Hamlet: A more powerful tool throughout Hamlet of Shakespeare, it seems that higher spiritual forces are affecting the events in Denmark. The ghost of King Hamlet who was recently delivered to his young Hamlet seems to convey his "most fouls and unnatural murder" (1.5.30). This began a series of events that led to the martyrdom of Hamlet and the spiritual cleansing of the Danish throne. First, Hamlet saw the evil and sneaky life of Denmark.
Shakespearean play, Hamlet tells his sins of malignant murder in the name of power and wealth to revenge Prince Denmark's prince Hamlet and his father, King Hamlet, and his uncle Claudius. Since Hamlet occasionally hesitated and hesitated, he even praised Fortinbula's passionate and violent character. - The story of Hamlet was written by playwright William Shakespeare and is considered an eternal work in literature and drama. Currently, after Hamley 's close - up of more than 400 years, society continues to analyze its complex features (Reiss 769).
William Shakespeare met the necessary elements of the whole Hamlet conflict by creating an internal conflict that focused on the struggle for revenge on Hamlet's father. In this case, Shakespeare focused on Hamlet's powerful edeps complex. Externally, Shakespeare outlines the external conflicts surrounding the legitimacy of Hamlet's claim to the crown. Hamlet 's inner conflict lies in psychological dissatisfaction with Hamlet' s nominal role. On the internal level, Hamlet seems to delay his revenge because his mother betrayed his father. This is a common concern for him. This inner concern contradicts ghost revenge orders. The internal confrontation of Tabasusum in Hamlet's "The perfect idealism of Hamlet of Prince Shawby" is due to the conflict between his own sorrow and the demand of revenge of the ghost.
Looking at Shakespeare's 'Hamlet', it seems that higher mental power is affecting the events in Denmark. The ghost of King Hamlet who died recently seems to told young Hamlet to tell him the "most fouls and unnatural murder case" (1.5.30). This began a series of events that led to the martyrdom of Hamlet and the spiritual cleansing of the Danish throne. First, Hamlet saw the evil and sneaky life of Denmark. Hamlet's mother, Gertrude and the Queen of Denmark, married an uncle shortly after his father's death. The funeral barbecue did not ignore the marriage table (1.2.189-90) Hamlet was very frustrated and probably confused.