If something that was truly loved was stolen, is it wrong to want it back? If this something was really a someone taken by the hands of some individual, is it justified to seek revenge to make amends? Revenge tends to create a cycle of loss and hatred but when the life of a loved one is on the line, these details seem unimportant. In Will Ferguson’s 419, it is expressed that humans react differently to the same type of emotional trauma. However one may react, there is a motive sometimes hidden within
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King Claudius, Hamlet’s Uncle and now stepfather, and Queen Gertrude, Hamlet’s mother, ask Hamlet to stop drooping around about his father’s death which happened very recently. Instead of Hamlet, should be in glee in their marriage which they are publicly announcing to the kingdom. This announcement only makes Hamlet angrier which is the main theme in the first soliloquy in scene one act two. Hamlet says how much he misses his father and how hard it is to live. He is dreading that he cannot
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William Shakespeare, born April 23, 1564, was a playwright from the late sixteenth century. He enjoyed writing characters as tragic heroes. In Shakespeare’s play, The Tragedy of Julius Caesar, the tragic hero is Brutus. Although the play is named after Caesar, Marcus Junius Brutus the Younger is the main character. The literary work focuses on the emotions, actions, and decisions made by Marcus Junius Brutus the Younger. Brutus is the best friend of Titular character, Julius Caesar. Gaius Julius
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In the story Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare, Shakespeare showed the many ways power can affect and change people. Shakespeare used main characters to enforce themes throughout the story. For example Shakespeare used characters like Julius Caesar, Mark Anthony, and Cassius to show when someone in power are killed chaos will emerge, and people can be easily swayed into mob with only a few right words. Shakespeare used power to show many things throughout the story but the biggest theme displayed
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Hamlet is probably the most popular of Shakespeare's plays. But why that one and not another, perhaps more lighthearted, enjoyable work? The answer lies in the fact that Hamlet is neither nonsensical nor implausible to the modern audience. Hamlet constantly deals with questions and situations that every person is confronted by at some point. Hamlet himself seeks to grasp mortality, morality, revenge, relationships, and meaning. The play concludes with Hamlet supposedly reconciling all of these
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Hamlet looked upon the frail boyish body of Candide and tried to force a laugh, but couldn’t, the decision started to weigh upon his shoulders and slowly then all at once Hamlet felt as though he could not handle this task at hand. “I must do this”, Hamlet thought to himself, “it's the only, it's the only way”, the world began to turn sideways in the eyes of Hamlet, or was it that Hamlet was sideways himself. “I shall not let some fool like this Candide be accepted rather than I…. I must do this”
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For many years the authorship of the plays, sonnets, and narrative poems written by Shakespeare have been disputed; now writers all over the world have assembled different theories on weather or not he actually wrote these. With evidence to support their theories many are beginning to question the ownership of these plays supposedly written by Shakespeare. I believe that Shakespeare wrote all of the plays that he was said to have written even though many may postulate, he didn’t write all of them
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continuum” (Mitchell, 55). Hamlet experiences much trauma when he sees his father’s ghost for the first time. There is a split in Hamlet’s mind that is caused by this moment. This is the moment where he begins to dissociate himself from reality because as a rational character, seeing a supernatural being causes all sense of reality, everything that has been familiar, everything that, up to this point, was correct and rational, to go. Dissociation is just one of the many features Hamlet has that point to
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Hamlet's "To be, or not to be" soliloquy is possibly one of the most famous soliloquy in the history of the theatre. The words of the soliloquy spark a serious debate and questions for Hamlet about the advantages and disadvantages of existence and whether one should take his or her own life. The questions Hamlet faces was “is this life, or death is where life begins”. It seems like a wall to him, and only by getting through that wall, he will know what’s on the other side. Then once he is through
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always some madness in love, but there is also always some reason in madness. Love and revenge lead to strong motif of madness in William Shakespeare “Hamlet”. Hamlet like most sons, loved, his father dearly. Hamlet tries to seek revenge for his father’s death so he decides to act mad. When Rosencrantz and Guildenstern try not to see what’s wrong with hamlet he says, “I am but mad north – North West when the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw” (scene 2 act 2 page 57). He explains that he is
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