Автор Анна Евкова
Преподаватель который помогает студентам и школьникам в учёбе.

What can you say about Hamlet, the main character of “Hamlet, Prince of Denmark

So many books have been written about the Hamlet tragedy, such vast literature exists in almost all languages, so many critical reviews, so many philosophical, scientific works are devoted to it - that Shakespeare’s tragedy drowns positively in a vast sea of ​​interpretation.

Hamlet has become one of the most beloved images of world literature. Moreover, he ceased to be just a character in an old tragedy and is perceived as a living person, well known to many readers. But this hero close to many was not so simple. In it, as in the whole play, a lot of mysterious, obscure. For some, Hamlet is a weak-willed person, for others, a courageous fighter.

On the one hand, the contemplation of the nature of Hamlet, his mind is combined with the desire for physical perfection. He is jealous of his fame as the best fencer. Hamlet believes that a person should be a harmonious fusion of diverse virtues.

On the other hand, from the very beginning of the tragedy, we see Hamlet shocked. The further the action develops, the more pronounced the spiritual discord experienced by the hero becomes. Hamlet hates Claudius and all the abominations surrounding him. He decides to take revenge. At the same time, the hero understands that evil is not in Claudius alone. The whole world succumbed to corruption. Hamlet feels its purpose.

From my point of view, Throughout the play, Hamlet is tormented by the contradiction between his extreme confusion and a keen sense of human capabilities. It is precisely the optimism and inexhaustible energy of Hamlet that gives his pessimism and suffering the extraordinary power that shakes us.

In conclusion, Hamlet is a spokesman for the views and ideas of the Renaissance. The literary controversy surrounding the image of Hamlet. Shakespeare wrote about modern England. Everything in his play - heroes, thoughts, problems, characters - belongs to the society in which Shakespeare lived.