HAMLET
Act
I, Scene 1: Hamlet’s friend Horatio joins Marcellus and Bernardo to confirm
reports of an apparition resembling the late King Hamlet who has recently died.
The ghost won’t speak to them and disappears at cockcrow. Horatio convinces the
others to inform the king’s son Hamlet about the apparition.
Act
I, Scene 2: Claudius thanks his subjects for their support during the funeral
of the late king and his marriage to the king’s wife Gertrude. He sends
ambassadors to the king of Norway urging him to control Fortinbras, the son of
King Fortinbras whom was defeated by King Hamlet in a single combat battle over
land. Young Fortinbras is agitating to get the land returned to him. Laertes,
the son of Claudius’s chief counselor and the brother of Ophelia, petitions
Claudius to return to France for his studies.Hamlet is introduced and is
brooding over the hasty marriage of his mother to Claudius and his low opinion
of Claudius. Hamlet agrees to watch for
the ghost that night on the battlements.
ActI,
Scene3: Laertes bids farewell to Ophelia and warns her that a relationship with
Hamlet is a mistake since he is royalty. Polonius walks in and gives Laertes a
sereies of perscriptions about how he should behave.He also forbids Ophelia to
see Hamlet. Ophelia reluctantly agrees.
Act
I, Scene 4: Hamlet, Horatio and Marcellus keep their vigil. The ghost appears
and leads Hamlet away from his friends. They fear the ghost is an evil spirit
and urge Hamlet not to go.
Act
I, Scene5: The ghost tells Hamlet he is the spirit of his father and that he
was killed by Claudius while he slept. He commands him to
avenge his murder but to spare Gertrude.Hamlet has his friends swear on a sword
never to reveal what they have seen and decides to put on an “antic disposition”
(pretend to be mad).
Act
II, Scene 1: Polonius directs one of his attendants to go and spy on Laertes in
France to see if he’s leading the wild life. Ophelia tells Polonius that Hamlet
is acting mad. Polonius is convinced it is because Ophelia has rejected him and
goes to tell Claudius.
Act
II, Scene 2: Claudius and Gertrude have summoned two friends of Hamlet,
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, to observe Hamlet and find out the cause of his
“antic disposition.” The ambassadors
from Norway return, successfully, they think.Polonius pesents his theoery that
Hamlet is mad because of Ophelia’s rejection.Claudius and Polonius devise a
plan to observe Hamlet and Ophelia together to see if Polonius is right.Hamlet
welcomes Rosencrantz and Guilderstern and immediately suspects them of coming
to spy on him.
A
group of players arrives at the castle and Hamlet devises a plan to have them
perform a play, “The Murder of Gonzago” and insert some lines reenacting his
father’s murder.Alone, he expresses self contempt for not yet avenging his
father’s death. He needs to decide if the ghost was real or a hallucination
brought on by his grief. He will use the
play to test the king’s conscience.
Act
III, Scene 1: Rozenkrantz and Guildenstern report to the king with no
information other than Hamlet’s order that a play be performed that
night.Polonius orders Ophelia to walk, so she will encounter Hamlet while he
and the king observe them. Hamlet greets her tenderly but when she returns his
gifts, he loses his temper, railing against women. Hamlet seems to know they
are being spied upon as he insults Polnius, threatens the king and tells
Ophelia to enter a nunnery.This scene convinces Claudius that Hamlet is no
depressed, jilted lover but dangerous
and someone who must die. Polonius, convinced his theory is correct,
suggests that the queen probe Hamlet’s mind later after the play.
Act
III, Scene2: Hamlet instructs the players and privately sets Horatio to watch
the king’s reaction to the play. As the play begins, he sits by Ophelia making
crude taunts to her while carrying on a running commentary about the play.The
players act out the scene designed to mimic Claudius’s murder of his brother.
Claudius is obviously disturbed by the reenactment and storms off, followed by
the rest of the court. Rosencrantz and Guilderstern return to announce the
king’s anger and Gertrude’s wish to speak to Hamlet in her chamber.Hamlet vows
to kill the king.
Act
III, Scene 3: Claudius orders Rosencrantz and Guilderstern to accompany Hamlet
to England where the king plans on sending him. Polonius goes off to hide
himself in Gertrude’s chamber to eavesdrop on her and Hamlet.While at prayer,
Claudius confesses to the murder but Hamlet, overhearing, refuses to kill him
because he is afraid that by killing Claudius in prayer he might send him to
heaven.
Act
III, Scene 4: Hamlet meets his mother in her chamber and begins berating her.
Her outcry alarms the hidden Polonius. Hamlet hears the noise and thinking it’s
the king stabs Polonius through the arras and kills him.Hamlet continues to chastise
Gertrude when the ghost returns to remind Hamlet to revenge him. Gertrude,
unable to see or hear the ghost, is even more convinced of Hamlet’s madness.
Hamlet leaves, dragging Polonius’s body. His parting words suggest that he
suspects Claudius of evil intent by wanting to send him to England and that he
will turn the tables on Rosencrantz and Guildenstern.
Act
IV, Scene 1 and 2: Gertrude reports of Hamlet’s killing of Claudius and
Rosencrantz and Guilderstern pursue Hamlet to discover where he has hidden the
body.
Act
IV, Scene 3: Hamlet’s killing of Polonius is Claudius’s pretext to send Hamlet
to England, Alone, Claudius indicates that his intention is to have Hamlet
killed when he arrives in England to protect his own safety.
ActIV,
Scene 4: Hamlet and his escorts observe Fortinbras and his army passing by to
fight in Poland. Hamlet comments on Fortinbras’s resoluteness
to avenge his dead father, compared to his own failures to act, and resolves
again to perform the deed.
Act
IV, Scene 5: The queen hears of Ophelia’s mental problems after the death of
her father and agrees to see her.All are shocked by
her conduct.The king discloses that Laertes, hearing of his father’s death, has
returned from France, intent on revenge.
Accompanied
by a mob of supporters, Laertes forces his way into the throne room. The king
manages to calm down Laertes and suggests that he make inquiries in to the
death of his father.
Act
IV, Scene 6: Horatio receives a message sent by Hamlet that he has been
captured by pirates and left alone back in Denmark. Horatio leaves with the
pirates to find Hamlet.
Act
IV, Scene 7: Claudius while meeting with Laertes receives a letter from Hamlet
telling of his return. Claudius devises a plot with Laertes to kill Hamlet
during a fencing exhibition by poisoning a blade and, if that fails, to have a
poisoned cup for him to drink between rounds. Gertrude comes in to inform them that
Ophelia has drowned herself.
Act
V, Scene 1: The act opens with two gravediggers drinking and joking about
mortality. Hamlet and Horatio observe them and Hamlet gets in to a battle of
wits with one of the gravediggers. A funeral party comes in which includes
Claudius, Gertrude and Laertes. Hamlet discovers it is Ophelia’s funeral and
winds up coming to blows with Laertes because Hamlet feels Laertes is
overstating his grief. Hamlet makes a hearfelt declaration of his feelings
about Ophelia. The king reminds Laertes that his revenge will come soon.
Act
V, Scene 2: Hamlet relates how he esaped from the death sentence the king had
written and how he set Rosencrantz and Guilderstern off to their deaths
instead.A courtier named Osiric comes in to summon Hamlet to the fencing
exhibition which Claudius has organized. Osiric tells Hamlet that the king has
placed a wager on the fencing match. After he leaves Hamlet speaks of his
fatalism over what is to come, and Horatio fails to get him to postpone the
contest.
After
an introduction and exchange of courtesies, the contest begins. Ater two hits
by Hamlet, Gertrude drinks from the poisoned cup intended for Hamlet. A
panicked Laertes catches Hamlet off guard and stabs Hamlet with the poisoned
rapier. A furious Hamlet winds up with the poisoned rapier and stabs Laertes.
The Queen dies and a dying Laertes confesses his treachery. Hamlet realizing
the king’s part stabs him and makes sure of his death by forcing him to drink
the dregs of the poisoned cup. Hamlet insists that Horatio tell the truth of
the story before he dies. Fortinbras’ invading army is heard in the distance.
Fortinbras enters and witnessing the results of the carnage orders that Hamlet
be borne off in honor and announces his intentions.
Source:
The Folger Library’s Hamlet