Monday, October 19, 2015

Hamlet 9

After Act 5 Scene 2, we, the audience, are forced to question Hamlet's motives and his thoughts about death and the afterlife.  Throughout the whole play, Hamlet gives contradictory sentiments regarding both aspects, but here, he not only kills Claudius, but he witnesses two other deaths before he himself dies.  Throughout the whole play, that is much longer than Shakespeare's others, Hamlet contemplates killing Claudius after his father's alleged ghost tries to convince him of this necessary act of revenge.  Several times, Hamlet claims he will go through with the act, especially to avenge his beloved father's death.  However, it took until the last scene of the play and his mother's death for him to kill Claudius.  As he forces his uncle to drink the poison, he asks, "Is thy union here?"  (V.ii.357).  By referring to Claudius's poison as a "union," Hamlet is also referencing Claudius's marriage to Gertrude.  Hamlet believes that their marriage was poisonous, harming those around it, including his mother.  The fact that Hamlet does not go through with the act of killing Claudius until his mother's death makes the audience question both Hamlet's love for his father and his thoughts on the ghost.  Hamlet claims to have loved his father dearly, so it is inferred that he truly did not believe his father's ghost was actually his father, which is why he did not follow the ghost's instructions until the death of his mother pushed him to do so.  From there, the audience wonders what Hamlet's beliefs regarding the afterlife are, since he did not trust the ghost of his father.  As Hamlet heads toward the great unknown, the audience is still unsure as to Hamlet's opinions about where he is headed.

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