Be all my sins remember'd” (1.3.90-91). Author and literary critic Alex Epstein states, “If Hamlet has importuned Ophelia in honorable fashion, why should his sins be remembered in her prayers? The implication is that they have sinned together.” Again this reinforces that they are most likely sleeping together, and sleeping together has a tendency to lead to pregnancy. Ophelia also demonstrates the likelihood of her pregnancy whilst singing her mad songs after Hamlet has left and Polonius’ death (courtesy of Hamlet). In her deranged stupor she sings of sorrow and betrayed love, “ To-morrow is Saint Valentine's day, All in the morning betime, And I a maid at your window, To be your Valentine. Then up he rose, and donn'd his clothes, And dupp'd the chamber-door; Let in the maid, that out a maid
Never departed more” (4.6. 48-55). Ophelia is most likely speaking of Hamlet and how he essentially left her, the maid, in a simplified song of how a man left a maid after spending the night together. Ophelia gets down to the point even more when she sings, “Quoth she, before you