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I would like to write an essay on how the reoccurring image of a mirror is used in Hamlet, and have a good idea about what to write about. However, I can't remember which scenes a mirror appears in. I was thinking of a mirror in the sense of the experiences and encounters that make Hamlet reflect upon himself. But I think I will have to mention where an actual physical mirror appears in the play in my essay Thanks Posted by babi on Apr 30, 2008. |
Hamlet Group
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In act III, Scene 2, Hamlet says:
Later, in Act V, Scene 2, Hamlet says:
Posted by a-b on Apr 30, 2008. |
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Thank you, that's exactly what I was looking for! Posted by babi on May 1, 2008. |
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Hamlet also mentions the mirror in Act III, scene IV, when he is scolding his mother right before he kills Polonius. He yells at her when she tries to leave and Hamlet basically commands her to look in the mirror before she leaves and see what she has become. Posted by monkstir75 on May 15, 2008. |
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Though there are several places where a director could introduce a mirror as a prop, the text of the play doesn't actually ever call for one. You're absolutely right though, the mirror is a potent symbol within the play itself. Hamlet, particularly, is interested in mirrors as a way of showing people the truth (compare the modern saying 'Go and take a look in the mirror'). In the closet scene with Gertrude, he wants to set up a 'glass' (an Elizabethan word for mirror) in which he wants her to see the 'inmost part' of herself. The mirror, therefore, is the means by which Gertrude (so Hamlet thinks) can attain self-knowledge. Hamlet says to the players that the purpose (i.e. the point) of acting is to 'hold, as 'twere, the mirror up to nature'. The stage is a mirror of the world: it reflects the audience who watches it by showing them their own vices and virtues (this logic, of course, underlies Hamlet's 'trap' for Claudius in the middle of the play). You might argue that the whole play, therefore, is in one sense, a 'mirror'. Posted by robertwilliam on Aug 16, 2008. |

