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Part II Acts 4-5

Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

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Page 1: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Part IIActs 4-5

Page 2: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Scene I I’m a bit confused about Hamlet’s madness,

to be honest. Let’s rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line

185): “Or paddling in your neck with his damned

fingers, / Make you to ravel all this matter out / That I essentially am not in madness / But mad in craft.”

Rewind: “not this”?

Page 3: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Then, back to Act 4, Scene 1: Gertrude says, “Mad as the sea and wind

when both contend / Which is mightier.” Claudius utters an irony: “It had been so

with us, had we been there.” He means to say that Hamlet would have killed him, had he been there, which is ironically true.

Claudius: “It [Hamlet’s murder of Polonius] will be laid to us…”

Page 4: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Claudius: “We must, with all our majesty and skill, / Both countenance [condone] and excuse.”

“…may miss our name / and hit the woundless air.”

Scene II Sidnote II, Page 270

Page 5: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Scene III Claudius: “He’s loved of the distracted

multitude, / Who like not in their judgment, but their eyes. / And where tis so, th’ offender’s scourge is weighed, / But never the offense.”

“Diseases desperate grown”

Page 6: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Hamlet makes many jokes about how Polonius is being eaten by worms.

He does this to show that all men die a similar death, as in Beowulf.

“Nothing but to show you a king may go by a progress through the guts of a beggar (in prose).”

Hamlet tells Claudius, in a clever way to “go to hell”.

Hamlet makes a joke about how Polonius will stink up the castle!

Page 7: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Hamlet makes a note that God sees the plans of men before they take place: “I see a cherub that sees them.”

Last line of scene III: Haps=Fortune What does Claudius letter ask of “England”? “For like the hectic [fever] in my blood he

[Hamlet] rages.”

Page 8: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Scene IV At the beginning of the scene, Fortinbras

wants to march through Denmark. He is a war-monger. First he wants to fights

with Denmark, now he wants to claim a very unimportant piece of Polish land.

Around line 20, SATIRE, the futile nature of war.

Page 9: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Ironically, Young Fortinbras becomes a motivation for Young Hamlet.

“Rightly to be great / Is not to stir without great argument, / But greatly to find quarrel in a straw / When honor’s at the stake.”

Page 10: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Scene v A “gentleman” reports that Ophelia is mad. “She speaks much of her father[….]speaks

things in doubt / That carry but half sense” “They yawn at it / And botch the words up

to fit their own thoughts…” Shakespeare had much to say about the

common, the vulgar, the mobs, in this scene and later on.

Page 11: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Gertrude: “So full of artless jealousy is guilt, / It spills itself fearing to be spilt.”

Ophelia’s song…is she chaste? Line 56. Claudius says of Ophelia, “When sorrows

come, they come not single spies / But in battalions: first her father slain; / Next your son gone, […] the people muddied, / thick and unwholesome in thoughts and whispers / For good Polonius’ death…”

Page 12: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Claudius admits that it was a dumb idea to bury Polonius in secret.

Laertes comes back from France with an agenda. He is ticked, he wants answers, and he initially blames Claudius.

“Her brother is in secret come from France, / Feeds on this wonder, keeps himself in clouds…”

Page 13: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

The ocean, […], / Eats not the flats (shores) with more impetuous haste / Than young Laertes, in a riotous head, / O’erbears your officers.

“Choose we, Laertes shall be king!” Claudius (ironic), “There’s such divinity doth

hedge a king / That treason can but peep to what it would, / Acts little of his will.”

Page 14: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Laertes: “I dare damnation! To this point I stand / That both the worlds I give to negligence. / Let come what comes, only I’ll be revenged…”

Laertes is passionate and wants to act. He plays the foil to Hamlet, who is too philosophical about consequence.

However, as one is about to see, Laertes is also too easily persuaded (by Claudius) to delay action.

Page 15: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Laertes is moved by Ophelia’s madness. Line 175, a note, the flowers have symbolic

meaning. Scene VI “Yet are they [words] too light for the bore

of the matter.” Hamlet was abducted by sailors, but now

these sailors have letters for the king.

Page 16: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Scene VII Claudius, at the beginning of the scene,

tells Laertes that he is innocent of Polonius’ death. Is this true?

“That he which hath your noble father slain / Pursued my life.”

Does Claudius know of Hamlet’s plan?!

Page 17: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Laertes then asks, why didn’t you punish Hamlet?

Claudius responds, “For two special reasons.”

(1) “The queen, his mother, / Lives almost by his looks […] She is so conjunct to my life and soul, / I could not (live) but by her.” ????

Page 18: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

(2) “Why to a public count I might not go / Is the great love the general gender bear him / […] Convert gyves to graces–”

Claudius: “You must not think / That we are made of stuff so flat and dull / That we can let our beard be shook with danger / And think it pastime.”

Page 19: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Claudius receives a letter that says, HAMLET IS BACK,” but that letter is somewhat confusing.

Therefore, Claudius comes up with a “master plan” to get rid of Hamlet once and for all.

Hamlet will have to fence Laertes, which should not be a hard match to set up, since Hamlet envies Laertes skill in fighting.

Page 20: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Claudius is a great persuader: “What would you undertake / To show yourself in deed your father’s son / More than in words?”

Laertes: “To cut his throat i’ th’ church” Hamlet + Laertes = FOIL Claudius (ironic) “Revenge should have no

bounds”

Page 21: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

In essence, a wager will be placed on each side (that of Hamlet and Laertes) and they will fence to see who wins. We will discuss the wager later, as it is expounded upon in Act V.

Laertes will choose a rapier that is not blunted, and will poison the tip.

Claudius comes up with plan B, which is, if Hamlet is winning for some reason, they will offer him a drink from a poisoned chalice.

Page 22: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Ophelia is drowned? How? Was it an accident? What is the

image?

Page 23: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Scene I Notice the social register of the clowns

(jesters) is lower. They are intended to be comical, but they often utter truths, as does everyone in Hamlet.

Side-note 2: According to church law, those who die by suicide are to be denied full Christian funeral rights (which include burial in consecrated ground).

Page 24: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

“The crowner hath sat on her and finds it Christian burial.”

The coroner decided it was not suicide. First Clown (line 14): Logic over suicide. “If this had not been a gentlewoman, she

should have been buried out o’ / Christian burial.”

The clown’s riddle: “Who builds stronger than a mason, a shipwright, or a carpenter?”

Hamlet: “The hand of little employment hath the daintier sense.”

Page 25: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

“Here’s fine revolution…” (Hamlet) Notice that Ophelia’s grave has been

previously used…That’s where the discussion about all the skulls comes from.

To be brief, all Hamlet’s musings essentially boil down to one thing. Occupation, finance, and social status matter not in death.

“The age is grown so picked that the toe of the peasant comes so near the heel of the courtier he galls his kibe.”

Page 26: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Funny or ironic statement: “There (England) the men are as mad as he.”

We find Hamlet is 30. “Upon what ground?” “Faith, if ‘a be not rotten before ‘a die –” Double meaning of rotten. “To what base uses may we return” The priest calls Ophelia’s death “suspicious” G’trude: “I hoped thou shouldst have been

my Hamlet’s wife…”

Page 27: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Hamlet: “I loved Ophelia. Forty thousand brothers / Could not with all their quantity of love / Make up my sum. What wilt thou do for her?”

Line 275 Nature will take its course

Page 28: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Scene II Hamlet: “There’s a divinity that shapes our

ends, / Rough-hew (crudely shape) them how we will.”

We find that Hamlet actually does something in Act V. He stealthily finds the letter that Claudius sent to England. After taking it from R & G, he rewrites it, reseals it, and replaces it. The letter now orders to the immediate killing of R&G.

Page 29: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

“Why, even in that was Heaven ordinant. / I had my father’s signet in my purse, / Which was the model of that Danish seal.”

“They are not near my conscience. Their defeat / Does by their own insinuation grow.”

What is the purpose of Osric? He is a waffler, but other than that? Hamlet: “…and many more of the same

breed that / I know the drossy age dotes on –”

Page 30: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

What is the wager of the fight? The odds? Hamlet: “We defy the augury (divination).

There is special providence in the fall of a sparrow [….] The readiness is all; since no man of aught he leaves knows, what is ‘t to leave betimes?

Hamlet’s apology (LINE 204) Hamlet and Laertes fence. Hamlet is winning

3-0, which is obviously unexpected. G’trude: “The Queen carouses to thy fortune,

Hamlet.”

Page 31: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

G’trude is poisoned (dies). Laertes: [Aside] “And yet it is almost

against my conscience.” Laertes: “I am justly killed with my own

treachery.” Hamlet kills Claudius. Hamlet: “Mine and my father’s death come

upon thee, / Nor thine one me.” Hamlet tells Horatio to “Report me and my

cause aright / To the unsatisfied.”

Page 32: Part II Acts 4-5. Scene I Im a bit confused about Hamlets madness, to be honest. Lets rewind to line Act 3, Scene 4, (line 185): Or paddling in your neck

Hamlet recommends Fortinbras the new king.

Hamlet dies. We find that R&G are dead. Horatio explains the tragedy. Fortinbras: “For me, with sorrow I embrace

my fortune.” Hamlet would have “proved most royal.”