Saturday, August 3, 2019
Free Essays - Fatal Flaws in Hamlet -- Shakespeare Hamlet Essays
      Fatal Flaws in Hamlet     Ã       Ã       Ã       In the ending to Shakespeare's Hamlet, each of the main characters fatal  flaws leads them inevitably to their destruction.Ã   The process of the play  could not lead one anywhere else but to their ultimate fate.Ã   Claudius is  basically an opportunist whose blind ambition erases his moral  sense.Ã  Ã  Ã   Gertrude, through the eyes of Hamlet, is to eager to  remarry her husbands brother.Ã   Hamlet himself, driven both by his need for  vengeance and his inability to act was perhaps as guilty as anyone else in the  play because his behavior indirectly resulted in the deaths of Ophelia,  Rosencratz and Goldenstein.Ã   In each of these characters, the lack of the  firm moral structure leads them in only one direction which is toward their  death.Ã   In the ending of the play, then, is both inevitable and fitting  given the evidence that precede it.      Ã       In the case of Claudius, his actions betray a moral feeling from the  start.Ã   Having first murdered his brother in cold blood, he then proceeded ...                    Free Essays - Fatal Flaws in Hamlet --  Shakespeare Hamlet Essays        Fatal Flaws in Hamlet     Ã       Ã       Ã       In the ending to Shakespeare's Hamlet, each of the main characters fatal  flaws leads them inevitably to their destruction.Ã   The process of the play  could not lead one anywhere else but to their ultimate fate.Ã   Claudius is  basically an opportunist whose blind ambition erases his moral  sense.Ã  Ã  Ã   Gertrude, through the eyes of Hamlet, is to eager to  remarry her husbands brother.Ã   Hamlet himself, driven both by his need for  vengeance and his inability to act was perhaps as guilty as anyone else in the  play because his behavior indirectly resulted in the deaths of Ophelia,  Rosencratz and Goldenstein.Ã   In each of these characters, the lack of the  firm moral structure leads them in only one direction which is toward their  death.Ã   In the ending of the play, then, is both inevitable and fitting  given the evidence that precede it.      Ã       In the case of Claudius, his actions betray a moral feeling from the  start.Ã   Having first murdered his brother in cold blood, he then proceeded ...                      
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