Why Shakespeare's Hamlet Still Taught Today?

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The play Hamlet by Shakespeare written between 1599-1603, is still taught today in numerous schools for many reasons. Hamlet teaches us to be ourselves and stay true to ourselves; The play also teaches people that revenge is not always the answer; Lastly the play is still taught today because people can sympathise the feelings that are given throughout the play.
The first reason why Hamlet is taught in schools today is because of how it teaches students to be themselves. This is a good moral lesson because Polonius tells his son Laertes to be true to himself no matter what. He tells him, “Give thy thoughts no tongue. Nor any unproportioned thought his act. Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar” (I.II.60). Polonius tells Laertes how he should act while he is away. Saying how he should always treat people with respect, but how he should not let them walk all over him. This goes for people reading the play too. To respect other but to not give too much respect …show more content…

He pretty much forgot he was a prince and forgot about all his duties, and forgot about the people in his life. “For Hamlet, revenge was coupled with justice, but the situation of father/uncle, mother/uncle, uncle King confused him…” says a commenter. Hamlet was so worried about killing Claudius and revealing him to everyone he forgot about everything else in his life. During the whole play Hamlet thinks about how he wants to kill Claudius, and reveal him to everyone, that he began to slowly go a little crazy without even noticing. Even though he was acting crazy for the plan he had to reveal Claudius, He seemed to actually be going crazy with revenge. He is obviously a philosopher, meaning he likes to think a lot, but him thinking caused him to go a little crazy. He was so busy thinking of revenge and planning revenge that it sort of drove him mad, and made him lose a lot of the people he

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