Ophelia In Hamlet

Words: 224
Pages: 1

Flowers are nature’s beauty that bloom, wilt, and sway depending on the weather and seasons that control their development.William Shakespeare’s, Hamlet, focuses on the repercussions of life’s disappointments, heartache, duplicity, and madness, by giving readers insight to Ophelia’s life journey and misfortunes that led to her death. Ophelia, a young maiden in love, but caught between her father and brother’s condemnation of her love for Hamlet lived throughout an era where fixed gender expectations were to be met, so she had a restrained freedom, however; she still had an internal love for Hamlet that was absolute. Before she became mad she was blossoming, educated to some degree, and lighthearted, which is why her life portrays a flower symbolizing a statement of life’s ephemeral nature. Each flower that is mentioned represents an emotion or feeling that Ophelia had to endure. After he shattered her heart, her soul began to deteriorate gradually, then her father died which led to derangement, the state of being mentally and severely ill. Eventually, Ophelia died. Through her madness and death readers see that she never experienced real freedom, but bondage.The bondage of love, submissiveness, and disloyalty controlled her.