Internal Confliction In William Shakespeare's The Tragedy Of Hamlet

1223 Words3 Pages

In William Shakespeare’s famous play, The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Hamlet is distinguished by his loyalty, bravery, and vast intelligence; however he is burdened by the recent death of his father and the marriage of his mother to his uncle. While Hamlet vows to take the responsibility to right many wrongs, his rationality will not let him take action without proper evidence and certainty. Despite Hamlet’s admirable character, virtue, and nobility, his internal confliction and his inability to take action and exact revenge after his father’s murder, his mother’s marriage, and his murderous uncle acquiring the throne, brings about his inevitable downfall. The internal strife among his thoughts consumes him and causes him to remain idle rather than take action against the wrongdoings of those around him. The constant lies and deceit that envelop Hamlet, including his deceiving maniacal behaviour, leaves him with paranoia and the inability to trust those around him. The war raging in his mind and the pretense …show more content…

Hamlet is obsessed with proving his uncle’s guilt before trying to act, this hesitation and indecisiveness has a dreadful aftermath. During Hamlet’s maniacal act, he surprisingly steps very easily into the role of a madman by behaving erratically which in itself leads Hamlet to his own downfall. Hamlet 's death is a result of much internal confliction and can be seen as atonement because of his responsibility in the deaths of Polonius, Claudius, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, and his indirect role in the deaths of other characters. In the end, Hamlet comes to the realization that destiny is ultimately controlling all of our lives and that he will never gain a complete understanding of life, he knows that he must die and he accepts his fate as it

Open Document