Play Doh In Hamlet

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A child’s cry: a sound that that enters this world as strong as a solder but slowly fades to the deafening silence. It is with this parallel that one may begin to understand the life of Hamlet and thus connect it to the fragility of youth. Children, as we view it, shape their lives in ways they do not understand at the time. Like Play-Doh, life is formed through a series of random twists and turns that may not always be under one’s control; however, one has to take its punches. To an adult, his or her Play-Doh is a piece of work, but to an adolescent, it’s all fun and games. If such is the case, then the Prince of Denmark himself is a foil for a child. Through the study of children, one may understand the family, development, and relationships in Shakespeare’s Hamlet. From the time a child is born, he or she is never alone, and “newborns are ‘prewired’ to pay attention to special kinds of information – those bits and pieces of data about the adults who take care of them” (Mayes 92). Hamlet, a young prince seeking to avenge his father, is left with only one choice to retain information from the one whom he loathes the most: his mother, Gertrude. Not only has the Queen not fulfilled her duties as a mother, but she has also relinquished any sort of love towards the fallen King Hamlet by marrying his …show more content…

These are two: Claudius' incest with the Queen, and his murder of his brother. Now it is of great importance to note the profound difference in Hamlet's attitude towards these two crimes. Intellectually of course he abhors both, but there can be no question as to which arouses in him the deeper loathing. Whereas the murder of his father evokes in him indignation and a plain recognition of his obvious duty to avenge it, his mother's guilty conduct awakes in him the intensest horror

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