The Importance Of Honor In William Shakespeare's Hamlet

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In Williams Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Hamlet appears to be a dignified prince and a good Christian who has a good reputation with the people. During these times, personal reputation and honor was something to be revered. The noble family was seen as superior and the example for how the people should conduct themselves. However, after the death of his father Hamlet dwells only on his own misery and does not think about the affects his actions can have on others. He begins lashing out at innocent people and even insults his own mother, accusing her of having an incestuous relationship without trying to understand her situation.
Distraught over the killing of his father by his uncle, all for the sake of power, Hamlet begins acting selfishly, killing people without justification. Hamlet only feels sorry for himself and no longer acts as an honorable, noble man. Someone with personal honor would feel guilty and responsible but Hamlet never shows regret or concern for the ones he has killed. When Hamlet killed Polonius, the father of Ophelia, he actually took credit …show more content…

Because Hamlet never told her the truth, she also ends up being a victim of Claudius. She was simply a woman who lost her husband and leaned on another man who she thought she could trust, a man who seemed to understand and who could support her. Hamlet never once thinks of his mother's feelings, he repeatedly acts out against her, even comparing Claudius to his father and saying mean things about their marriage.
In this play, it is clear that Hamlet's father was killed for greed of the kingdom and Gertrude and Hamlet should have been his father's successor. Out of greed and a feeling of entitlement to the throne, both Claudius and Hamlet felt justified in their actions. Entitlement is not a behavior that would have been accepted during this time and no honorable person would have acted the way that they

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