Literary Analysis Of Hamlet In William Shakespeare's Hamlet

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Hamlet Hamlet, Prince of Denmark is a dramatic play, written by author William Shakespeare in the period between 1599 and 1601. The play has three acts and it is packed full of drama, betrayal, incest, revenge and demise. It is well written, and it best presented in live stage form. In the early 1600’s, elaborate theaters and stages were built for stories like Hamlet to unfold upon, and the audiences were not disappointed. Many writers wrote dramatic plays during this era, but Hamlet was different. Shakespeare’s Hamlet is a complicated, twisted story of some of the worst things that can happen and how those behaviors lead to difficulty in relationships, love and life. William Shakespeare takes the most awful things that could happen to an …show more content…

He is told the king will wager on him to win. The king and queen, oddly, ask him to meet with them before the match to apologize for the murder he committed. All the while, the King’s plan is to murder Hamlet secretly during the match, making it look like it was all part of the game. Part of the plan is for Hamlet to drink poisoned wine during the match. Additionally, his opponent’s sword has been dipped in poison. Hamlet is offered the wine and refuses. He is wounded by his opponent, but ultimately in a twist of fate, he stabs his opponent with the poisoned sword, ultimately causing his death. Before he dies, he tells Hamlet the sword was poisoned to kill him. During all of that, when Hamlet again refuses the wine, instead his mother grabs the goblet and drinks it. She falls and then she dies. Just before she fell, she announced that the king had poisoned her. What was meant to kill Hamlet has now killed both his mother and his opponent instead. Hamlet, in a blind rage, kills the king with the poisoned sword and pours the poisoned wine down his throat. And then, in the biggest twist of fate yet, Hamlet declares a new king, and then he dies as well. The plotting, planning and madness surrounding the entire existence of Hamlet has led to the ultimate death of everyone, including

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