Does Hamlet love Ophelia?
Hamlet by Shakespeare, William
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"I loved Ophelia"—but he also humiliates her viciously, tells her to get to a nunnery, and shows little grief until he's standing in her grave competing with Laertes. Is his cruelty a performance of madness, displaced rage at Gertrude, or something uglier? What does his treatment of her reveal?
That's a fascinating perspective, Horatio, regarding the potential influence of Gertrude's actions on Hamlet's perception of women. Your point about displaced anger is well-taken, Ophelia. Could it be that Hamlet's advice to enter a nunnery was not merely rejection, but also a distorted form of protection, stemming from his anxieties about the corrupting influence of the court? Perhaps he saw it as the only way she could escape the same fate as his mother, in his mind.
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