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Dr. Vavra's ENL 121: Lit & Comp
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Spring 1998: MP # 3
A Set of Essays on Foils in Hamlet
Paper # 453     (G84 - 01)
 


 
Hamlet and Ophelia
 
1.      Plays have foils to help the audience understand important characters in the play. Foils are minor characters that have similarities and differences with a more important character in the play. Sometimes the minor character is just there for the character to talk to; this is the basis for being a foil. In the play "Hamlet," [Titles] by William Shakespeare, the character Ophelia is a foil to Hamlet.

2.     Similarities are an important part of being a foil. One similarity that Hamlet and Ophelia share are that they both are children of controlling parents. [SV - 1] Hamlet's father, who is murdered[,] comes back as a ghost to tell him who his murderer is. This news is his father's way of controlling him from the grave. Hamlet's mother and stepfather are also controlling him by presuading [persuading] Hamlet not to go to Wittenburg. Men in those days went away to get an education. There was no need for Hamlet to do so because he was a prince. [As a Prince, he might have been even more likely to go abroad for his education.] Ophelia is controlled by her father also. She tells him how Hamlet has tried many times to express his affections for her. Ophelia's father does not believe Hamlet is sincere and orders her to stay away from him. Ophelia obeys her father[']s wishes. Women were expected to do as they were told and believed what they were told to be true.

3.      Another similarity between Hamlet and Ophelia is their [the] feelings they have for each other. In the beginning of the play[,] we are lead [led] to believe that Hamlet loves Ophelia. This frightens Ophelia, but that does not mean she does not have feelings for him also. It is her father who discourages [encourages] her to suppress any feelings she may have then. Later in the play Ophelia confesses her love for Hamlet[,] and he then hides his feelings and denies that he loved her. He suggests that she goes [go] to a nunnery. This makes Ophelia feel worthless and not wanted.

4.     Finally the reactions that the characters have to their fathers' deaths are also similar. When Hamlet learns that his father was murdered and that his stepfather is the killer[,] it is more than he can handle. This news drives him mad as [well as] Ophelia's news of her father's death does to her. It is how the two characters deal with their madness that leads to the differences between them.

5.     Hamlet[']s madness drove him to seek revenge on anyone who seemed to be trying to trick him or get in his way. His madness and need for revenge led Hamlet to the accidental killing of Ophelia's [sic] father. He also wanted to make his stepfather pay for killing his father and convince his mother that she should be mourning her first husband's death. Ophelia[']s madness was directed at herself. [Nice point] Without her father she was left with nothing. She felt that her chances with Hamlet were gone. Back then women without a male did not have any reasons for living. [I wouldn't go that far.] So Ophelia fell into a brook and drowned. Again, [that] they both took a life to rid themselves of the madness are [is] another similarity. [Another nice point.]

6.     The final way a character can be a foil for another character is that they are there to talk to the important character. This helps the character show his or her feelings about conflicts in the play. In Act 3, Scene 1 (p. 672-677) [Citation] Ophelia is used by the king, Gertrude, and Polonius to set up Hamlet to see if his madness is because of Ophelia's rejection of his love. [Nice point! They use Ophelia precisely as a foil to see what Hamlet will say!] In their discussion Hamlet questions who Ophelia is. He asks "Are you honest?" "Are you fair?" These questions support the major conflict of the play that is who's there (p.629)? [sic] This conflict can also be stated as appearance verse's [versus]  reality. Another scene between Hamlet and Ophelia that helps the audience understand Hamlet[']s feelings is in Act 3 Scene 2. [SV Logic -- The scene IS Act 3, Scene 2, not "in" Act 3, Scene 2.] Hamlet acts very merry[,] which Ophelia questions. This scene reveals how Hamlet sees his mother. He feels she is too happy for the amount of time it has been since his father's death. Hamlet thinks Gertrude should be mourning because it has only been two months since his death. [Nice connection]

7.     So we can see that Hamlet without Ophelia would leave Hamlet without a heart. [Very nice!] Hamlet needs someone like him to keep the audience interested in giving Hamlet a chance to get over his madness and give into  [in to] his heart. [Which] in [In] the end[,] when Ophelia takes her life, Hamlet does just that. [SS-1] He again admits to his love for her and apologizes to her brother Laertes for the death of their father. At the end of the play Hamlet's madness is also brought to an end, and he joins Ophelia again. [A Romantic conclusion, but I have to admit that it is true.]
 
     This is one of those essays that demonstrate the KISS principle -- Keep It Simple because the instructor is Stupid. This essay probably should have received an A. (I can always find minor adjustments to make in the grading sheets to move a grade up or down a letter.) The problem was that the essay was graded in the context of an entire set. If you look at a lot of the other essays in this set, especially those with lower grades, you will find many with a thesis sentence comparable to the thesis of this paper -- "... the character Ophelia is a foil to Hamlet." The papers that got better grades almost all had a thesis which suggested not simply that X is a foil to Y, but that the foil(s) in some specific way affect(s) the meaning of the play. Thus, when I was reading (and grading) this essay, I initially assumed that it was like all those weaker papers.
     This writer shows the importance of Ophelia, brilliantly, but primarily in the concluding paragraph. In the context of a set of essays that have to be read quickly and graded (Students want their papers back.), a thesis at the end is not helpful. I did not have time to go back and reread to see how well the paper supports its thesis.  Let me try to put it another way. In reading and grading essays, most instructors probably do what I do. As I begin to read, I begin to carry a grade in my head. (I had a graduate professor who claimed that he could determine the grade from the first paragraph -- he would have really messed this one up.) In reading the first paragraph of this essay, I started with a C. (Compare the first paragraph to the first paragraphs of most of the essays that got C's.)
     As I kept reading, the grade kept moving up, but it wasn't helped by the grammatical errors. It's not just that they are grammatical errors, but that they tend to confuse a reader. It's the confusion that causes the real problem. In class we have talked (or will talk) about short-term memory and how the brain processes language. George Miller suggested that STM has seven slots in which to hold and process incoming information. Those slots are used to hold the thesis, organization, topic sentences, etc., in addition to the individual incoming words. Grammatical errors force the reader to use valuable STM space to figure out what is going on within a sentence. As the reader does that, it becomes difficult to keep the thesis, organization, etc. in clear focus. Hence the drag that grammatical errors put on grades. [Yes, I know -- a fragment -- intentional.] By the time I got to the end of this essay, and to its great conclusion, the initial C had moved to a B, but I was still too confused to be willing to give it an A. I didn't see how good this essay really is until I reread it, slowly, as I prepared it for this web site. Remember -- KISS!


Outline
 
(1) 
 
 
 
(2)
(3)
(4-5) 
 
(6)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(?)
 
 
 
 
(7)
I. Intro + Thesis In the play "Hamlet" by William Shakespeare, Ophelia is a foil to Hamlet. 

II. Similarities 

    A. Children of controlling fathers 
    B. Have love for each other 
    C. Go mad after fathers death
III. Differences [Note that the topic sentences do not clearly match the outline. That, plus the fact that the paragraph numbers were not on the outline, did not help me in grading.] 
    A. Sex 
    B. Side (Ophelia) with King + Queen + father to find out why Hamlet's mad 
    C. Ophelia kills herself after fathers death 
    D. Hamlet revenge
IV. Ophelia is there to support Hamlet 
    A. Good side to Hamlet 
    B. Bad side to Hamlet
V. Conclusion - Hamlet without Ophelia
 
ENL 121 (Vavra) Grading Sheet for MP3B (1 of 3)
Foils in Hamlet (Revised 11/27/97)
Possible 
Points
Student's 
Grading
Instructor's 
Grading
Description Totals
Audience (20)
 18 / 18
0 - 5  5  4 The essay has a good introductory paragraph.
0 - 5  5  4 The essay includes a brief definition (not in the introduction) of foils, such that a student who had not previously heard the term would understand both the concept and this essay.
0 - 5  5  5 The essay does not simply retell the play.
0 - 5
 3
 5
The essay has a good concluding paragraph.
Thesis (20) 18 / 19
0 - 4  4  4 The thesis is recognizable, somewhere near the beginning of the essay.
0 - 4
4
 4
The thesis and essay reflect good, independent thought about Hamlet. 
0 - 4  4  4 The thesis and essay reflect at least an average understanding of foils
0 - 4  4  4 The essay reflects at least an average understanding of foils in Hamlet.
0 - 4  2  3 The essay reflects an above average understanding of foils in Hamlet 
[This should definitely have been a four.]
 Organization (20) The writer recognizes the weakness, but way overestimates it.
 8 / 15 
0 - 4
 2
 3
Topic sentences relate paragraphs to the thesis.
0 - 4
 2
 3
Paragraphs are generally eight to ten sentences long.
0 - 4
 2
 3 
Major and minor points in the outline are logically arranged.
0 - 4
 0
 2 
The essay is accompanied by a typed formal outline with subdivisions to the level of capital letters, i.e., II B. The paragraphs in the essay have been numbered and the numbers of the paragraphs have been placed in parentheses next to the corresponding part of the outline.
0 - 4
  2
 4 
Paragraphs reflect subdivisions of major points. (For example, more than one paragraph is devoted to a single foil.) [Paragraphs 2 - 5 are devoted to similarities.]
2 of 3
Possible 
Points
Student's 
Grading
Instructor's 
Grading
Description Totals
Details (20) (Please fill in the blanks.) 
[Note: This rubric assumes that you will discuss at least two foils and be graded on the two you choose. You may discuss only one foil and use the same grades for both sections of this form.] [I could have given the full twenty.]
 12 / 18 
0 - 3
 2
 3 
An explanation of similarities establishes __Ophelia____ as a foil to ______Hamlet__________.
0 - 3
  2
 3 
The differences  between foil #1 (above) and __Hamlet____ and their significance to the play are explained in detail.
0 - 3
 2
 2 
The function of foil # 1 as a listener on stage (and its significance to the play) is explained in detail.
0 - 1
  1
 1 
The relevance of foil # 1 to the thesis is explained in detail. 
0 - 3
 2
 3 
An explanation of similarities establishes ___Ophelia___ as a foil to ____Hamlet_.
0 - 3
 2
 3 
The differences between foil #2 (above) and __Hamlet___ and their significance to the play are explained in detail.
0 - 3
 2
 2
The function of foil # 2 as a listener on stage (and its significance to the play) is explained in detail.
0 - 1
 1
 1
The relevance of foil # 1 to the thesis is explained in detail.
(3 of 3)
Possible 
Points
Student's 
Grading
Instructor's 
Grading
Description Totals
Style (20)
 20 / 17 
0 - 3  3  3 Words are used correctly and accurately.
0 - 2  2  2 There are no (few) errors in usage.
0 - 2  2  2 Pronouns are used correctly.
0 - 2  2  1 Verb forms and tenses are used correctly. ["lead"]
0 - 3  3  3 All sentences are comprehensible.
0 - 2 2  2 Sentence structure is mature and varied.
0 - 3
 3
 2
There are no (few) sloppy errors. ["presuading" -- spell checker?]
0 - 3
 3
 2
Punctuation marks are used correctly. [Titles]
Minus Style Penalty Points (May be regained by correcting errors)
 -3 
Basic Grade for the Essay (100)  78 / 84
Penalty Points: - __________ Late          -___________ Other
 
Bonus points (6 possible)
0 - 2
 
 
Brainstorming
0 - 2
 
  Outlining
0 - 2
 
  Revision
Final Grade for the Essay  78 / 84
Hostage Fifty:  
    Apostrophe
N.B. If there is anything in the "Hostage Fifty" block, your grade is being held hostage at 50 until you earn its release. To learn how, look at the "Additional Major Paper Requirements."

Student's Comments: (You can also use the back of either page.)
 


Student's Log Codes: B = Brainstorming; RR = Reading/Research; O =Outlining; TC = Tutoring Center;
D = Drafting; RV = Revising; E =Editing; G = Grading; T =Typing

NOTE: Revising = RV. Remember: use only one code per entry. (See Instructions.)

I used a word-processor __x___while drafting __x___ while revising __x___ to type my paper.
 

Date: Code Started Stopped Minutes Comments
4-19 B 7:55 8:15 20
O 8:15 8:30 15
D 9:30 11:15 105
4-21
D
6:00
6:30
30
 
D [RV]
9:05
12:00
185
[There were revisions in the envelope.]
4-21
E
12:00
12:20
20
 
Distribution of Time:
Process Minutes % of Total
Brainstorming
20 
Read/Research
Outlining
15 
Tutoring Center
Drafting
135 
36 
Revising
185 
49 
Editing
20 
Grading
Typing
Total
375 
= 6.3 hours