Thursday, October 24, 2019
The Theme of Death in William Shakespeares Hamlet Essay -- GCSE Englis
The Theme of Death in William Shakespeare's Hamlet      In the play  Hamlet, by William Shakespeare, the protagonist, Hamlet is obsessed with the  idea of death, and during the course of the play he contemplates death from  numerous perspectives. He ponders the physical aspects of death, as seen with  Yoricks's skull, his father's ghost, as well as the dead bodies in the cemetery.  Hamlet also contemplates the spiritual aspects of the afterlife with his various  soliloquies. Emotionally Hamlet is attached to death with the passing of his  father and his lover Ophelia. Death surrounds Hamlet, and forces him to consider  death from various points of view.      In the first scene of Act 5, Hamlet discovers Yorick's skull in the  graveyard. While Hamlet is speaking to Yorick, his father's jester's skull, as  well as about him, Hamlet focuses in on the physical deterioration of the human  body. He also touches on the inevitability of death as everyone's fate. He  orders the skull to "get to my lady's chamber, and tell her, let her paint an  inch thick, to this favor she must come"(5.1. 178-179), which means no one can  avoid death. Hamlet also imagines the jester's features still existing on the  skull, consequently showing his enthrallment with the physical outcome of death  on the body. This concept is a very prominent motif throughout the play. Hamlet  repeatedly makes observations alluding to every man's physical decomposition. "A  man may fish with the worm that have eat of the king, and eat of the fish that  hath fed of the worm," a symbol in which he states, " how a king may go a  progress through the guts of a beggar" (4.3. 26-31).      The ghost of the elder Hamlet is described as a very genuine looking ghost.  The spectators ...              ...s that he has slain Polonius the father of his "love" Ophelia. He  comments, saying "I'll lug the guts into the neighbor room. / Mother, good night  indeed. This counselor/ Is now most still, most secret, and most grave, / Who  was in life a foolish prating knave. -/ Come, sir, to draw toward an end with  you." (3.4. 235-9).      Death is approached through many facets in the play Hamlet. Shakespeare has  used a great deal of imagery and symbols in order to portray death as a major  theme in this play. The play is seeped with literal death as well as figurative  death. By Hamlet approaching death in physical, spiritual, and emotional terms  forces death to become a major theme in the play.      Sources Consulted      Fagan, Garrett G. Death in Hamlet. 24 July 1998.      Shakespeare, William. Hamlet. Four Great Tragedies. Sylvan Barnett, ed. New  York: Signet 1998.                          
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