Hamlet's Inward Analysis

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Hamlet’s “exterior” image “nor [his] inward” (2.2.6) character are the same as they used to be, Claudius states while conversing with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern about Hamlet, whose personality has changed drastically since the previous King’s funeral. Shakespeare, the author of Hamlet, writes about Prince Hamlet’s plan to cause the downfall of King Claudius, Hamlet’s uncle, in order to avenge the murdered King, Hamlet’s father. While Hamlet is only fooling King Claudius into believing his insane act, the comment holds more truth to Hamlet’s actual state of mind.
Throughout the play, Hamlet has trouble understanding the full complexity of what makes a man. However, a man is not made of certain qualities per se, but rather he is made from life …show more content…

After noticing Hamlet’s hostile attitude, Gertrude and Claudius ask Hamlet accept their marriage graciously. Refusing, Hamlet states that his grieving is an“[action] that a man might play”(1.2.84). Through this statement, Hamlet tries to express that he feels he still has a filial obligation towards his father, and could never accept Claudius and Gertrude’s marriage without betraying his personal morals. Immediately, Claudius calls him out, saying that Hamlet’s mourning is “unmanly”(1.2.94), a insult that is intended to harm Hamlet’s pride. In result of this insult, Hamlet’s journey to find what truly defines a man begins. In the beginning of the play, Hamlet believes that he is a man because he sustains filial and honorable memories of his father. However, he lacks attachment to the rest of the world, stating that he has no feeling for the “quintessence of dust”(2.2.278) that is humanity whilst speaking about his depression with his old friends, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, who were sent by the King to gain information from Hamlet. Hamlet aims to demean humanity not by saying they are dust, but rather that their existence in general means nothing to him. In this scene, the reader can find that Hamlet is highly egotistical and thinks only of himself, uncaring towards the world around him and focusing only on what is important to …show more content…

Many believe that since Hamlet completes the goal he set for himself when he murders Claudius, Hamlet’s personality does not change. His unfeelingness towards humanity is reinforced by his actions; for instance, killing his uncle, Claudius, and his indirect murder of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, whose deaths Hamlet felt no remorse for. Hamlet continues to prove his cold-hearted mentality when, after being asked by Horatio if he felt guilty about causing the deaths of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, he replies “[t]hey are not near my conscience”(5.2.57). Lines such as “let a beast be lord of beasts”(5.2.73), which Hamlet states to Horatio when seeing a man who Hamlet believes is pompous and unworthy of status, only offer additional proof that Hamlet is incorrigibly against humanity. Overall, Hamlet’s growth as a man is notable, not only in his acceptance of mankind, but also in his understanding of what a man should be. Therefore, Hamlet is a man because he undergoes personal development over the course of the play. In the end, all people should strive for knowledgeable growth and maturity in order to better understand the world, just as Hamlet’s transformation into a better man consisted of better comprehension of humanity and its

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