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Sunday, June 2, 2019

Shakespeares Hamlet - Laertes :: GCSE English Literature Coursework

Hamlets Laertes One of the less-discussed characters in the Shakespearean tragedy, Hamlet, is Laertes, the son of Polonius and brother to Ophelia. He witnesses the death of all of his immediate family, thus losing his sincere approach to living until the very end of the drama. Bernice W. Kliman in A Television Interpretation of Hamlet (1964 with Christopher Plummer) highlights the actions of Laertes at the climax of the drama Close-ups, of course, reveal that Gertrude offers Hamlet the poisoned wine-colored once she has drunk, that Laertes crosses himself as he takes the fatal rapier, that he gives Hamlet a foul blow after impatient urgings from Claudius, that the soldiers restrain Claudius after Laertes revelation. Yet the background allows enough space around the close-ups for Laertes to make his first admission to Osric alone and for the supernumeraries to disappear while Horatio holds the dying Hamlet, the frame widening out for Fortinbras stately entry. (157) Klimans des cription contains some detail which is not within the official text since her description derives from a television version of Hamlet. Based on the stage version, Marvin Rosenberg describes Laertes in his essay, Laertes An Impulsive but Earnest Young Aristocrat Laertes is a dashing, romantic figure who excites striking, spectacular moments in the play. Not much attention has been paid to him by scholar-critics and theatre observers for all his activity in the later acts, he is not much cursed with inward struggle while being surrounded by others fascinating for their infernos of inwardness. After Laertes brief, bright introduction in I,i and I,iii, he disappears from the play and Denmark until he returns at the head of a rebellion in IV,v . . .. (87) With Rosenbergs overview of Laertes bunk in the play, let us begin a consideration of his interaction with other members of the cast. Laertes makes his appearance in the drama after Marcellus, Barnardo and Horatio have already see n the phantom and have trifled with it in an effort to prompt it to communicate with them. Horatio and Marcellus exit the ramparts of Elsinore intending to enlist the aid of Hamlet, who is dejected by the oerhasty marriage to Hamlet Is wife less than two months after the funeral of Hamlets father (Gordon 128). After this scene, Laertes is one of many in attendance at a post-coronation social gathering of the court at Elsinore.

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