Hamlet Fate Vs Free Will Essay

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Mankind has been fascinated by the concept of Destiny and free will for centuries. The theme was incorporated into art and culture since the early ages. At the center of every great tragedy laid the struggle between the inclination to accept fate absolutely and the natural desire to control destiny, and Shakespeare is no exception. His play, “Hamlet”, is an epitome of the forces of destiny and human free will clashing and fighting for control over human life. Shakespeare incorporates this theme is teaching a variety of lessons to his audience.
Shakespeare borrows ideas from Greek mythology involving destiny which can be observed in Hamlet. Similarities and differences between the play and the Greek story of Oedipus act as proof. While Oedipus …show more content…

Shakespeare wanted his audiences to realize that no matter what you do, you cannot deny your fate. If you try, you may find yourself in a situation worse than if you just accepted it and let the universe take its course and that an individual’s actions not only affect them but others. Hamlet’s actions (and inactions) are directly responsible for the deaths of nearly every character in the play, including Hamlet himself. Had he only accepted what was to come, then only one would have been dead; King Claudius, the man who murdered the original King Hamlet and the intended victim of …show more content…

His inability to make decisions create externalities that creates a domino effect that leads to his downfall. Hamlet’s first unintended victim is Polonius, advisor to the king. Hamlet is pretending to insane to set up his plan to kill the king. His “madness” distresses the queen who then attempts to talk to Hamlet while Polonius listens behind a tapestry. Once Hamlet realizes someone is listening, he jumps to the conclusion that it is the king and attempts the assassination right then and there, “How now! A rat?” Killing Polonius instead. Hamlet not only killed an innocent man, but caused the woman he supposedly loves, Ophelia, after going insane from sorrow over the death of her father, drowns after a the tree branch she was sitting on broken, making Ophelia fall to her death. Shakespeare wrote this to punish Hamlet and to show that karma will come back to bite you in the butt. Since he defied the universe, he (and those he cares about) must be punished. Next one close to Hamlet to die is his mother, Queen Gertrude. Unintentionally, she drinks poisoned wine intended for Hamlet. This is caused by Hamlet’s refusal to kill Claudius. Gertrude suspected Claudius of killing her first husband and knew that the wine was poisoned. She sacrifices herself to save her son as an act of begging for forgiveness. Instead of mentioning her husband, the queen calls out “O my dear Hamlet! The drink, the drink! I am poisoned” indicating

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