Friday, February 21, 2014

Act 3 Scene 1

 OPHELIA  90                                       Good my lord,  91   How does your honor for this many a day?

      HAMLET
 92   I humbly thank you; well, well, well.
      OPHELIA
 93   My lord, I have remembrances of yours,
 94   That I have longed long to re-deliver;
 95   I pray you, now receive them.
      HAMLET
 95                               No, not I;
 96   I never gave you aught.
      OPHELIA
 97   My honor'd lord, you know right well you did;
 98   And, with them, words of so sweet breath composed
 99   As made the things more rich. Their perfume lost,
100   Take these again; for to the noble mind
101   Rich gifts wax poor when givers prove unkind.
102   There, my lord.
      HAMLET
103   Ha, ha! are you honest?
      OPHELIA
104   My lord?
      HAMLET
105   Are you fair?
      OPHELIA
106   What means your lordship?
      HAMLET
107   That if you be honest and fair, your honesty should
108   admit no discourse to your beauty.
      OPHELIA
109   Could beauty, my lord, have better commerce than
110   with honesty?
      HAMLET
111   Ay, truly; for the power of beauty will sooner
112   transform honesty from what it is to a bawd than the
113   force of honesty can translate beauty into his
114   likeness. This was sometime a paradox, but now the
115   time gives it proof. I did love you once.
      OPHELIA
116   Indeed, my lord, you made me believe so.
      HAMLET
117   You should not have believ'd me, for virtue cannot
118   so inoculate our old stock but we shall relish of
119   it. I lov'd you not.
      OPHELIA
120   I was the more deceived.
      HAMLET
121   Get thee to a nunnery: why wouldst thou be a breeder
122   of sinners? I am myself indifferent honest; but yet I
123   could accuse me of such things that it were better my
124   mother had not borne me: I am very proud, revengeful,
125   ambitious, with more offences at my beck than I have
126   thoughts to put them in, imagination to give them shape,
127   or time to act them in. What should such fellows as I do
128   crawling between earth and heaven? We are arrant knaves,
129   all; believe none of us. Go thy ways to a nunnery.
130   Where's your father?
      OPHELIA
131   At home, my lord.
      HAMLET
132   Let the doors be shut upon him, that he may play the
133   fool no where but in's own house. Farewell.
      OPHELIA
134   O, help him, you sweet heavens!


      OPHELIA
141   O heavenly powers, restore him!
      HAMLET
142   I have heard of your paintings too, well enough; God
143   has given you one face, and you make yourselves
144   another: you jig, you amble, and you lisp, and nick-name
145   God's creatures, and make your wantonness your
146   ignorance. Go to, I'll no more on't; it hath made me mad.
147   I say, we will have no moe marriages: those that are
148   married already, all but one, shall live; the rest shall
149   keep as they are. To a nunnery, go.
           Exit.  Full Summary
      OPHELIA 150   O, what a noble mind is here o'erthrown! 151   The courtier's, soldier's, scholar's, eye, tongue, sword; 152   The expectancy and rose of the fair state,
153   The glass of fashion and the mold of form,
154   The observed of all observers, quite, quite down!
155   And I, of ladies most deject and wretched,
156   That suck'd the honey of his music vows,
157   Now see that noble and most sovereign reason,
158   Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune and harsh;
159   That unmatch'd form and feature of blown youth
160   Blasted with ecstasy: O, woe is me,
161   To have seen what I have seen, see what I see!

Aware that they are being watched, Hamlet stages his own response and argues that he gave her nothing and that he has never loved her. He tells her to go to a convent, assaulting her with another double entendre insult. Knowing that she is working for her father and Claudius, Hamlet accuses Ophelia of prostitution. Hamlet now asks a question on which turns the entire remaining action of the play: "Where is your father?" He earlier asked her, "Are you honest? Are you fair?" To which she gave no direct reply. Now he asks her where her father is, knowing full well that he is in the room. She lies, "At home, my lord." Hamlet flies into a rage. He calls her two-faced and accuses her and all women of painting a false face. His accusations leave her shocked and certain that his madness is complete and completely destructive.
Ophelia's response to Hamlet's question serves as the force that propels Hamlet's story to its tragic ends. Had Ophelia answered truthfully, had she disclosed her father's whereabouts, had she allied herself with Hamlet rather than with Claudius, had she truly believed in her love for Hamlet, Ophelia might have saved Hamlet from his burden. The play could have been a romance rather than a tragedy. However, by confirming his belief in women's basic dishonesty — "frailty thy name is woman" — Ophelia seals her fate and Hamlet's at the same time.

24 comments:

  1. Ophelia was so surprised to see hamlet change into something that is not common to her. To her he is probably changing into a monster. She doesn't even recognize him anymore. She is so sad that he changed into to this and even sadder that she knew him before he changed. Do you think Hamlet is lying that he doesn't love Ophelia? Or do you think that he's lying just to push her away for her own good?

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  2. Although Hamlet appears to change into the man that Ophelia's father and brother warned her about do you really believe that Hamlet truly doesn't love Ophelia and was just lying to her all this time or do you believe he is trying to push her away for whatever reason? In previous scenes I have noticed a pattern, Hamlet stages his madness to evoke a response from people. I think he is doing the same thing here: He is pushing Ophelia away by acting mad and accusing her of acts such as prostitution, etc. because of his past experiences with women. I believe he loves her, however in this scene he is just simply pushing her away. -Aldesha

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  3. I think Hamlet has a bigger plan for these outbreaks. He always chooses to go mad when he knows there an audience watching. He also always steps out of his character but for what purpose? I think he does this to see how certain people react to the situation and so he can always have the upper hand on his peers. The question of if he loves her or not is out of the question because even if he did he ruined it now.

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  4. I feel so bad for hamlet! His heart must be so broken after he knew that she lied to him. I wonder how lonely he feels knowing that no one is on his side. I also agree with David. Maybe Hamlet does have a bigger plan and that he wants people to think of him a certain way. Maybe he never liked her in the first place and set the stage up as if he did.

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  5. In this scene a Hamlet ruins his chance to be with Ophelia with is dishonesty.He also sounds as if he a opposes marriage because he keeps suggesting that Ophelia should become a Nun.He also doesn't want her to marry anyone while he is breaking up with her when he says"If thou dost marry, I'll give thee this plague for thy 136 dowry: be thou as chaste as ice, as pure as snow,"

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  6. What if this is all just hamlets plan to begin with. We speak about how god knows everything and how William Shakespeare likes to relate religion and god in his text. Maybe he is symbolizing god through hamlet and hamlet knows that in the future he will be betrayed as said in the bible when Jesus apostles betrayed him. I don't know but it just all seems to me like I am reading parts of the bible in forms of Shakespeare literature.

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  7. i agree with sam if god knows everything and hamlet is Shakespears form of god he knows hes being watched and suddenly saying "You should not have believ'd me, for virtue cannot so inoculate our old stock but we shall relish of it. I lov'd you not." i feel as if he really does love her but needs to cover up, but ophelia isnt in on it so shes sad inside and replies "I was the more deceived." with a resentful and appalled tone.

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  8. Hamlet knows their being watched and this is why he's acting this way towards us. In the beginning of the scene he was acting his usual self but you see a tonal shift when he asks ophelia wheres her "lord" (father). When he notices that shes lying by saying he's at home when he's in fact lurking by he begins to act as the person ophelia's father warned him about. I also agree with aldesha that he's pushing her away for whatever the reason maybe. maybe because he doesn't want her engulfed in the madness of his family's problem and he's just doing this to protect her.

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  10. Hamlet is so much smarter than the people watching him from afar think. Hamlet goes off the rails to put on a show for people, his outbursts are not something that I think is out of his control, he seems fully aware of what he is saying and what reactions he’s going to draw out from the people around him.
    Hamlet seems like an emotional character to me and I think he truly does love Ophelia and that he is only pushing her away for her own good.

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  11. I feel as if Ophelia really does love Hamlet but is control by her brother and father as it says women at that time were treated as weak and fragile. Hamlet in other hand decides to take all his anger of her father's death and this ghost that has been around him with Ophelia leaving her heartbroken. I agree with Natalie i feel as he does love Ophelia but right now has no intention or head to show her his love. His main focus is on his father's death. As said Shakespeare changed this story from being romantic to a horrible tragic. I cannot wait to see what happens next to Ophelia and Hamlet's love.

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  12. Hamlet has suddenly became or changed into a man that his father had warned him about. I do believe that Hamlet doesn't love Ophelia and was just lying to her all this time like ms.G said in her comment. Because of this change and the way he's acting towards her. I wouldn't blame him because he just found out that she has been lying to him and he is hurt by it. This is what mainly causes his quick change.

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  13. Ophelia loves/likes Hamlet. We've already seen how she acts with her brother and father, but with Hamlet, she seems to show her softer side. I'm not sure if Hamlet actually feels the same, but he does care for her to a certain extent. the only bad thing about Hamlet is that he happens to be brutally honest with himself and other people. The problem is that Hamlet has changed, because he now has things on his mind. Ophelia doesn't understand that, and is actually hurt because she doesn't understand why he is acting differently. I think if anything, Hamlet needs to worry more about himself than Ophelia's well being at the moment. His mind is cluttered, and he may end up making a terrible mistake because of it.

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  14. I feel like Hamlet and Ophelia both care about each other very much but I think that it's everything that is going around them that is messing up their relationship. Had Ophelia 's father and brother not have this control over her then I do think she would've sided with Hamlet. I don't think she wanted to lie to him and with Hamlet I don't think he meant what he said to her. I agree with what Natalie said that he is just pushing her away for her own good. I also think that Hamlet's mother did mess up his views on women and now sees all women as lying, deceiving humans. I definitely want to his more of Hamlet and Ophelia.

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  15. Hamlet is making up excuses to not be with Ophelia. I think hes taking out his fustratation of plotting a murder that he has to take out his anger on someone with lesser power than him. I believe that she did truely love Hamlet but is ultimately too good for him. Hamlet is trying to remove all connections or ties he has to Claudius that way when he kills him, he doesnt feel as bad.

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  16. I believe Hamlet loves Ophelia but with everything going on right now, he does not have the time to show it or even feel it. This is shown by the way he goes off on her and he leaves her heartbroken. Again with the gender roles, Hamlet treats Ophelia this way because she's a woman and weak.

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  17. i feel like hamlet doesn't love ophelia, he probably once did but i don't think he does for the fact that she has been lying to him all this time and the way things are right now hamlet is changing the way he was and now ophelia is surprised but i don't blame hamlet for the way he is acting towards her because if she would've told the truth from the beginning then he wouldn't be acting like this

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  18. In the beginning, Hamlet is being very thoughtful and questioning. But now that he realizing Ophelia actions. His reaction towards her is changing and she is very surprised by it.

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  19. I think that Hamlet has feeling for Ophelia. I feel like some how he is smarter than he appears to be and maybe he goes off on Ophelia because he doesn't want her to be apart of what he wants to do. I feel like he thinks that maybe Ophelia's father is right and Ophelia is better off without him.

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  20. I feel like Hamlet is hiding behind the peon act of rage and using it to defend his extremely socially appropriate sexist nature towards Ophelia.
    Regardless whether or not he knows her father is in hiding he is taken aback by the fact that a woman would want to leave him, let alone make the first move. This causes him to not say things he doesn't mean but rather eliminate the emotional attachment he has to her and act as though she were just someone else on the street, What I'm basically saying is I feel like this is his true unimpressioned opinion of Ophelia.

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  21. Hamlet is in the middle of loosing everything he hold dearest to him.THE faif Ophelia is leaving him without explaination or reason. His reaction explains his feelings toward the situation.

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  22. I certainly think Hamlet loves Ophelia and with all the madness that is happening around Hamlet with the ghost and him trying to kill his uncle is driving him insane. Ophelia lying to him made him go into complete rage and disappointment as he knew they were being watched. I do agree with Unique and say Hamlet is setting the person his loves and revealing a side of anger and revenge to have the courage to finally kill his uncle. I also say this scene also portrays gender and since women are seen as fragile and weak I think Hamlet used that as a token to gain control and power and make Ophelia feel bad and get himself angry, but what does Hamlet gain from that since he is hurting the one person who made him feel loved?

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  23. Since Hamlet knew he was being watched during this scene, is there any way that we could confirm that what he said to Ophelia is actually true? It seems like Hamlet is officially consumed by the idea of killing the King, but does that mean he is not aware of his actions? For all we know he could be doing this so Ophelia is not endangered. Little did Hamlet know that by acting mad he is putting everyone in danger.

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