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Queen Gertrude And Gertrude In Shakespeare's Hamlet

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Queen Gertrude is a character in the Shakespearian play Hamlet. She is a very secretive character. After the death of her husband, King Hamlet, she marries her former brother in law, Claudius. In the play, Shakespeare portrays her as sexually driven woman. Even though she has caused hamlet, her son, a great deal of pain, Gertrude is very protective of him. Hamlet is blinded by revenge and accusations that he fails to see his mother for what she truly is. Throughout the play, Hamlet is disappointed by his mother for remarrying just after a month of the funeral. After the Ghost of his father reveals to him how his Uncle, Claudius, poisoned him, Hamlet starts to blame both Claudius and Gertrude for the death of his father.
Claudius's relationship with Gertrude is very typical for that era. As her husband, he controls and treats as a child. Men considered women to be childlike and lascivious. Even though she might not be neither of those things, both the Ghost of King Hamlet and Claudius as a man, see her as a child. In the play, Gertrude is accused by the Ghost and Hamlet. The Ghost describes her as "seeming-virtuous" (1.5,46) which implies, she was having an affair with his brother before he was murdered and not grieving for him long enough and accuses his brother as "adulterate beast" (1.5,41). while Hamlet accuses her of being "In the rank sweat of an enseamèd bed, Stewed in corruption, honeying and making love"(3.4,92-94). But the Ghost doesn't seem to mind her behavior

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