Revenge:
Revenge is what we all seek when someone hurts us or hurts someone close.
Although we all know that revenge is not the best when we harm not think the consequences of our actions only serve our own impulses, the impulse of self-protection or bystanders.
Hamlet to learn that the murderer of his father, was his uncle, the present king, the only thing that goes through your mind and your body was craving for revenge.
Since Hamlet learns that his uncle is the murderer of his father the only thing it does is look for ideas for revenge.
At first he tried to confess that his uncle murdered his father through the use of comments and what he knew about the murder of his father in the way of acting, it rebuilt what happened in one of the theaters to the palace.
Finally, when Hamlet is doing a sword fight, when the queen (Hamlet's mother) is a drink that poisoned the king had prepared for Hamlet, Hamlet does not think and all that writers do is kill the king, the he throws the sword and eventually kills.
Nagore,
ReplyDeleteThis is a good start, and you've got a good topic in "revenge"; however, I'm still not certain what your thesis (or argument) is relative to that topic. Are you suggesting that Shakespeare wants us to believe that revenge is a good and proper motivation Or that it tends to wind up harming those who seek it (consider Laertes' observation that he is like a woodcock to its own springe). I'm also interested in your idea that revenge is somehow related to "impulse"--for part of Hamlet's problem, with regard to revenge, is that he doesn't act impulsively enough--that he thinks too much.
Anyway, some good ideas here. I look forward to helping you craft a clearer thesis.