Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, and colors used to
represent abstract ideas or concepts.
Yorick’s Skull
In Hamlet, physical objects
are rarely used to represent thematic ideas. One important exception is
Yorick’s skull, which Hamlet discovers in the graveyard in the first scene of
Act V. As Hamlet speaks to the skull and about the skull of the king’s former
jester, he fixates on death’s inevitability and the disintegration of the body.
He urges the skull to “get you to my lady’s chamber, and tell her, let her
paint an inch thick, to this favor she must come”—no one can avoid death
(V.i.178–179). He traces the skull’s mouth and says, “Here hung those lips that
I have kissed I know not how oft,” indicating his fascination with the physical
consequences of death (V.i.174–175). This latter idea is an important motif
throughout the play, as Hamlet frequently makes comments referring to every
human body’s eventual decay, noting that Polonius will be eaten by worms, that
even kings are eaten by worms, and that dust from the decayed body of Alexander
the Great might be used to stop a hole in a beer barrel.
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