Hamlet - Act 1, Scene 5 Flashcards

1
Q

What context may be used for 1.5?

A
  • Seneca’s Agamemnon (Ghost of Thyestes) emphasises trope of ghost asking to be anvenged
  • Thomas Kyd’s Spanish Tragedy
  • 1596 Shakespeare’s son Hamnet died 11. Influence of death in the play
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2
Q

“Mark me”

A
  • Imperative emphasises the desire to be listened to
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3
Q

“Sulphrous and tormenting flames”

A
  • Hellish imagery creates ambiguity about the ghosts state
  • Fearful to an Elizabethan audience
  • Anguish
  • Protestant idea of purgatory
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4
Q

“Speak, I am bound to hear”

A
  • Imperative : filial obligation
  • Duty to avenge fathers death - reflects attitudes at time
  • Ghost is manipulative and danger
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5
Q

“Doom’d for a certain term to walk the night” / “To tell the secrets of my prison-house”

A
  • Repetition of hellish imagery
  • Replicates purgatory acting as a visualiser
  • Entrapment and confinement
  • Creates ambiguity surrounding the ghost
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6
Q

“List, list, O List! If thou didst ever thy dear father love”

A
  • Ironic : manipulative
  • Ghost wants Hamlet to commit huge sin despite previously listing the detriments of purgatory
  • Creates ambiguity and uncertainty of his character
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7
Q

“Murder most foul as in the best it is, but this most foul, strange and unnatural”

A
  • Emphasises corruption of the state : emphasises transgressive nature of act
  • TGCOB disrupted
  • Repetition of foul emphasises the corruption
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8
Q

“May sweep to my revenge”

A
  • Proleptic irony : initial reaction one of obligation but isn’t fulfilled
  • Harmartia = procrastination
  • Hasty and certain / instantaneous
  • Speaks like young Fortinbras (medieval) : “mettle hot and full”
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9
Q

“A serpent stung me so The whole ear of Denmark is by a forged process of my death rankly abus’d”

A
  • Synecdoche : corruption of the state
  • Biblical allusion to the garden of Eden
  • Ambiguity of ghost
  • Tempts hamlet to take action (serpent figure)

CRITIC : “The ghost is the linchpin of Hamlet” (Arnold)

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10
Q

“Of life, of crown, of queen at once dispatch’d”

A
  • Anaphoric repetition / syndetic listing : empathetic towards Gertrude
  • Emphasises the extent of the loss
  • Instantaneous- no opportunity to repent for sin, life snatched away from him
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11
Q

“Let not the royal bed of Denmark be a coach for luxury and damned incest”

A
  • Imperative / symbolic of corruption - acts as a warning
  • BODY POLITIK
  • Controlling / authoritative nature of the ghost
  • Juxtaposition used to emphasise the extent of corruption
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12
Q
  • “Leave her to heaven”
A
  • Empathetic view towards Gertrude
  • Ironic as Claudius who is guilty too is targeted
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13
Q

“Thy commandment”

A
  • Religious intertextuality : filial obligation
  • Act of revenge seen as a holy conquest - reflects views at time
  • Ironic due to the complications of treason / regicide
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14
Q

“O most pernicious woman! O villain, villain smiling damned villain”

A
  • Juxtaposition between “smiling” and “damned” - duplicitous nature of Gertrude
  • Imperative : loss of control emphasising emotion - unhinged
  • Frustration ironically directed at Gertrude
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15
Q

STRUCTURE OF THE GHOST

A
  • Dominates the line length when talking to Hamlet whereas Hamlets lines are short and obedient
  • Repeated use of imperatives emphasise a control over him
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16
Q

“Put on an antic disposition”

A
  • Metaphor : planning ahead
  • Hide true intentions by pretending to be mad