry. Maybe Claudius wasnt paying attention,
    or he was able to keep a grip on himself until
    the lines were spoken.

7
  • He wants Gertrude to acknowledge her disloyalty
    to her first husband. Although he told Horatio
    that he planned the play to establish evidence
    against Claudius, the play he selected has a
    double thrust. The protestations of undying love
    the Player Queen makes to her husband are
    intended to would Gertrude, to remind her of her
    vows to her first husband, and to impress upon
    her the disloyalty of her remarriage. The
    Elizabethans religious and political backgrounds
    let them affirm the evil of such remarriage far
    more readily than a modern audience would.

8
  • Gertrude, who did remarry after the death of her
    husband, is made uncomfortable by the
    queen-characters assertion that she would never
    remarry.

9
  • 8. It is the first clear proof that the ghost
    was speaking truth. Claudius previous fears and
    suspicions of Hamlet might have been based on the
    princes odd behavior, and the Kings
    acknowledged guilt might have stemmed from his
    incestuous union with Gertrude. Now, however,
    Claudius admits the murder of his brother. Note
    the manner in which this confession is shaped
    Claudius emerges a fully developed character with
    passions and drives, understandable motives, and
    justifiable griefs. He is not a one-dimensional
    villain but a complete character who evokes a
    certain sympathy. He regrets his crime but
    cannot bring himself to relinquish the rewards of
    evil and so cannot achieve true repentance.

10
  • Bitter, struggling to restrain himself, he
    decides to wait for a time when unrepentant
    Claudius soul will be sure to go to Hades
    rather than now, when Claudius soul has
    apparently been purified by confession and
    repentance.
  • He is harsh with her, criticizing her for being
    disloyal to her dead husband, and frightens her
    to the point where she worries he will stab her.

11
  • Gertrudes frightened cry elicits a cry from
    Polonius behind the curtain Hamlet may have
    thought Claudius was hiding there. He doesnt
    seem very sorry, referring to Polonius as an old
    fool and unceremoniously lugging the body from
    the room.
  • He has come to spur on Hamlet, who seems to be
    spinning his wheels, not getting down to
    murdering Claudius.
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