Did Ophelia love Hamlet?
For Hamlet, and the trifling of his favours
Does Ophelia ever say or do anything to indicate she loves Hamlet?
Which of the two opposing possibilities, namely, Ophelia loves Hamlet or Ophelia does not love Hamlet, is true?
The answer can only be found by examining the evidence and her responses in the circumstances. There are things
that a lover will do. There are also things a lover will not do. Ophelia repeatedly responds the opposite way to
that of a lover. At no time does Ophelia ever give a sign of loving Hamlet nor does she say to anyone that she
loves him. Nor does anyone else say she loves him. It is argued, therefore, that Ophelia does not love Hamlet
and evidence is presented to show why that appears to be the case.
Hamlet says he loves Ophelia but how serious is she? The prospect of becoming a queen might be sufficient reason
for Ophelia to marry Hamlet even if she did not love him. He has given her love tokens and has written love-letters
to her. This suggests he has maintained contact during his absence, perhaps while at Wittenburg. The relationship
has been going for some time, sufficient, in fact, for Gertrude to believe they will marry, and with her approval.
Hamlet's interest in Ophelia seems to have increased of recent times. Ophelia says Hamlet has been more attentive
of late and Polonius has heard the same.
She tells her father of Hamlet's affection for her but he orders her to break off the relationship and keep away
from Hamlet, and she keeps away! If she loved Hamlet she would not keep away, simply because she could not keep
away! No girl can deliberately repel the man she loves, her love being an irresistible force to drive her to him.
If she loved Hamlet she would ignore her father's order and find a way to meet Hamlet secretly. She makes no
effort to see Hamlet and rejects his entreaties to see her and returns his letters.
Ophelia: I did repel his letters
That is not entirely so because she retained one letter. This is the one she hands to her father and that he reads
to the king and queen. This is a love-letter, but no woman would ever give up love-letters from the man she loves.
This raises a serious doubt that Ophelia loved Hamlet.
Why did she retain this particular letter? What is there that is special in this letter? It is hardly to be a
mere random choice, so there must be something of particular interest in its content. Presumably, then, Ophelia
read some, if not all, of Hamlet's letters before selecting this one and returning the rest. So why did she choose
this letter? It would not be because of Hamlet's expression of love for he very likely stated that in every letter.
If she really loved Hamlet she would have kept more than one letter. It is, therefore, unlikely to be Hamlet's
love that has caught her attention but something else that takes her fancy, namely, poetry! This letter includes
a poem, and Ophelia is very susceptible to poetry. She writes poetry and, what is more, learns it by heart, for,
as she clearly demonstrates later when mad, she is able to recite poems she has written about her dead father and
also other poems and ditties she has known for years. Further evidence of her susceptibility to poetic words can
found in two places in the nunnery scene. Firstly:
Ophelia: My lord, I have remembrances of yours
That I have longed long to re-deliver.
I pray you, now receive them.
Hamlet: No, not I!
I never gave you aught.
Ophelia: My honour'd lord, you know right well you did,
And with them words of so sweet breath compos'd
As made the things more rich.
And secondly:
And I, ...... that suck'd the honey of his music vows.
For several weeks, in fact, approximately two months, Ophelia refuses any contact with Hamlet but he eventually
goes to her. He holds her by the wrist for a few minutes while he studies her face. He doesn't speak, but neither
does she. If she loves him, why doesn't she say she is sorry for rejecting his letters and avoiding him, or fall
into his arms, or kiss him, or tell him she loves him or give some sign of affection? She does none of these
things and only becomes frightened, which is something that would never happen if she loved Hamlet. He is possibly
wondering, "What is this woman that I love? Why has she been ignoring me? Am I nothing to her? Can't she speak a
word? It's her turn. I think I get the message - she doesn't love me." In despair, Hamlet sighs and walks away.
Ophelia, is completely bamboozled and extremely frightened and runs off to tell her father, yet again.
Where there is love, the beloved is first in a lover's thoughts, a father is insignificant. Note Rosalind's true
love for Orlando in "As You Like It":
Rosalind: But what talk we of fathers, when there is such a man as Orlando.
Hamlet and Ophelia only meet in two scenes: the nunnery scene and "The Mousetrap" scene. In the nunnery scene,
the first thing Ophelia does is give back to Hamlet all the love tokens he had given her as though they were
just a heap of junk, whereas a true lover would treasure ever gift and never part with any. She says she has
wanted to return them to him for a long time. This makes it abundantly clear that she does not love him. The
jilted lover, Hamlet, responds with a tit-for-tat. "I never loved you," he says. Most spurned lovers will say
something like that; it is a normal thing to do.
Following Hamlet's visit to Ophelia in her closet, her father, the King and the Queen believe
Hamlet to be mad. Undoubtedly Ophelia believes it, too, when she participates in the nunnery scene the following
morning. During this episode she gives clear indications, a few times, that she continues to think he is mad.
Hamlet has been acting his antic disposition for weeks and he speaks to Ophelia in similar vein, making outlandish
remarks about marriage and telling her to get to a nunnery. Does Ophelia comment on Hamlet's ridiculous remarks?
No! Does she say or indicate that his harsh words affect her on a personal basis and that she is upset by his
idiotic comments and takes them to heart? No! Ophelia ignores Hamlet's ravings. She only prays for his recovery
from madness, "O, help him, you sweet heavens!" and a little later, "O heavenly powers, restore him!"
Those who think Ophelia loves Hamlet are likely to select two lines from her final speech as proof, but
they prove nothing! Many a girl would wish to be wooed by a prince and have him whisper such sweet nothings
in her ear.
And I, of ladies most deject and wretched,
That suck'd the honey of his music vows,
Now see that noble and most sovereign reason,
Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune and harsh;
As noted earlier, Ophelia likes poetry. We may, therefore, assume her susceptibility to the sweetness of
Hamlet's music vows, but that does not mean that she loves him. She loves the poem, not the poet.
Ophelia likes Hamlet immensely but only as a true friend, not as a lover. She is the female equivalent of
Horatio, except she knows Hamlet far better than Horatio does. That final speech, except for the two lines
relating to herself, could have been spoken by Horatio and had just the same effect. Ophelia and Hamlet had
a big romance and, even though she does not love him, it is only natural that she would be very deeply affected
by his apparent madness. Now, everything has gone radically wrong with her friend. Of course, she is upset.
The others are upset, too, though to a lesser degree. Who wouldn't be?
At the very end, after Hamlet walks out, she says, "O what a noble mind is here o'erthrown!" as a final
indication that she still thinks he is mad. So, throughout the entire nunnery scene she believes him to be mad!
Then the king says Hamlet will be sent to England to restore his sanity. Persumably, Ophelia was pleased to hear
of that positive step. It raises a simple question: If you listened to the insane rantings of a madman and were then
told he would absent for while to regain his sanity, do you believe it could drive you mad or suicidal? It seems most unlikely.
That night, only a few hours after the nunnery scene, she goes to a performance of "The Mousetrap."
She is relaxed and carries on an animated discussion with Hamlet, firstly about the dumbshow and, later,
about the play. Despite claims that Hamlet's words during the nunnery scene cause Ophelia intense anguish,
she shows not the slightest sign of being upset or emotionally stressed nor the onset of madness. There is
certainly nothing wrong with her mind. She chats away happily with Hamlet, talking about the play, enjoying
the entertainment, and obviously concentrating on its details and what is happening.
- What means this, my lord?.......
- Belike this show imports the argument of the play.......
- Will he tell us what this show meant?.......
- I'll mark the play.......
- 'Tis brief, my lord.......
- You are a good chorus, my lord.......
- You are keen, my lord, you are keen.......
- The king rises.
When Hamlet starts to talk nonsense it seems that she still considers him to be crazy:
Ophelia: Will he tell us what this show meant?
Hamlet: Ay, or any show that you'll show him: be not you
ashamed to show, he'll not shame to tell you what it means.
Ophelia: You are naught, you are naught: I'll mark the play.
When Ophelia is mad, she talks only of her father and never once mentions Hamlet's name.
This hardly suggests she ever loved Hamlet. Did she? I don't think so.
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