Wednesday, February 13, 2019
Gertrude and Helen: Wantonness in the Trojan War and Shakespeares Hamlet :: Shakespeare Hamlet
Gertrude and Helen Wantonness in the Trojan War and crossroads Hamlet is the melancholy Dane Claudius, the smiling villain. Polonius is the oily courtier Horatio, the loyal friend. Most of the causes in Hamlet are well defined and unambiguous the character of Gertrude, however, presents us with many ambiguities and difficulties. Some critics see her as well-meaning but alter and feminine, in the pejorative sense of the word incapable of any carry on rational process, superficial and flighty (Heilbrun 10), while others see her as a stronger character, cool and calculating. The play presents many aspects of Gertrudes character ambiguously. Janet Adelman writes, Given her centrality in the play, it is touch how little we know about Gertrude even the extent of her involvement in the murder of her first hubby is left unclear....The ghost accuses her at least in straight off of adultery and incest...but he never accuses her of nor ex hotshotrates her from the murder. For the ghost, as for Hamlet, her chief wickedness is her uncontrolled sexuality that is the object of their moral revulsion, a revulsion as intense as anything directed toward the murderer Claudius. solely the Gertrude we see is non quite the Gertrude they see. And when we see her in herself, apart from their characterizations of her, we tend to see a woman more muddled than actively wicked even her notable sensuality is less apparent than her conflicted solicitude both for her new husband and for her son....Even her death is not quite her own to define. Is it a suicide designed to keep Hamlet from danger by dying in his endue?...Muddled, fallible, fully human, she seems ultimately to make the choice that Hamlet would have her make. But even here she does not speak clearly her character body relatively closed to us (Adelman 15-16). In spite of the many ambiguities of Gertrudes character, one of her chief characteristics is wantonness, and like Helen of Troy, Gertrudes wantonness led to tra gedy. Wantonness-a word that is little in use nowadays-suggests three characteristics luxuriously rank extravagance, lack of discipline, and lustfulness. The treatment of Gertrudes character in Hamlet supports the argument that her chief fault is wantonness, for these three characteristics burn down be seen in her character. The first characteristic, luxuriousness or extravagance, is not directly stated in the play but can be inferred from the actions of Gertrude. wholeness possible reason for her remarriage after King Hamlets death is a trust to maintain her position as queen, with all its luxury and comfort.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.