48 pages 1 hour read

William Shakespeare

Hamlet

Fiction | Play | Adult | Published in 1609

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Symbols & Motifs

Yorick’s Skull

Yorick’s skull is perhaps the most famous symbol in Hamlet. The skull represents the certainty of death, the inevitable fate to which king and jester alike will come. Yorick, in death, is indistinguishable from Alexander the Great: As Hamlet observes, death makes everyone much the same. Yorick’s skull has a notably nasty physicality: Hamlet remarks that it smells terrible (5.1.176). Hamlet’s doubts and fears about the afterlife meet, in Yorick’s skull, one unequivocal truth—and it isn’t pleasant. 

Actors and the Theater

Actors and the theater are a frequent image in Hamlet. They appear, of course, in the play-within-a-play, but they also play an important role in the final moments of the play, when Horatio asks that the bodies of Hamlet and his family be placed on a stage where everyone can see them. Hamlet also fears that everyone around him is an actor. The gap between people’s inner truth and outer performance is a source of constant anxiety to him. Symbolically, the play’s actors represent that unbridgeable gap between inner and outer. The frequent presence of actors also recalls us to the circumstances of the play itself. The symbolic stage reminds us that we’re watching the action on a quite literal stage, which itself symbolizes the world.

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