Hamlet ophelia eulogy essay

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    Hamlet to Horatio Eulogy

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    Year 12 English – Hamlet's Eulogy (delivered by Horatio) Simone Schulz Lords, ladies and citizens of Elsinore, what treasure lost. It is with great sorrow that I stand before you in this difficult day, in this difficult time. I do not know what to say nor how to say it. We are all here to honour, remember and pay respect to the most remarkable Prince we could ever know, Prince Hamlet of Denmark, beloved son of the late King Hamlet and Queen Gertrude, royal courtier and loyal friend. To all

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    intriguing and well-known playwright and is considered to be the face of literature. Through the brainstorming of his greatest plays Romeo and Juliette, Othello, King Lear, and Macbeth, just to name a few, Shakespeare’s most famous play seemingly enough is Hamlet. This play is mostly evoked for its intrinsic worth however, it has its imperfections. Shakespeare will forever live on as the literary genius of the century because of the internal tragedies he endured that gave him the opportunity to express his

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    Hamlet’s and Oxford’s life paralleled in the same matter. In Hamlet, Ophelia does not want to be married to Hamlet (Bethell 1). Bethell states that Oxford thought his wife was not truthful to him when he was away on an European tour (1). Oxford discredited the fact that he was the father of Ophelia’s first born (Bethell 1). After the incident, Oxford and Ophelia were not as fond of each other as they used to be (Bethell 1). This relates to when Hamlet said to Polonius, “Conception is a blessing, but not

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    Shakespeare’s renowned tragedy Hamlet is filled, of course, with plenty of tragedies and death. The very basis of the play is Hamlet’s journey towards avenging his father’s murder, but in true Shakespearean fashion, several other characters will die along the way as well. This brings about many scenes that feature the various ways grief can be expressed, while falling action shows how these expressions of mourning can affect other people. For example, in light of his father’s death, Hamlet feels every emotion

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    unnatural murder. Murder! Murder most foul, as in the best it is; But this most foul, strange and unnatural.” (Hamlet, 1.5 25-28) In Act 1, Scene 5 of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, the Ghost, which can be either interpreted as Hamlet’s late father or a figment of Hamlet’s imagination, commands the young Hamlet to take revenge for the death of the former King of Denmark. In this iconic scene, young Hamlet takes heed of the Ghost’s words and it sets forward in motion the plot for revenge. Throughout Shakespeare’s

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    A Comparison of Hamlet and McMurphy in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" It is suggested that in modern literature, the true element of tragedy is not captured because the protagonist is often of the same social status as the audience, and therefor, his downfall is not tragic. This opinion, I find, takes little consideration of the times in which we live. Indeed, most modern plays and literature are not about monarchs and the main character is often equal to the common person; this, however

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