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Is Hamlet 's Madness Genuine Or Feigned?

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Jordan Avery
Mrs. Joyner
Honors English IV
17 December 2015 Is Hamlet’s Madness Genuine or Feigned?
One of the most controversially discussed themes in William Shakespeare’s play, Hamlet, is the theme of Hamlet’s madness. Shakespeare left it up to the audience to decide whether he was truly crazy or not. Although, there are many deliberate acts of fabricated insanity repeated throughout the play. Hamlet’s life events such as the death of his father, loving someone he cannot have, and not mention the marriage of his mother to his uncle, was enough to make someone go off of the deep end. However, Hamlet even admits that he was going to “feign madness” in order to avenge his father’s death in a less apparent manner.
The death of King Hamlet singlehandedly was the reason behind Hamlet’s acts of antic disposition. After Hamlet’s father died, he came back in what seemed to be an apparition. In Act I, scene V, the ghost speaks to Hamlet and claims to be his father’s spirit. In this conversation, he was asked to avenge the death of his father by killing King Claudius, which would be King Hamlet’s brother. Prince Hamlet’s worst fears about his uncle have now been confirmed and he is ready to begin the process of a hasty revenge. He promises to keep his word of obeying what the ghost asked of him by saying, “…meet it is I set it down that one may smile, and smile, and be a villain. At least I’m sure it may be so in Denmark. So, uncle, there you are. Now to my word”

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