Apr 23, 20232 min

Ophelia - Original Poem

Something about the great William Shakespeare that has always resonated with me is the fact that nobody knows the day he was born. Historians know he was baptised on April 26th 1564 and thus they assume he was born around 3 days prior on April 23rd. April 23rd is also the day he died in 1616, within a month of signing his will which described him as being in "perfect health". He was 52 years old. Today is April 23rd, so I had to have a Shakespeare-related post.

In my second year of University we had a Shakespeare Studies module which, had the COVID-19 pandemic not happened, would have entailed a week-long trip to Stratford-upon-Avon. Missing out was disheartening, especially when the trip was one of the reasons I'd been so excited to study at Birmingham. I've been to Stratford before but never for more than a day trip. When I was younger, my family and I visited the town once a summer; we would venture to the Butterfly Farm, go boating and trek through the markets. My favourite thing about Stratford though, of course, is Shakespeare's Birthplace. When I was 18, on a school trip, I purchased a pencil from the RSC gift shop that said '2B or not 2B' on the side. Very overpriced, but I have no regrets. That quotation 'to be or not to be' comes from Hamlet - the titular character contemplates suicide as he says the line in a soliloquy at the beginning of the play. He is lamenting the death of his father and venting his horror at his mother Gertrude, who has decided to marry his uncle, Claudius.

Hamlet's love interest is Ophelia, who is depicted in her death in the above oil painting by Sir John Everett Millais. The audience doesn't actually see Ophelia die though in her final scene, she appears to have driven herself into madness as a result of believing Hamlet has fallen out of love with her. She tells the audience she is collecting the 'willow', 'nettle' and 'daisy' that she lays beside in her passing, plants symbolic of forsaken love and grief. In the play, Hamlet and Horatio visit the churchyard and the titular character ponders who has died upon hearing the 'maimed' funeral being performed. I decided to alter the storyline for my below poem - I imagined how Hamlet would grieve Ophelia if he were to discover her body in the lake and how he would regret his treatment of her.

Oh, it hurts again.

The familiar tugging of the chest

When regret first made its nest

You went mad, they suggest

My bride to be

Her fairness and fragility

Lost in the serene of the stream

My darling Ophelia

The rapacious daydreamer

How I hoped

In your yearning

You’d see through my turnings

My twists were unsealed

My fair Ophelia

Oh, how I wish you’d told me!

Perhaps you did

And I speedily shut the lid on your cries

Dismissed them as though they were lies

And now you have died


 

You lay still and blue

In the lake

And in your wake

They are finding the art in your demise

Like the lady of the lake

Except you will never rise

My Ophelia

The weeds claim you as their own

As I walk this ground

Forever alone

Happy Birthday to the big man himself!

See you next week,

Karisma xx