If you are referring to The Lobby Scene, he knows that Claudius and Polonius are eavesdropping on them from behind the arras.
"What a noble mind is here o'erthrown." She thinks he's nuts.
Ophelia is hamlets love interest.
In Act 3, Scene 1, Claudius and Polonius try to get Hamlet to reveal his private thoughts by setting up a meeting with his erstwhile girlfriend Ophelia. When Hamlet arrives, he probably knows full well that Claudius is lurking somewhere around but does not appear to be sure that Ophelia is party to the trap. Eventually, however, he figures out that Ophelia knows all about it and it makes him very angry.
ophelia doesnt actually write hamlet a love letter.. Hamlet however does write one to ophelia
Hamlet has no wife. His love interest in the play was Ophelia and perhaps his mother;), but no marriage was held
Hamlet Sr. was married to Gertrude. Hamlet Jr. did not marry although he did love Ophelia.
Hamlet himself, while angry with Ophelia. This is probably actually refering to a brothel, as Hamlet no longer trusts Ophelia's honour
Ophelia is hamlets love interest.
Gertrude is Hamlet's mother. Ophelia is his love interest.
ophelia doesnt actually write hamlet a love letter.. Hamlet however does write one to ophelia
In Act 3, Scene 1, Claudius and Polonius try to get Hamlet to reveal his private thoughts by setting up a meeting with his erstwhile girlfriend Ophelia. When Hamlet arrives, he probably knows full well that Claudius is lurking somewhere around but does not appear to be sure that Ophelia is party to the trap. Eventually, however, he figures out that Ophelia knows all about it and it makes him very angry.
That character Ophelia is a central person in the Shakespeare classic Hamlet. Potentially married to Hamlet, Ophelia is the sister of Laertes who kills Hamlet.
ophelia
Hamlet has no wife. His love interest in the play was Ophelia and perhaps his mother;), but no marriage was held
Hamlet Sr. was married to Gertrude. Hamlet Jr. did not marry although he did love Ophelia.
Ophelia is the daughter of Polonius (the king's main advisor), the sister of Laertes, and the beloved of Hamlet.
Not at all. Polonius ends it, first by ordering Ophelia to stop communicating with Hamlet, and second by using Ophelia as a tool to get at Hamlet. Gertrude was favourable to the romance; at Ophelia's funeral she says "I hoped thou would have been my Hamlet's wife."
In Ophelia's grave.