The Will Of God In Shakespeare's Hamlet

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Will of God In Shakespeare’s play, Hamlet, every major character, throughout the entirety of the play, have went against God’s moral beliefs and laws. Claudius’ regicide was a direct violation of the Divine Right of Kings that have been strongly imbedded into their culture and tradition; he was also guilty of committing adultery and was the instigator of the murder of numerous characters in the play. Claudius was not chosen by God, and once Hamlet exacts his revenge, Hamlet would not be committing regicide since it did not rightfully belong to Claudius in the first place. It was due to the spirit of his late father that Hamlet was able to ascertain the truth regarding his own father’s death. However, Hamlet’s indecisiveness, rash behaviour, …show more content…

Claudius’ ascension to the throne and becoming king instead of Hamlet was due to his capabilities which earned him that spot through any means necessary; although his method is dishonorable and violate God’s will, it undoubtedly worked for him. Who assumed the throne after King Hamlet’s death was preordained, and, according to law, should have been passed onto his direct successor, Prince Hamlet. Nazi Germany Adolf Hitler’s method of using a nation 's crisis in order to appeal to the large population, and becoming the nation’s saviour contains similarities to Claudius approach to obtaining the throne; with the exception of King Hamlet’s murder. Claudius approach was very successful due to the fact that he had the support of the Queen, the late king’s wife; the ghost spoke of Claudius evil deed towards Gertrude and was speaking to Prince Hamlet, “With his clever words and fancy gifts, he seduced my seemingly virtuous queen, persuading her to give in to his lust. They were evil words and gifts to seduce her like that!” (A1.S5.Modern), to convince Hamlet that everything was Claudius’ doing. Claudius’ actions violated the Divine Right of Kings, which directly goes against God’s will. His ascension was not part of God’s will but rather it was through his own greed and …show more content…

Therefore, the ghost who roamed the night seeking to speak out its grief and regrets before its death was merely a devil plotting to plant a seed of vengeance into the heart of Prince Hamlet, and cause strife within the royal family. However, contrary to the Protestant belief, Shakespeare introduces the ghost of King Hamlet to the audience as a sympathetic figure; the ghost’s emergence confirmed Hamlet’s fear: his uncle Claudius murdered his father. The ghost’s appearance along with his grief and deep sorrow would never allow Hamlet to assume that he was speaking with a devil; in act one and scene five of Hamlet, the ghost spoke to hamlet saying, “ doomed for a certain period of time to walk the earth at night, while during the day I’m trapped in the fires of purgatory until I’ve done penance for my past sins.” This contradicts the Protestant belief that the soul may never leave heaven or hell. However, in addition to Protestant belief, the Catholics believed that aside from heaven and hell, there was purgatory; a place where one who was not altogether evil but not good enough for Heaven would go to be purged of their sins to make them holier before they ascended to Heaven; and only with God’s permission are the spirits allowed to go to earth and deliver a message to the living. The Catholic belief is more closely related to King Hamlet’s story than the

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