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Friday, May 17, 2019

Confused and DazedConfused and Dazed Essay

At the risk of sounding clich-ish, in replying the question of whether or non I thought the chemical group of the play was all about a man who could non make up his take care, my answer would be yes. If ever there was a man who contemplated life until it absolutely absorbed him into a pitiful peace-less mind it was hamlet. The above mentioned clich is from the ever famous Act III Scene ITo be, or not to be that is the questionWhether tis nobler in the mind to sufferThe slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,Or to take arms against a ocean of troubles,And by opposing end them?To be, or not to be has been quoted, misquoted, used out of context, and has been said adequate that little children will know the line before they know who small town is. However, to further support my answer to the above question, man has contemplated life in many different ways. For Hamlet to say to be, or not to be that is the question is to say he is conveying all that has him perplexed. In those t en words lies more(prenominal)(prenominal) depth of thought than can be demonstrated in the writing of this essay. But, there is hope for adult male in that some have dared to answer the question, rightly translated to live or not to live?Is it nobler to debate or act? Does the act of thinking, (in the mind to suffer), lessen the blows of life that wealth and fame can bring? Hamlet would say it makes no difference. Hamlet is not the first man to set out to perform a specific task and get side-tracked by so many distractions that grab at the mind kindred children in a candy store. Is it nobler? One would have to define nobler. A good example of his more righteous (nobler) thought was trying to decide, within this same passage, if anxious(p) would be a copout to living. If he thought he could be considered a noble man by dying, then he would certainly be obliged to do so. However, there were all those other thoughts nagging at him.One such thought, outturn or interruption is fo und when he comes into the room where his mother is crying because Claudius is upset with her. The ill Claudius was feeling, though, could not be compared to what Hamlet was feeling. In a scene that can only be described as confusion trying to make sense of chaos, Hamlet manages to kill someone he suspects is Claudius hiding underside the tapestry. In the one moment he decides to act, he blows it royally (no pun intended).It is worth the mention that Hamlet does get around to doing both what he had revenged to do to Claudius and himself. But, in the end of the play there is the popular opinion that he still could not make up his mind. Laertes forgives Hamlet for his and his fathers death and was excessively concerned that Hamlet would not blame him either. Hamlet does it as only Hamlet could in his dying breath, after all the time he spent contemplating life and death he says Had I but time.

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