Is Hamlet Internally Conflicted? If So, What is the Nature of the Conflict?

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Rather unfortunately, Hamlet is by far the most internally conflicted character in the play. The personal and family troubles that have afflicted him from very early on in the play have proven to have had an extremely serious affect on Hamlet's reasoning and judgements. As a result, the two most prominent internal conflicts that have arisen are Hamlet's frequent musings of suicide, and his contemplation of whether to kill King Claudius or not.

The first instance of Hamlet's internal struggle with suicide is found in Act 1 Scene 2. Here, Hamlet has just been denied by King Claudius to return to his studies in Wittenburg: “[To Hamlet] For your intent/ In going back to Wittenburg,...we beseech you, bend you to remain/ Here in the cheer and comfort of our eye” (1.2.116-120). As all the other characters exit, Hamlet transitions to his first of many famous soliloquys, in which he opens by expressing his despair saying, “[I wish that my] sullied flesh would melt/ Thaw, and resolve itself into a new dew” (1.2.133-135), and that he further wishes that God had not made “self-slaughter” ...

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