Seven ways Hamlet might see a mirror of himself in Laertes
It is often said that Laertes is a foil for Hamlet. Hamlet says he sees his own image in Laertes: But I am very sorry, good Horatio, That to Laertes I forgot myself, For by the image of my cause I see The portraiture of his. (5.2.85-88) Later in the scene, the word “foil” is used five times, usually by Hamlet, punning on foil as weapon and as mirror image. Jesus claimed that the greatest commandment is to love God, and the second, "like it," to love neighbor as self (Mark 12:28-31; Matthew 22:34-40). One’s neighbor may be a sort of concrete local manifestation of God, “the least of these,” or of transcendence and mystery. To love neighbor as self, one must look with compassion and be willing and able to see oneself in one’s neighbor. But how might Hamlet see his image in Laertes? How might we? Consider seven ways, the last of which Hamlet may recognize only too late: 1. Both have fathers unjustly killed, and both are inclined toward revenge. 2. Hamlet would have preferred to