Revenge Of Revenge In Hamlet

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The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark by the world-renowned William Shakespeare is an incredible play with an intricate plot despite its relatively short length. The main character trait that keeps the plot moving is Hamlets’ desire for bloody revenge against his uncle Claudius for murdering his father. As the story continues it becomes obvious that Hamlet and his desire for vengeance is self-destructive and hurting his family and life more than Claudius himself. Coinciding with this key trait is the theme that one should not let their emotions control their actions, as Hamlet can easily minimize collateral damage in his revenge ploy, but does not even consider it because he acts so much on impulse. With a discerning eye, one may notice
Overall, the intended idea that Shakespeare was trying to convey was that singlehanded revenge is horribly dangerous to everyone who can possibly be involved.
While Hamlet may not be the first story to have the character motive of revenge for the death of one or more loved ones, it is certainly one of the most efficient ones at displaying how self-destructive it is when used as one’s sole motivation. The story is notable in that there are two major characters that have revenge as a major motive: Hamlet Junior, who seeks revenge on his uncle Claudius for murdering his father, Hamlet Senior, and Laertes, who blames Hamlet Junior for driving Ophelia to madness and suicide. Hamlets’ desire for revenge made him extremely unstable, to
The actions of Claudius have much less direct damage to the setting, unlike the rage-fuelled Hamlet, who has murdered many more people and ruined the lives of several others while Claudius ruled during the few month period the events of the plot occur over. The only possibly villainous behavior Claudius shows during the play itself is poisoning a dueling sword and cup, as well as convincing Laertes that Hamlet was responsible for the death of Ophelia, and in a way he was correct, as she is implied to have committed suicide due to thinking on what Hamlet has been raving about and discovering that Claudius murdered the king. Those who continue to believe that the real enemy is vengeance should consider the character Fortinbras. Fortinbras is possibly the most level-headed character in the play, he has no reason to pursue vengeance with anyone, and when he finally arrives in person to the scene of the play he immediately imposes order. He represents what was truly needed to safely dispose of Claudius, a reasonable mind who can make decisions without being clouded by

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