100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Hamlet detailed text analysis summary (A* A02)

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
10
Uploaded on
15-08-2025
Written in
2025/2026

An ordered analysis (line by line) of all the key literary devices used in Hamlet quotes. Perfect A02.

Content preview

HAMLET: A02
Rhetoric: Persuasive speaking
Hamlet is heavily composed with soliloquys -> psychologizes characters

Act 1 Scene 1: Ghost is seen by guards
- ‘Tis now struck twelve’: Stereotypical ‘Ghost hour’
- Pathetic Fallacy: ‘Tis bitter cold’
- Hyperbole: ‘Not a mouse stirring’: Lack of life in Denmark
- ‘It harrows me with fear and Wonder’: Horatio religious + Philosophical perspective?
- Simile: ‘Is it not like the king?’
- Foreshadowing: ‘Such was the very armour he had on when he th’ambitious Norway
combatted’. Hamlet could not live up to his father, Norway defeated him, Denmark is
now unprotected.
- Alliteration: ‘Main motive of our preparations’ – Fortinbras proses a real threat
- Contrast: ‘Time be thine’; Laertes has all the time in the world / control over time.
- Foreshadowing: ‘Young Fortinbras, of unimproved mettle, hot and full’.
- Costume: A little month, or ere those shoes were old
With which she follow'd my poor father's body’ (Same shoes funeral
and wedding)
- Kairos (perfect timing) Horatio’s presence
Act 1, Scene 2: C’s address to the Danish court, audience meet Hamlet
- Stage directions: ‘Hamlet, dressed in black’. He is still mourning.
- Foreshadowing ‘they are actions that a man might play: But I have that within which
passeth show’: Hamlet’s clothing is not only an outer symbol but also an inner reflection.
- Metaphor: ‘Unweeded garden’: Denmark is overgrown with corruption

- Contrast: ‘Dear brother’s death’ ‘memory be green’ (symbolic of new life, quick
moving on)
- Metaphor: ‘Contracted in one brow of woe’: trying to present Denmark as a united
nation
- Juxtaposition: ‘Sometimes sister, now our queen’.
- Foreshadowing: ‘Young Fortinbras, holding a weak supposal of our worth’.
- Metaphor: ‘The head is not more native to the heart’. C closer to L than to H, great chain
of being truly corrupted.
- Personification: ‘My thoughts and wishes bend again towards France’. Laertes has
agency, he can leave
- Pun: ‘A little more than kin, and less than kind’. Hamlet’s opening line.
- Pun: ‘I am too much in the sun’. Foreshadow of how he will find out the truth? Double
entendre of ‘sun’.
- Simplicity: ‘All lives must die’. No sympathy for her son.
- Anaphora: ‘Nor,… x5)
- Gender roles: ‘Tis Unmanly Grief’.
- Parapraxes: ‘You are the most immediate to our throne’.
- Contrast: ‘It is most retrograde to our desire’. But C allows Laertes to return to school:
surely it is less of a threat to have Hamlet away? Perhaps he already has murderous
intent.

, - Manipulative language: ‘Let not thy mother lose her prayers’
- Audience context: ‘Two months dead, nay not so much, not two’
- Allusion: ‘Hyperion to a Satyr’ (God to a woodland creature, part beast) Comparing old
King H to C
- Personification: ‘Frailty thy name is woman!’
- Mythological simile: ‘Like Niobe, all tears’. Niobe’s excessive price / arrogance (hubris)
caused he gods to kill all her children. A scary foreshadow of how Gertrudes inability to
give up her Queen position led to Hamlet’s death.
- Mythological simile: ‘No more like my father than I to Hercules’.
- Euphemism: ‘Incestous sheets’
- Foreshadowing: ‘All is not well. I doubt some foul play’.
- Synecdoche: ‘O’ this too sullied flesh would melt’
- ‘Grown’ ‘groan’ (sexual phonology)
Act 1, Scene 3: Polonius family interaction
- Parallel: ‘Perhaps he loves you now’… ‘but he is subject to his own birth’.
- Contrast: ‘To thine own self be true’. P is accepting of L in aways that G was not to H.
- Possessive Language: ‘My daughter and your honour.’ ‘Be something scanter of your
maiden presence’.
- Metaphor: ‘Green girl’. Inexperienced and new.

Act 1, Scene 4 Hamlet meets ghost
- Repetition: ‘It is very cold’
- Religious imagery: ‘Be thou a spirit of health or goblin damned’
- Suicidal ideology: ‘I do not set my life at a pin’s fee’
- Foreshadowing: ‘Something is rotten in the state of Denmark’
Act 1, Scene 5: Ghost informs H of his father’s murder
- Double Entendre: ‘Whither wilt thou lead me?’ Physical location vs to death
- Instruction: ‘So art thou to revenge when thou shalt hear’ ‘Revenge his foul and most
unnatural murder’
- Allusion: ‘A serpent stung me’ (Garden of Eden) ‘Now wears his crown’
- Zoomorphism: ‘Incestuous, that adulterate beast’
- Metaphor: ‘Sleeping within my Orchard’
- Analogy: ‘Let not the royal bed of Denmark be A couch for luxury and damned incest’.
- ‘Leave her to heaven’: Paints Claudius as extremely corrupt.
- Alliteration: ‘Wild and whirling words’. Indicates Horatio believes Hamlet has already
lost some sanity.
- Calculated language: ‘To put an antic disposition on’
Act 2, Scene 1 Polonius spends a spy on Laertes, Ophelia reports H’s madness
- Ambiguity: ‘You must not put another scandal on him’. Causes audience to question
Laertes character.
- Simile: ‘As if he’d been loosed out of hell’. Ironic, hell / heaven has caused this madness
- ‘Mad for thy love?’ A femine trait painted on Hamlet
- Gender roles: ‘As you did command, I did repel his letters and denied his acess to me’.
Ophelia cannot win between males.
Act 2, Scene 2 Hamlet sets up the play.
- ‘Hamlet’s transformation’

Document information

Uploaded on
August 15, 2025
Number of pages
10
Written in
2025/2026
Type
SUMMARY
£5.96
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
studyn0tes

Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
A* edexcel english literature paper 1 (drama) notes
-
5 2025
£ 31.10 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
studyn0tes University College London
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
-
Member since
7 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
5
Last sold
-

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Trending documents

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions