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How Does Shakespeare Present The Theme Of Revenge In Hamlet

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In William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, the theme of revenge quickly becomes a present theme in the latter half of the play. Soon revenge spreads like a virus throughout the characters of this tragedy. It acts as the prime motivating factor of Act IV, from Hamlet’s actions, to Claudius’s plotting, to Laertes’s reappearance in the play. Before the act even started Polonius was murdered by Hamlet. This lead to the furious return of Laertes and his eventual conspiring against Hamlet alongside Claudius. The chain of events presented will form another climax in this tragedy, where revenge acts as a driving power. Even though other crucial emotions and elements are presented in this act, revenge acts as the ultimate motivating factor throughout Act IV of …show more content…

When confronted with the crime that he commits, he shows no regrets. Hamlet quite literally killed his ex-lover’s dad and shows no remorse when confronted of the deeds he commits. In fact, Hamlet continues to plot against Claudius during his exile to England. By not giving up on ultimate goal of avenging his father’s death, even after being banished to another country on charges of murder shows how full of revenge Hamlet’s heart really is in this moment. He actually states in his monologue, “How stand I, then,/that have a father killed, a mother stained,/excitements of my reason and my blood,/and let all sleep, while to my shame I see/the immanent death of twenty thousand men/ that for a fantasy and trick of fame/go to their graves like beds, fighting for a plot/whereon numbers cannot try the cause/which is not tomb enough and continent/to hide the slain?” (IV. 4. 59-68). Hamlet even goes on to say that his thoughts should be bloody from this time forward, demonstrating that his thoughts of revenge have not nearly been enough. Hamel realizes that he needs to take serious action against his own uncle once and for all, a vengeful plight

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