Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Hamlet - Claudius :: essays papers

juncture - Claudius What could be worse than killing your brother? Marrying his wife right after Claudius is the shadiest cause in Act I of Hamlet. Claudius had poured the juice of a hebenon (henbane a genuinely poisonous plant) into his brothers, Hamlet olders ear. Hamlet Sr. died quickly but was doomed for a certain term to bye the night. Claudius then hurriedly married Gertrude and became king. Hamlet knows none of this however, yet already holds certain contempt for his step- novice/uncle. In scene 2, Claudius gives a very satiny speech, side-stepping the fact that he is in the middle of a very incestuous relationship. He says, With an auspicious and a dropping eye, / With mirth in funeral and with threnody in marriage, / In equal scale weighing delight and dole, -/ taken to wife Claudius tries to beat around the bush and not really let off anything about his marriage to Gertrude. No one questions him because he is King, but the wad are not happy about this situ ation anyway. Claudiuss hocus-pocus nature somewhat surfaces when he is speaking to Hamlet also. He is plain uncomfortable with the fact that Hamlet is still mourning the death of his father and almost seems to bully him to stop to preserver/ In obstinate condolement is a course/ Of impious stubbornness tis unmanly grief/ It shows a will most incorrect to heaven,/ A heart unfortified, a mind impatient,/ An judgment simple and unschooled Claudius, of course, seems to say this with a face full of smiles as if politely correcting Hamlet, but it seems obvious that he is downright afraid of what Hamlet could do if he discovered the truth. This is expressed even more when Claudius says, we request you, bend you to remain/ Here, in the cheer and comfort of our eye, / Our chiefest courtier, cousin, and our son.

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