The death of Polonius is central to the play. For one thing, it is the first of many deaths to occur, and it is the cause of many of the other deaths. Claudius is frightened when he learns that his mad stepson has killed Polonius. He tells Gertrude, his informant, "It had been so with us, had we been there." Hamlet was already commissioned to go to England as the King's ambassador, but this murder makes Claudius decide to have him executed when he gets there. This leads to the deaths of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, who are carrying the letter requesting the execution. But Hamlet substitutes another letter requesting the execution of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, and then he returns to Denmark, having been kidnapped by pirates and ransomed.
Polonius's murder causes his daughter Ophelia to lose her mind and his son Laertes to start a rebellion. Ophelia eventually dies by what is thought to be suicide, and Laertes is persuaded by the King to kill Hamlet with a poisoned fencing foil. Laertes himself is killed when the two duelists switch foils. Claudius has prepared a poisoned drink because he still wants to make sure of killing Hamlet, but Gertrude drinks it inadvertently. Then Hamlet kills Claudius when Laertes informs him that he is holding an untipped foil with a deadly poison on the point. Hamlet himself dies of a stab wound he has received in the duel with Laertes.
The death of Polonius precipitates the deaths of all the other major characters except for Horatio, who remains alive in order to explain the complex chain of events as best he can.
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