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Essay introduction /
Thesis statement
“Those friends thou hast”
Horatio’s relationship with Prince Hamlet is a genuine friendship in an Elsinore otherwise poisoned by deception and betrayal.
Their companionship evokes the advice offered to Laertes: “Those friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, / Grapple them unto thy soul with hoops of steel” (1.3).
Horatio’ tranquil attitude (“As one, in suffering all, that suffers nothing”, 3.2) represents a blend of Stoic acceptance (“not a pipe for Fortune’s finger”, 3.2) from the classical world that the scholar Horatio loves and Christian forbearance (“not passion’s slave”, 3.2) that reflects world in which the play is set.
But does Horatio’s “sweet prince” (5.2) exploit his friend’s loyalty with his heroic if hard-to-believe story of divinely-inspired rescue by kindly pirates with which the prince hopes to be remembered?
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Horatio: the first major character to appear in #Hamlet - and the only one to survive until the end.
1
Hamlet meets Horatio
“What brings you from Wittenberg?”
In the same 1.2 scene when we learn that Horatio has been at Elsinore for Old King Hamlet’s funeral (“He was a goodly king”) and afterward attended the wedding of Claudius and Gertrude (“Indeed, my lord, it followed hard upon”) we also discover that his encounter with Hamlet is their first meeting since their time together at Wittenberg.
Hamlet’s greeting suggests the prince is surprised to see his fellow scholar (“Horatio—or do I forget myself?”) and is puzzled at his presence (“What, in faith, make you from Wittenberg?” and “But what is your affair in Elsinore?”). Hamlet’s genuine welcome, however, is without the suspicion with which the prince later greets Rosencrantz and Guildenstern (“Were you not sent for? … Come, come, deal justly with me”, 2.2)
The prince who will bemoan Denmark’s reputation for excessive drinking (“They clepe us drunkards”, 1.4) cordially insists Horatio join him for a boozy reunion: “We’ll teach you to drink deep ere you depart.”
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Horatio has been at Elsinore for two months before he and #Hamlet actually meet.
2
Horatio, Hamlet and the Ghost
“More things in heaven and earth”
In the first scene of 1.1, Horatio confirms that “this thing” (1.1) witnessed by the two guards is no mere hallucination. As Marcellus complains to Barnardo: “Horatio says ’tis but our fantasy / And will not let belief take hold of him.” But the evidence of “Mine own eyes” convinces the skeptical scholar that “this dreaded sight” is real and “usurpest” the “form” of “Our last King.”
With the two guards’ agreement, it is not to King Claudius but Prince Hamlet that Horatio decides to report the ghostly visitation: “As needful in our loves, fitting our duty.”
Hamlet disregards Horatio’s advice against speaking with the Ghost (“What if it … draw you into madness?”, 1.4), just as he also does later before the rigged fencing duel (“You will lose this wager, my lord.”, 5.2).
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The scholarly, skeptical Horatio confirms that the Ghost of 'Our last King' is no mere hallucination.
3
Hamlet, Horatio and The Murder of Gonzago
“Observe mine uncle”
As he was earlier asked by the guards to confirm the Ghost’s reality (“He may approve our eyes”, 1.1), Horatio is recruited by Hamlet in 3.2 to test the spirit’s truthfulness by observing King Claudius’ reaction to The Murder of Gonzago: “Observe mine uncle.” The prince has confided in Horatio that the play will include a scene that “comes near the circumstance / Which I have told thee of my father's death.”
After a “marvelous distempered” Claudius has fled the performance, the prince tells Horatio: “I’ll take the ghost’s word for a thousand pound.” But Horatio seems unconvinced, remarking only of the king’s reaction that: “I did very well note him.” It seems just as likely that it was the prince’s public threat to Claudius’ life through the character of Lucianus (“nephew to the king”) that prompted his uncle’s panicked response.
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To Horatio at the play-within-a-play, #Hamlet reveals his love for the life of an actor in theater.
4
Hamlet’s story to Horatio of the pirate rescue
“Thieves of mercy”
Hamlet’s choice of Elsinore graveyard as his meeting venue with Horatio suggests his fatalistic acceptance that Claudius “will work him / To an exploit” (4.7) the prince is unlikely to survive. As he tells his trusted confidant: “thou wouldst not think how ill all’s here about my heart. But it is no matter” (5.2).
Hamlet’s improbable tale to Horatio of his rescue by pirates portrays the prince as a figure who was preserved by the “divinity that shapes our ends” so that he might complete a “heaven ordinant” mission set out by “providence” (5.2).
But is this pirate tale actually true? Or is the prince, who in life admitted to being “indifferent honest” (3.1), seeking to be remembered by his appointed biographer in a story that while, heroic, is just another “forgery of shapes and tricks” (4.7) with which the play abounds?
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#Hamlet looks to Horatio as his biographer just as the Ghost regarded the prince as his avenger.
5
Essay conclusion / Summary
“I can truly deliver”
In his opening soliloquy, a dejected Hamlet considered “self-slaughter” (1.2). At the play’s end, it is the dying prince who urges Horatio not to yield to despair but to live on so he may restore Hamlet’s “wounded name” and “tell my story … more and less” to the “unknowing world” (5.2).
Hamlet’s plea to Horatio (“If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart”, 5.2) echoes the Ghost’s request to the prince (“If thou didst ever thy dear father love”, 1.5).
Horatio began the play by recounting the story (“At least the whisper goes so”, 1.1) of a fatal duel between two kings from two countries. He survives to tell another tale: of two kings from the same country—two brothers; one undead, one alive—who competed for the loyalty and ultimately doomed the life Horatio’s “sweet prince” (5.2).
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Horatio's tale will be of two kingly brothers who fought each other through the son of one and nephew of the other.
6
The most helpful book ever for students and teachers of Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
42 x 1,500-word model essays
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IN THIS BOOK ARE THREE 1,500-WORD SAMPLE ESSAYS ON EACH ONE OF THE FOLLOWING 14 CHARACTERS, RELATIONSHIPS, AND THEMES. THAT’S 42 SAMPLE ESSAYS IN TOTAL.
#1: The Character of Hamlet
Born a prince, parented by a jester, haunted by a ghost, destined to be killed for killing a king, and remembered as the title character of a play he did not want to be in. If at the cost of his life, Hamlet does in the end “win at the odds.”
#2: The Character of Claudius
His “ambition” for Denmark’s crown leads him to commit one murder only to find that he must plot a second to cover up the first. When this plan fails, his next scheme leads to the death of the woman he loves followed by his own.
#3: The Character of Gertrude
“Have you eyes?”, Prince Hamlet demands of his mother. Gertrude‘s “o’erhasty marriage” dooms her life and the lives of everyone around her when her wished-for, happy-ever-after fairytale ends in a bloodbath.
#4: The Character of Ophelia
As she struggles to respond to the self-serving purposes of others, Ophelia’s sanity collapses in Elsinore’s “unweeded garden” of falsity and betrayal. Her “self-slaughter” is her revenge for her silencing and humiliation.
#5: Relationship of Hamlet and the Ghost
Hamlet grants the Ghost the atonement his suffering soul needed more than the revenge he demanded: he surrenders Denmark to the son of the man murdered by his father on the day of the prince’s birth.
#6: Relationship of Hamlet and Claudius
Uncle and nephew are two men at war with each other—and themselves. Claudius is haunted by the murder he has committed (“O heavy burden!”); Hamlet by the one he hasn’t yet (“Am I a coward?”).
#7: Relationship of Hamlet and Gertrude
A haunted-by-the-past Hamlet seeks the truth about his father’s death (“Do you see nothing there?”). A live-in-the-present Gertrude seeks to protect her second husband and crown (“No, nothing but ourselves”).
#8: Relationship of Hamlet and Ophelia
Their relationship begins in uncertainty, descends into mutual deceit and rejection, and ends with their double surrender to death: Ophelia, to the water; Hamlet, to Claudius’ rigged fencing duel.
#9: Relationship of Hamlet and Horatio
“Those friends thou hast … Grapple them unto thy soul with hoops of steel.” Horatio is Hamlet’s trusted confidant in life and vows to remain the keeper of his memory after the prince’s death.
#10: Relationship of Claudius and Gertrude
A marriage of mutual self-interest: Claudius wanted to become king; Gertrude wanted to remain queen. In the end, both die by the same poison her second husband used to murder her first.
#11: Main Themes of Hamlet
A king murdered, an inheritance stolen, a family divided: Elsinore’s older generation destroys its younger when two brothers—one living, one undead—battle in a “cursed spite” over a crown and a queen.
#12: The Theme of Revenge
Hamlet and Laertes journey from revenge, through obsession and anger, to forgiveness. And the revenge sought by the Ghost on King Claudius becomes the revenge of Old King Fortinbras on Old King Hamlet.
#13: Deception and Appearance versus Reality
“Who’s there?” The characters struggle to distinguish between truth and falsehood in a play-long triple pun on the verb ‘to act’: to take action, to behave deceitfully, and to perform in theater.
#14: The Theme of Madness
“Your noble son is mad”, Polonius tells Denmark’s king and queen. But is Hamlet ever really insane? If not, why is he pretending to be? And is the prince’s “antic disposition” the cause of Ophelia’s traumatic breakdown?