What are the 5 stages of Grief? How does each stage of grief affect a person's life? To understand what the cast is going through we need to understand the 5 stages of grief. Each person in the story of Hamlet goes through different stages of grief, Denial/Isolation, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance are all stages of grief that are presented throughout the story. This quote from Kübler-Ross “people can experience these aspects of grief at different times and they do not happen in one particular order”, informs us that people experience these stages of grief but not in the same order, Hamlet and Laertes are perfect examples of that. Hamlet and Laertes are two characters of this story who visit all stages of grief in different, in …show more content…
Her initial denial comes from the rejection of her love by Hamlet, leading to anger and confusion. She then begins to bargain with herself, trying to understand why Hamlet has treated her so coldly. As the play progresses, Ophelia's depression deepens. She becomes overwhelmed by the events around her, ultimately leading to her tragic demise. Ophelia's story shows how grief can be not only a response to loss but also to rejection and disappointment. "I would give you some violets, but they withered all when my father died." (Act 4, Scene 5). This quote reveals Ophelia's depression following the death of her father, with her inability to enjoy even small things such as flowers. Her words suggest a sense of mourning and a lack of hope or joy. The idea that the violets have withered away mirrors the loss and decay Ophelia is experiencing in her own life, contributing to her …show more content…
After the death of his father, Laertes becomes consumed with anger and willing to do whatever it takes to avenge his father's death. He bargains with Claudius, hoping to use his loyalty to gain the power to take revenge. Laertes falls into depression as he realizes the consequences of his actions, ultimately leading to his tragic end. Laertes' story shows how grief can drive individuals to extremes as they seek justice for their loss."Exchange forgiveness with me, noble Hamlet; Mine and my father's death come not upon thee, Nor thine on me." (Act 5, Scene 2). This quote shows Laertes' acceptance of his imminent death, as he seeks forgiveness from Hamlet and offers forgiveness in return. He accepts the consequences of his actions and seeks to make peace before his
Their actions and emotions in comparison show how the two are different from one another, as revealed by Laertes’ compulsiveness. As both characters have similar motives to avenge their fathers deaths, they react differently. Laertes gets to immediate action and does not let anything hold him back, whereas Hamlet remains still in his madness and contemplates his actions. When Laertes rushed back to Denmark after hearing about Polonius’ death, he says to Claudius, “To this point I stand, / That both the worlds, I give to negligence, / Let come what comes; only I’ll be revenged / Mostly thoroughly for my father. ”(Shakespeare 4.5 151-154)
Laertes does not mourn at all” (Levin 222). Laertes even goes to another level when he says he would “cut [Hamlet’s] throat it’h’ church” (Shakespeare 4.7. 3271). This displays an absolute opposite to what Hamlet says earlier in the play when he dismisses the chance to kill Claudius because Claudius was kneeling in prayer. Laertes revenge, like Hamlet’s, ultimately leads to his
and his lack of acceptance in regards to his mother's choices. Within this context, depression turns out to be the front-runner when it comes to the 5 stages, and subsequently is one of the main features of this play, as it causes Hamlet to reevaluate the fatality of his father, his mother’s new marriage, and eventually his own life. Anger is considered a necessary stage in the
When his father died, he returned home in vengeance. When his sister went crazy, his first reaction was anger and pain, but it then turned to anger seeing how affected she was by her father’s death. Later on when she dies, he storms out filled with rage and at her funeral, he was crying so much that Hamlet fought him to prove he was affected more. Hamlet and Laertes are character foils for one another.
Initially, Laertes returns to Denmark to avenge the murder of his father. He shares his plan to punish Hamlet for his role in his father’s death in the lines, “It warms the very sickness in my heart that I live and tell him to his teeth, ‘Thus didst thou.' ” (IV, vii, 52-54) There is irony in him using the phrase “It warms my heart” to describe the sickness of it. Laertes admits he finds joy at the thought of killing Hamlet, but his diction/word choice suggests that he is disgusted with himself. The contradiction in the quote indicates his internal conflict about whether or not to take action.
Throughout the play Hamlet and Laertes prove to have different personalities, but share love for the same people, and are both on missions to avenge their father. When Hamlet first learns that Claudius is the murderer of his father, he first makes sure that he is proven guilty of the murder by creating a plan. First he investigates his dads murder, then he waits until it is the perfect time to avenge his father’s death. Here he hesitates to kill claudius because if he does he’ll go to heaven and that would be pointless to send a villain to heaven.
Laertes returns home on account of his father’s death. Claudius manipulates and deceives Laertes into thinking that it was all Hamlet’s fault and that revenge must be taken. Laertes resolves to do just that by accepting the power Claudius grants him to arrange a sparring match, in which Laertes can poison his sword. Leartes states that all he must do is, “touch my point[on Hamlet] with this contagion, that if I gall him slightly, it may be death” (IV, vii, 147-149). Leartes plans the murder of Hamlet all on account of what Claudius wants him to do.
As the innocent victim of Hamlet’s feigned madness, Ophelia’s insanity is a product of her inability to cope with Hamlet and her father’s death. Her songs show hidden grief and sorrow; her flowers represent the fact that beneath the innocent exterior, there is a weakness or flaw in everyone. Hamlet was able to look past his grief for his father’s death, but he caused someone he loves to be in pain. Whether it is the frailty of women, sorrow, or death, anything, including love, can appear to be pleasant, but can be the ultimate cause of a person’s
When Ophelia returns all his letters and gifts he tells her that he has never loved her and that she should “get thyself to a nunnery.” This is one example how his mood changes throughout the play. Then after all this her father, Polinous, is murdered by Hamlet. The Hamlet is sent away to England All of these actions result in her feeling such stress that she becomes insane in the end.
Then, Laertes chooses to become a participant in the killing of Hamlet. As aforementioned, this plan for death is a success, but causes many other deaths along with Hamlet to fail.
This can be presented through the events with Laertes, In the scene showing the burial of Ophelia they both jump in the coffin and start fighting. Hamlet pulls out from the fight first, giving us a hint of his Maturity growth. We see that with all the trouble Hamlet has experience, his become a bigger person and realizes that Laertes also lost his father and sympathizes with him. He comes clean and admits his wrongdoings saying “give me pardon sir…. I have done you wrong”.
His willingness to conspire with Claudius and deceive Hamlet into thinking that it is a fair fight. Eager to get his revenge, Laertes “[dips] a knife in” the poison so that nothing “can save [Hamlet] from death,” demonstrating the damaging consequences of acting on desires for revenge through deception (IV, vii, 159). In the end, Laertes does end up wounding and therefore killing Hamlet, however, “Laertes, as he himself admits, ‘is justly killed by [his] own treachery’ (5.2.297),” by also getting stabbed by the same poisoned blade
Ophelia is grieving the loss of her father after Hamlet kills him. Ophelia doesn't know that Hamlet killed her father. But Ophelia has gone mad from learning about her father's death. Also, after Hamlet telling Ophelia that she needs to go to a nunnery, Ophelia is a little bit discouraged. She is discouraged because Hamlet had told her before that if Ophelia would sleep with him that they would get married.
When he returns to the castle, he enters "in a riotous head"(4.5.100), and bursts in and says to Claudius, "... O thou vile king, / Give me my father" (4.5.113-114) as he believes Claudius killed Polonius. To this Claudius replies “What is the cause, Laertes, / That thy rebellion looks so giant-like?--"(4.5.119-120). Laertes is the embodiment of Hamlet's rage and desire for revenge, however where Hamlet hesitates, Laertes acts without questioning or thinking. As in this case, he bursts in the castle, and confronts the king and calls him "vile", without thinking of the consequences of speaking to the king in such a manner and accusing him of murder.
Shakespeare presents death as an inevitable act of life, noting that all that is living must eventually come to an end. Due to “Hamlet” being a Shakespearean tragedy, the theme of death recurs throughout the play. Additionally, Shakespeare can be seen as using revenge as the main motive of a character’s murder, which makes “Hamlet” a revenge tragedy. The tragic nature means that by the end of the play, majority of the characters would have died. In this case, many of the characters have died due to murder or suicide.