Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

The Stamp of One Defect

Good Essays
1368 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Stamp of One Defect
The Stamp of One Defect
“To know a man well were to know himself” (5.2.139), the definition of a foil in Hamlet’s own words. In literature foils can be used to contrast and highlight specific qualities of the protagonist or other main characters. Hamlet has many foils throughout the play, which help to aid in the understanding of Hamlet’s character and his motivations. However, three characters in particular, Laertes, Horatio and the First Player play key roles in how Hamlet ultimately takes his revenge. It can be argued that through his deep thinking Hamlet is aware of the foils in his life and uses their differing traits to complete his own character. Laertes compared against Hamlet displays under thinking vs. over thinking. The First Player contrasted to Hamlet displays action vs. inaction. And finally, the comparison between Horatio and Hamlet reveals balance vs. imbalance. In Hamlet, Shakespeare uses the contrasting character traits of Laertes, the First Player and Horatio to reveal Hamlet’s tragic flaw and the cause and course of his revenge.
In the death of their father’s comes Hamlet and Laertes largest similarity, revenge. However, their largest distinction shows how each chooses to follow through with their revenge. Hamlet has “cause and will and strength and means” (4.4.44), while Laertes is determined to “go far with little” (4.5.138). Hamlet is “bound” to revenge, but upon finding out who he must kill “lose[s] the name of action” (3.1.89). Laertes on the other hand reacts with unwavering “readiness”, ready to kill even the King to gain his revenge: I’ll not be juggled with. To hell, allegiance! Vows, to the blackest devil! Conscience and grace, to the profoundest pit! I dare damnation. To this point I stand That both the worlds I give to the negligence. Let come what comes, only I’ll be revenged Most thoroughly for my father. (4.5.128-134)
Laertes vengeance and rash character are arguably the reason Hamlet decides to kill Polonius. Hamlet murders Polonius knowing Laertes will come after him and that “tis dangerous when the baser nature comes / between the pass and fell incensed points / Of mighty opposites” (5.2.63-65). Hamlet is aware that Laertes will be willing to “be ruled” by Claudius as long as he is able to be the “organ” in Hamlet’s death. Hamlet welcomes this as he ultimately decides to use Claudius’s own plan for Hamlet’s death as a means in completing his own revenge. Also, since Hamlet fears “self slaughter” Laertes “dares damnation” it can be argued that Hamlet uses Laertes wanted revenge as a way pass into heaven and leave this “unweeded garden”. Throughout the whole play Hamlet and Laertes are rivals with the same deed to be done, however, because of Hamlet’s overactive conscience and Laertes rash undeveloped decisions neither are able to create and execute their own plan for a successful murder.
Hamlets second foil is found in the First Player. The First Player is again similar to Hamlet in that he has a murder to avenge. Unlike the relationship between Hamlet and Laertes, Hamlet admires the First Player and how he “in a dream of passion / Could force his soul to his own conceit” (2.2.527-529). Hamlet wonders “What would he do, / Had he the motive and the cue for passion / That I have?” (2.2.536-538). Action vs. inaction, as well as the undying passion found in the First Player is the largest difference between these two foils and ultimately the character traits Hamlet wishes he held. Unlike Laertes, Hamlet consciously contrasts himself to the First Player and uses their differences to spark emotion in himself calling himself “pigeon liver’d” and “a dull and muddy-mettled rascal” (2.2.543). In revenge the First Player takes immediate action to avenge Hecuba, he comes up with a plan and executes it without hesitation. Hamlet compares himself to the First Player and in him discovers what he thinks is his tragic flaw: Yet I,
A dull and muddy-mettled rascal, peak Like a John-a-dreams, unpregant of my cause, And can say nothing! No, not for a king, Upon whose property and most dear life A damn’d defeat was mad. Am I a coward? (2.2.543-547)
Hamlet admires the actor’s passion and as well his plan, so much that he uses it as inspiration for his own revenge. Hamlet asks the First Player “Play something like the murder of my father / Before mine Uncle. I’ll observe his looks” (2.2.574-575). Because Hamlet is cautious of the Ghost abusing his “weakness” and “melancholy” he decides to use the First Player to “Play something like the murder of [his] father” (2.2.574), where Hamlet will “observe [Claudius’] looks” and then he will “know [his] course”. Hamlet decides that “The play’s the thing / Wherein I’ll catch the conscience of the King” (2.2.583-584). In the end, Hamlet uses his similar situation and definite differences to the First Player to instigate the first steps towards completing the revenge he is “prompted” to by “heaven and hell”. Hamlet’s last foil can be found in rational and balanced Horatio. Horatio is “a man that fortune's buffets and rewards / hast taken with equal thanks” (3.2.60-61) while Hamlet views himself as “but one part wisdom / And ever three parts coward” (4.4.41-42). The fundamental difference between Hamlet and Horatio is that Horatio’s emotions and reasoning are in balance, while Hamlet’s is very much out of balance. Hamlet values Horatio and identifies him as “he that though knowest thine” (4.6.28), Hamlet also trusts Horatio more than anyone with his “wild and whirling words” (1.5.136). Horatio completes Hamlet in that Horatio’s decisions and judgments are sound while Hamlet is naturally “thought sick”. Hamlet admires Horatio’s well-balanced judgment and uses him as a guide and a balanced conscience while he decides how to act out his revenge. It is through talking to Horatio that Hamlet ultimately decides how he wishes to act out his revenge. Hamlet converses with Horatio and decides:
Does it not, think thee, stand me now upon - he that hath killed my king and whored my mother, … is’t not perfect conscience, To quit him with this arm? And is’t not to be damned To let this canker of our nature come In further evil? (5.2.67-74)
Here Hamlet makes the decision to turn Claudius’s own plan for his murder, and backfire it to use it in his own revenge. To Hamlet Horatio is “As one in suffering all that suffers nothing” (3.2.59). Horatio holds the judgment and reasoning that would have been required for Hamlet to successfully execute his revenge and therefore Hamlet uses this foil to complete his revenge in the best way his “poisoned” mind can.
All in all Hamlet can be considered as an incomplete man. Someone with “cause and will and strength and means” (4.4.44), but “thinking too precisely on th’ event” (4.4.40) is his ultimate ruin. Throughout the play Hamlet uses the similar and contrasting virtues and flaws of three other characters in hopes of using their differing character traits to complete his own self. Hamlet uses Laertes “rashness” and “indiscretion” to counteract his “pale cast of thought” (3.1.86). Also, Hamlet uses the death of Polonius and Laertes wanted revenge as a means of forcing his own revenge and using the King’s plan as means of backfire. Hamlet uses the First Players admirable “passion” and ease of action as inspiration on how he should act himself. Through deep analysis of the First Players motives and actions, Hamlet decides how he should act himself. And finally, Hamlet uses sound and balanced Horatio as sounding board for his overactive conscience. Horatio’s balanced judgment completes Hamlet’s unbalanced reasoning and through Horatio Hamlet is able to follow through with his plans. Without these three main foils working to override Hamlet’s “viscous mole of nature” (1.2.36) it is arguable that Hamlet would have never made any progress at all in the revenge he is so “bound” to complete”

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Shakespeare crafts the play so Laertes can have an illogical need and desire for revenge. Laertes is determined to make Hamlet pay: “I am satisfied in nature, / Whose motive in this case should stir me most / To my revenge". Laertes’s need for revenge indicates his desire for closure and his wish to find inner peace. Laertes believes that the solace he desires will come through revenge: "But in my terms of honor / I stand aloof, and will no reconcilement / Till by some elder masters of known honor / I have a voice and precedent of peace.” Again, this demonstrates the need for closure and shows the reasoning behind Laertes’s thirst for justice, reinforcing Shakespeare’s theme of…

    • 583 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Horatio Foils In Hamlet

    • 315 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In Hamlet, Shakespeare uses several literary FOILS to contrast Hamlet’s character. These characters use their relationship and interactions with Hamlet to better show the audience who he is. Many of theses characters are alike in their negative ways. I think by using foils with negative attitudes Shakespeare shows the true Hamlet.…

    • 315 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hamlet (prince of Denmark) can be greatly compared to Laertes (son of a noble), and Fortinbras (prince of Norway) in the play. They all are very similar but yet different at the same time. They all had love and respect for their fathers and felt the need to avenge their deaths, which all were brutally killed. All three believed that the murderers had dishonoured their fathers as well as themselves. They all reacted and took different approaches in attempt to restore honour in their families.…

    • 1027 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare, the theme of revenge is very palpable as the reader examines the characters of Hamlet himself, as well as Laertes, son of Polonius, and Fortinbras, prince of Norway and son of the late King Fortinbras. Each of these young characters felt the need to avenge the deaths of their fathers who they felt were untimely killed at the bloody hands of their murderers. However, the way each chose to go about this varies greatly and gives insight into their characters and how they progress throughout the play.…

    • 1346 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Throughout William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, there exists an inner struggle among all characters, as to who they are and who they strive to become. Princes of rival nations, Hamlet and Fortinbras, undergo a desire to achieve a greatness to which they feel destined. Through examining these two characters, one can discover the true value of a foil in developing the character’s personality, differentiating the feeling of defeat, and the motives affecting their…

    • 72 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Of this his nephew’s purpose…” (1.2.28-30) Along with that Laertes shares something big with these two noble princes. They all share the same grief of their deceased fathers that has passed by the means of murder by someone they were close to, in which is Hamlet’s case his father was slain by his own…

    • 307 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Hamlet vs. Laertes

    • 1220 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The differences between Laertes and Hamlet affect a main theme of the play revenge. Both men have fathers killed, and both are seeking revenge. Hamlet, though he knows who murdered his father, hesitates to take direct action against the villain. In stark contrast is Laertes, who doesn’t know who killed his father but will kill anyone on a whim. Laertes’ rashness throughout provides the play with an unlikely stereotypical hero-- brave, unwavering, ready to kill-- and is rather ironic because Laertes is not the play’s “hero” role. The hero instead is Hamlet, and Hamlet is not a typical hero, in that he shies away from violence, and is portrayed as insane for half of the play (though that is by his own doing). Hamlet is not even able to kill his uncle until Act 5, by which time he can be argued to be mentally and emotionally instable, if not insane. In order to avenge his father’s death, Hamlet must lose himself in insanity; he must become, essentially, an entirely different character.…

    • 1220 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Theme of hamlet

    • 850 Words
    • 3 Pages

    and Laertes differ, Laertes acts as a stable foil for Hamlet whom makes sound decisions and acts on his words instead of just speaking. Laertes allows us readers to explore how Hamlet should have acted instead of how he did: Inactive, in a state of delay, and full of words. The moment Laertes heard of his father's death he left for Denmark, rallied up some followers, and marched past the King's guards to the Royal Court and demanded an answer. "O thou vile King, give me my father," Laertes bellowed at the King. Claudius relays to Laertes that Hamlet is to blame and once again…

    • 850 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the play it becomes quite evident that Laertes is Hamlet's foil. He mirrors Hamlet but behaves in the exact opposite manner. Where Hamlet is more verbal and conscience about his actions, Laertes is physical and very blunt in his decision making. "How came he dead?...Let come what comes, only I'll be revenged/Most thoroughly for my father's death." [Act IV, Sc V, Lines 141-147] reveals that unlike Hamlet, Laertes is very determined to quickly seek out his father's killer and to have his revenge without regards to the consequences. As soon as Laertes learns of his father's death he is furious with anger and immediately demands to know who it was that committed this crime. He doesn't waste time with soliloquies or take into account his conscience but is driven solely on his emotions and the task of avenging his father. "To cut his throat i'th' church" [Act IV, Scene VII, Line 139] proves Laertes' physical characteristic that Hamlet lacks. When Laertes is questioned by Claudius about the extent he will go to in achieving his revenge it's ironic that his remark is exactly what Hamlet could not follow through with. His brutality again shows his determination to accomplish his task by whatever means. It is clear that Laertes' love for Ophelia and responsibility to Polonius drive him to passionate action, while…

    • 798 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    There are many foils used for the antagonist Hamlet in the play Hamlet, written by Shakespeare. We get a list of characters that amplify all Hamlet’s distinct qualities by the contrast of their own. Laertes bears one of the strongest contrast with Hamlet. Laertes and Ophelia being the children of Polonius- the chief counselor for the late Hamlet Sr, grew up in the castle with Hamlet. They all developed a close relationships with one another and a sense of loyalty.…

    • 492 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Laertes and Hamlet

    • 816 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Laertes and Hamlet both display impulsive reactions when angered. Once Laertes discovers his father has been murdered, he immediately assumes the slayer is Claudius. As a result of Laertes' speculation, he instinctively moves to avenge Polonius' death. "To hell, allegiance! Vows, to the blackest devil! Conscience and grace, to the profoundest pit! I dare damnation: to this point I stand, that both worlds I give to negligence, let come what comes; only I'll be revenged most thoroughly for my father." (IV, v, 128-134) These lines provide insight into Laertes' mind, displaying his desire for revenge at any cost.…

    • 816 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hamlet Foil Analysis

    • 890 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Once Laertes discovers that his father has been killed, he assumes immediately that the killer must be Claudius. An effect of his speculation is his instinctive desire to retaliate against Polonius's murderer. He says, "To hell, allegiance! Vows, to the blackest devil! Conscience and grace, to the profoundest pit! I dare damnation. To this point I stand, that both worlds I give to negligence, let come what comes. Only I'll be revenged most thoroughly for my father" (4.5. 128-134). This excerpt provides insight into his mind and shows his thirst for revenge at any cost. In contrast to Laertes’s belief of his father's killer, Hamlet assumes that the individual eavesdropping on the conversation he has with Gertrude is Claudius, and he says, "Nay, I know not: is it the King?" (3.4.28). Consequently, Hamlet is consumed with rage and automatically thrusts out with his sword in an attempt to kill Claudius but strikes Polonius instead. Hamlet's and Laertes's spontaneous actions are incited by fury and frustration. Sudden bursts of anger prompt both Laertes and Hamlet to act rashly, and they end up giving little thought to the consequences of their actions. But while both characters have the desire to avenge their father’s murders, only Laertes has any real resolve to take real…

    • 890 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Like many tragedies, Shakespeare’s Hamlet does not fail to provide readers with tales of fervent, bloody revenge which satisfies the primal impulses of characters in the play, wrought on by unjust murder and a desire for vengeance. With a temperamental demeanor and mercurial mood, Laertes is portrayed in many instances as a brash, near irrational son whose desire to avenge his father’s death leads to both verbal and physical conflict. Even Hamlet himself enjoys his own moments of frustration, slandering his duplicitous and incestuous uncle in private scenes and soliloquies. Unlike many traditional revenge tales, however, Hamlet also illuminates the question of the morality of revenge itself: whether or not the adage of “an eye for an eye” may…

    • 1081 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ghost In Hamlet

    • 1324 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The similarities between Hamlet and Laertes far outweigh the differences between the two. Both were loyal and loving to their families. Both acted carelessly at some point within the play. Although the circumstances of their murders were different both of their fathers had been killed because of political conflict and greed for…

    • 1324 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Who Is Wronged In Hamlet

    • 949 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Laertes’s father, Polonius, was murdered by Hamlet. Hamlet, blinded by rage against Claudius, thought Polonius was Claudius causing him to mistakenly kill Polonius. After finding out about his father’s death Laertes says, “Let come what comes, only I’ll be revenged most thoroughly for my father” (Act 4. Scene 5). Laertes knew that he had to react, so he came up with a plan to kill Hamlet. He concocts a plan, accompanied by Claudius, to challenge Hamlet to a fencing dual. This evil plan involved Laertes secretly poisoning his sword, so that the slightest cut will cause Hamlet to die. Laertes says, “I will do ’t, and for that purpose I’ll anoint my sword… I’ll touch my point with this contagion, that, if I gall him slightly, it may be death.” (Act 4. Scene 7). The anger that came from inside Laertes was so strong that it blinded him from weighing all the possibilities of the outcomes of the dual. Laertes did not consider that if he was touched with the poisoned sword, then he will be the one to die. Ironically, Laertes is indeed wounded by the poisoned sword and dies. Laertes says,” I am justly killed with mine own treachery” (Act 5. Scene 2). Shakespeare says that Laertes is rightly killed by his own deceptive act to show that Laertes knows that his irrational actions for revenge deservingly killed…

    • 949 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics