Weeds In Hamlet

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During Hamlet's soliloquy, he uses a metaphor to say Claudius will corrupt Denmark by describing Claudius as the weed and Denmark as the garden. As most of you know, weeds are a gardener's enemy because they take up all of the food and water from the plants, and they also spread quickly. Under Claudius' rule, Denmark is an unweeded garden that does not allow the plants to grow any further than just a seed. The plants are what's desired to grow in gardens, so the plants symbolize the goodness of Denmark. Weeds spread quickly, and if he does not "unweed the garden," the plants in the garden will die and the weeds will take over. Hamlet knows that his uncle is evil and believes that he needs to take action against evil or the land will fall corrupt.

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