The influence of Kid's "Spanish tragedy" is seen while William Shakespeare uses Hamlet's ghosts. This scene shows the beginning of Hamlet's revenge. Through Greek mythology, hints of death and revenge, the tragedy of the Elizabethan era is reflected in both conversations. The ghosts that appear in both dramas are consistent with the superficial view of the Elizabethan era. Described by Shakespeare and Kid, the theme of revenge is related to ghostly monologue. Their two goals are to seek revenge for their relatives.
Thomas Kid 's "tragedy of Spain" formed the work of William Shakespeare' s "Hamlet". Both are tragedies of revenge including the mystery of death. Behind the mystery there is the soul of the dead who shouted revenge and appeared before the hero Hironimo and Hamlet. In "Spanish tragedy and Hamlet", monologue plays an important role. It is often used to express the true feelings of the hero. In these two tragedies, the hero uses monologism to demonstrate a central dilemma that delays the process of revenge to the hero.
In the mid-16th century, Seneca's work was rediscovered by Italian humanists and became a model of the revival of the tragedy. The influence of Seneca is particularly evident in Thomas Kidd's "Tragedy of Spain" and "Hamlet of Shakespeare". Both are revenge, climax of the body, and ghosts between actors. Ghosts of Richard III are also similar to the Seneca model, but the ghosts of Hamlet play a more complex role. The shadow of Hamlet's murder against Hamlet's father has become one of the most famous ghosts in British literature. In other works of Shakespeare, Macbeth, the murdered Banco returned as a ghost to the frustration of the title character.
Shakespeare is also a script called Thomas Kid (1558 - 1594), Ur - Hamlet (beginning with Ur - for original), and the surviving Kid 's drama "Spanish Tragedy" ("Spanish Tragedy" It may also be due to). And I lost the drama. ), The announcement of the character Hieronimo may have influenced the exploratory analysis of Shakespeare's Hamlet. About Ur-Hamlet, Peter Alexander, also a critic and scholar of Shakespeare - a popular version of the first edition of Shakespeare, published in 1951, is the Ur-Hamlet as a final version of the draft from 1587 to 1589 by Shakespeare I argue that it was written in. to play. Shakespeare's critic Harold Bloom supports this claim in the book "Riverhead Books, New York, p. 124" published in 2003. Abu OL-qasem Mansour: Prince Hamlet of Denmark is probably the story of the Celtic 10th century, to the author, from the king of warriors and books (Shah-nameh) Persia's story named 11th century Amhlaide,