Vacillation and Determination of Hamlet

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Vacillation and Determination of Hamlet

What is mankind? Who am I? What is the meaning of life? These are multifaceted existential questions that ancient and modern philosophies have yet to adequately answer. The character Hamlet from Shakespeare’s tragedy explores these profound questions, seeking truth and understanding as he tries to avenge his father's death. Throughout the play, hamlet’s perpetual challenging of himself and his actions makes him unable to act on his inclinations consistently. Hamlet is restrained by his excessive consideration of religious morals and beliefs as well as his fear of fatality. This indecisiveness is a crucial part of Hamlet’s character for most of the play, but he eventually undergoes a transformation in his attitude at the end of play when he begins to exhibit an intention of immediate revenge on Claudius.

Religion codes conflict with ambitions and instinctual feelings in Hamlet, calling into question which paths of action are truly righteous. In Hamlet's case, such conundrums are enervating and causing a fatal lack of action. The distortion of Hamlet's Christian values has a drastic impact on his plot to avenge his father's death. Hamlet has the chance to kill Claudius, primarily when he encounters Claudius while he is "praying". In actuality Claudius was confessing his repentance to God without asking for forgiveness. At this moment, Hamlet's religious beliefs intervene to complicate his view of revenge in a peculiarly diabolical manner “A villain kills my father, and for that I sole son, do this same villain send to heaven” (Hamlet III; iii; 76-78). He has to ensure the way of Claudius’s death is not just the destruction of his body, but also the damnation of his soul, which is why he...

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... for his fathers death in the elimination of Claudius, and the ultimate escape from his own pain in reality. Hamlet’s fascination with death grows and he no longer considers his actions, wanting solely to complete his vengeance, and pays need to what alternatives circumstances his actions may bring.

Hamlet is introduced as a reflective and distinctive youth, who is the only character that fights back against Claudius’s usurpation of the throne and accepts the consequences of his death without a flinch at the end of the play. Through out the history of human kind, fascination and personification of death has become a common theme to society. Everything in the world has its respective rules and regulations, where pain is real, and where mankind is created to suffer and prove existence. Afterward, life will burst its bonds in exceeding pain and limits naturally.

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