From deep depression to mania, Shakespeare’s play about family, grief and revenge explores different ideas of madness and its effects.

Madness is a recurring theme in Shakespeare’s plays, but in Hamlet, madness, the discussion and portrayal of it, directly affects nearly every character as well as driving the plot forward.

Two characters in particular – Hamlet and Ophelia – display outward signs that Elizabethan audiences would have considered madness, but in very different ways, leading to one of literature's greatest and earliest explorations of the human psyche, and what it means to be 'sane' or 'mad'.

IS HAMLET REALLY MAD?

The question of whether Hamlet is truly mad or whether he is simply acting is one that audiences and scholars have enjoyed debating for centuries, and still today brings into question our understanding of what ‘madness’ is.

To a Tudor audience, there were recognisable outward signs of mania, or madness, including: dishevelled dress and appearance, distracted, babbled or nonsensical speaking and behaviour that is out of character, and sometimes violent.

However, Shakespeare pits these against different understandings of 'madness', from grief-induced melancholia to the rejection of social (or natural) norms, to explore what it truly means to be 'mad' or 'sane' in a world where a brother can murder a brother and get away with it.

ACTING MAD, SPEAKING THE TRUTH

Following the discovery of his father’s murder, Hamlet himself tells Horatio (and the audience) that he will feign an ‘antic disposition’ i.e. act mad. In the following scenes he behaves and speaks in a strange manner unlike his usual demeanour, unsettling nearly everybody at court.

Ophelia describes Hamlet before we see him, and true to form, he displays many Elizabethan signs of madness:

Hamlet, Act 2, Scene 1

Lord Hamlet, with his doublet all unbraced,

No hat upon his head, his stockings fouled,

Ungartered, and down-gyvèd to his ankle,

Pale as his shirt, his knees knocking each other,

And with a look so piteous in purport

As if he had been loosèd out of hell

To speak of horrors—he comes before me.

Young man wearing an open doublet with his right hand aloft
Roger Rees appears bare chested 'with his doublet all unbraced' in Ron Daniels' 1984 production of Hamlet
Photo by Reg Wilson © RSC Browse and license our images

To the court, his friends and family, he speaks in riddles that sound like nonsense (though even Polonius recognises that Hamlet is not completely without his senses, saying in an aside, “Though this be madness, yet there is method in it.").

But to the audience, Hamlet speaks the truth. The audience is clued in via Hamlet’s asides and soliloquys, which alter in meter and rhythm to his ‘mad’ speech, switching from loose prose to ordered verse. When speaking to the audience, himself and Horatio, he shows a rational understanding of reality, even while he grapples with the need to act and fear or ultimate pointlessness of enacting his vengeance.

So, Hamlet deliberately feigns madness in public, and retains his sanity in private. But why does he do this? While he doesn’t say it explicitly, Hamlet’s perceived madness gives him a kind of free reign to speak truths and perform actions that would be more heavily scrutinised were he visibly sane.

In Elizabethan times, the Clown or the Fool would be well known to speak uncomfortable truths via riddles and get away with it, because of their lowly (and mentally questionable) status. Therefore, Hamlet being seemingly detached from his senses allows him to speak to his mother, the king, Polonius and his friends in supposed nonsense, to distract from his true intentions – to find out whether or not his uncle murdered his father.

Paapa Essiedu as Hamlet, wearing a paint-stained jacket and banging on a drum
In Simon Godwin's 2016 production, Hamlet (Paapa Essiedu) dons a paint-spattered suit and sprays subversive graffiti in his 'antic disposition'
Photo by Manuel Harlan © RSC Browse and license our images

ANOTHER KIND OF MADNESS

On the other hand, there are signs that Hamlet does genuinely suffer from other forms of ‘madness’, at least from an Elizabethan doctor's perspective. One of those is melancholia – today, we would call it depression.

From the start of the play, we are told Hamlet is in mourning; both his dress and mood are "inky" and "solemn black". Claudius asks: "How is it that the clouds still hang on you?" and Gertrude says: "Good Hamlet, cast thy nighted color off" as they try to persuade him that his mourning has gone on for too long, and that it is unseemly behaviour ("’Tis unmanly grief.")

But in his first soliloquy, Hamlet privately expresses his grief, disgust and fury at his father's death and his mother's swift remarriage, leaving his view of the whole world dull and tainted: "How weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable / Seem to me all the uses of this world!"

Later on, Hamlet expresses to Guildenstern and Rosencrantz the reason for his recent change in mood and behaviour:

Hamlet, Act 2, Scene 2

I have of late—but wherefore I know not—lost all my mirth, forgone all custom of exercises; and indeed it goes so heavily with my disposition that this goodly frame, the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory, this most excellent canopy, the air, look you, this brave o'erhanging firmament, this majestical roof fretted with golden fire, why, it appears no other thing to me than a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours.

Today we may say that Hamlet is suffering from depression – the loss of happiness, the isolation, neglecting or avoiding his usual pursuits, and a general dull or dark outlook on the world. This kind of mental health condition is painted very differently to the kind of performative madness he displays to the court and appears genuinely in keeping with the tone of his soliloquies.

David Tennant as Hamlet in a red and black t-shirt
Hamlet (David Tennant) expresses his deep melancholy in Gregory Doran's 2008 production
Photo by Ellie Kurttz © RSC Browse and license our images

We also know Hamlet also performs alarming displays of what could be considered mania or delirium (today, psychosis) throughout the play, shown by:

  • Hallucinations - he sees visions and hears echoes of his dead father
  • Delusions - the conviction that his uncle murdered his father, though this turns out true
  • Confused or disturbed patterns of thought and speech

In this speech to Horatio, his words run over each other, repeat and cut off, giving the impression of a frantic babble:

Hamlet, Act 1, Scene 5

Here, as before, never, so help you mercy,

How strange or odd some’er I bear myself

(As I perchance hereafter shall think meet

To put an antic disposition on)

That you, at such times seeing me, never shall,

With arms encumbered thus, or this headshake,

Or by pronouncing of some doubtful phrase,

As “Well, well, we know,” or “We could an if we would,”

Or “If we list to speak,” or “There be an if they might,”

Or such ambiguous giving-out, to note

That you know aught of me—this do swear,

So grace and mercy at your most need help you.

Horatio wearing glasses grabs his friend Hamlet by the lapels
"These are but wild and whirling words" Horatio (Rob Edwards) doubts Hamlet's (Kenneth Brannagh's) sanity in Adrian Noble's 1991 production
Photo by Reg Wilson © RSC Browse and license our images

Hamlet also behaves in a violent and cruel way towards his mother and Ophelia, which their reactions suggest is out of character for him, and even kills Polonius in a fit of rage. None of these – save perhaps his interaction with Ophelia – seem to be Hamlet ‘acting mad’, but genuine, if extreme, reactions to trauma.

Hamlet’s supposed ‘madness’ allows for him to both act within and outside of the world of the court, eventually trapping his uncle into a kind of confession. But through Hamlet’s words and actions, Shakespeare explores the complexity of the human reaction to grief, betrayal and mental anguish.

On a bed, a scantily dressed woman cries out as a man wearing vest and striped pyjama bottoms grabs her
Hamlet (Mark Rylance) attacks Gertrude (Clare Higgins) in Ron Daniels' 1989 production of Hamlet
Photo by Reg Wilson © RSC Browse and license our images

OPHELIA’S MADNESS

Unlike Hamlet, we never see the inner workings of Ophelia’s mind, especially once she descends into madness. But though her madness looks similar to Hamlet's (she is dishevelled and speaks in riddles), we can be fairly certain that her mental decline is not an act, and leads to her death.

Like Hamlet, we hear about her mental state before we see her. A Gentleman of the court describes Ophelia’s behaviour to Gertrude and how she talks about her father:

Hamlet, Act 4, Scene 5

She speaks much of her father, says she hears

There’s tricks i’ th’ world, and hems, and beats her heart,

Spurns enviously at straws, speaks things in doubt

That carry but half sense. Her speech is nothing,

Yet the unshapèd use of it doth move

The hearers to collection.

When Ophelia enters, we can see this isn't just a show of insanity because:

  • Her patterns of speech change - she speaks in prose and in riddles ("They say the owl was a baker’s daughter. Lord, we know what we are but know not what we may be.")
  • Singing – particularly songs that pertain to death and betrayal by a lover
  • She never turns to the audience to reveal her 'true' mind
Ophelia kneels on the stage with her arms full of weeds
Ophelia (Mariah Gale) offers nettles and weeds in place of flowers in Gregory Doran's 2008 production of Hamlet
Photo by Ellie Kurttz © RSC Browse and license our images
 For example, when Claudius suggests she is grieving over the death of her father, she rebukes him, saying;
Hamlet, Act 4, Scene 5

Pray let’s have no words of this, but when

they ask you what it means, say you this:

(Sings) Tomorrow is Saint Valentine’s day,

All in the morning betime,

And I a maid at your window,

To be your Valentine.

Then up he rose and donned his clothes

And dupped the chamber door,

Let in the maid, that out a maid

Never departed more.

Gertrude (Elizabeth Spriggs) and Claudius (Brewster Mason) try in vain to restrain the mad Ophelia (Janet Suzman) as she plays her lute and sings (Hamlet, 1965)
Ophelia (Janet Suzman) sings of death and betrayal, while Gertrude (Elizabeth Spriggs) and Claudius (Brewster Mason) fail to restrain her, in Peter Hall's 1965 Hamlet
Photo by Reg Wilson © RSC Browse and license our images

Through her songs, Ophelia speaks to both the loss of her virginity and Hamlet's rejection of her, and the murder of her father, revealing the dual cause of her anguish.

While Hamlet's ‘madness’ is sometimes performed comically, Ophelia’s madness is usually shown as a tragic mirroring, demonstrating the brutal, knock-on effects of Hamlet’s behaviour on other characters in the play.

Caught in the crossfire of Hamlet's actions, Ophelia's madness and death is arguably one of the most tragic outcomes of the play, as she is shown to have very little agency in life or death, sanity or insanity - a contrast to Hamlet's quest for agency and self-knowledge.

Pippa Nixon as Ophelia in a dirty wedding dress lying dead in the mud
Pippa Nixon as Ophelia in David Farr's 2013 production of Hamlet
Photo by Keith Pattison © RSC Browse and license our images

THE MEANING OF MADNESS

Madness is used in many ways in Hamlet - it's used to disguise the truth (Hamlet's true motives) as well as reveal it (the truth in Hamlet's riddles and Ophelia's songs). It is used to compare the rigid order of the court, though riddled with secrets, with the turmoil of a grieving mind.

The presence of madness as an unsettling recurring theme also adds to the overall sense in the play that the natural world is out of sync; that something ‘rotten in the state of Denmark’ will continue to affect everyone, both inside and outside the court, until balance is finally restored.