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Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds

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Page 1: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

Ophelia

By: Amber E

dmunds

Page 2: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

Quote 1

Quote 4

Quote 3

Quote 6

Quote 5

Quote 2

Quote 8

Quote 9

Quote 7

Quote 10

Poem 1

Poem 2

Page 3: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

There is a willow grows aslant a brook, That shows his hoar leaves in the glassy stream;There with fantastic garlands did she come Of crow-flowers, nettles, daisies, and long purplesThat liberal shepherds give and grosser name,But our cold maids do dead men’s fingers call them:There, on the pendent boughs her coronet weedsClambering to hang, an envious sliver broke;When down her weedy trophies and herselfFell in the weeping brook. Her clothes spread wide;And, mermaid-like, awhile they bore her up:Which time she chanted snatches of old tunes;As on incapable of her own distress, Or like a creature native and induedUnto that element: but long it could beTill that her garments, heavy with their drink, Pull’d the poor wretch from her melodious layTo muddy death.- Queen Gertrude

This picture demonstrates the story of how Ophelia died/killed herself.

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Page 4: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

Drown’d, drown’d. - Queen Gertrude

This picture represents how Ophelia dies. She drowned.

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Page 5: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

You should not have believed me; for virtue cannotSo inoculate our old stock but we shall relish ofIt: I loved you not. - Hamlet

This picture represents the anger Hamlet portrayed toward Ophelia after she broke up with him.

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Page 6: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

I shall obey, my lord. - Ophelia

This picture represent how Ophelia’s heart was broken after her dad told her to break up with Hamlet.

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Page 7: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

Lay her I’ the earth:And from her fair and unpolluted fleshMay violets spring! I tell thee, churlish priest, A ministering angel shall my sister be, When thou liest howling. - Laertes

This represents the grave of Ophelia and what they buried her in.

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Page 8: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

He is dead and gone, lady, He is dead and gone; At his head a grass-green turf, At his heels a stone. -Ophelia

This picture represents when Ophelia went crazy after Hamlet killed her father, Polonius.

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Page 9: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

There‘s rosemary, that’s for remembrance; pray, Love, remember: and there is pansies, that’s for thoughts. - Ophelia

These flowers represent the symbols for how Ophelia felt. She used these flowers to resemble her thoughts.

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Page 10: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

O, my lord, my lord, I have been so affrighted! -Ophelia

This picture represents when Hamlet came into Ophelia’s room after she broke up with him and scared Ophelia. Everyone thought Hamlet was going crazy.

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Page 11: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

Sweets to the sweet: farewell!I hop’d thou shouldst have been my Hamlet’s wife;I thought thy bride-bed to have deck’d, sweet maid, And not have strew’d thy grave. - Queen Gertrude

This picture represents when the queen spread flowers on Ophelia’s grave, as she wished she would have became Hamlets bride. She would have rather spread the flowers on her bridal bed rather than her grave.

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Page 12: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

I lov’d Ophelia: forty thousand brothersCould not, with all their quantity of love, Make up my sum. What wilt thou do for her?- Hamlet

This picture represents Hamlet’s true love for Ophelia. After he went crazy and cursed Ophelia out, he knew he didn’t mean all the things he said. Hamlet loved Ophelia.

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Page 13: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

OpheliaMy eyes are stonesyou told me truth

but by dawnbeauty had fallen from sight

these stones are in league with gravityand green water gurgles over fathoms deep

where I lieabout the truthI lie in weeds

washed back and forthtangled, knotted,

decayingand those are stones that once were pearls

- Author Unknown

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Page 14: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

Home

Leaves are fa

lling

To cover the m

aiden

Whose feet q

uickly traverse

The wilderness

The catch in her h

air

Flowing behind her like garla

nd

In the cool w

ind

And, she's O

phelia as s

he

Splashes into th

e winter river

And floats downstr

eam

Blue lips a

nd purple rimmed eyes

She's a picture of ic

y beauty

As her d

ress drags h

er down to

the

bottom

Where she waits

A century later

To be thawed in

a Spring

That never c

omes

Ophelia

Page 15: Ophelia By: Amber Edmunds. Quote 1 Quote 4 Quote 3 Quote 6 Quote 5 Quote 2 Quote 8 Quote 9 Quote 7 Quote 10 Poem 1 Poem 2

Final Reflections

The thing that surprised me about my thinking in this unit was that Hamlet killed Polonius.

The writing in this unit was relevant to my life because there’s many things our parents tell us to

do, but we don’t obey them.The piece I’m most proud of is my quotes because

they are what makes my project entertaining. If Ophelia was standing right in front of me, I would try to talk her out of killing herself, and try to help

her through her father’s death. I will hold onto the different events that took place in this book and learn from the bad mistakes and

take advice from the good things.