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Hamlet10

is newly lost and homesickness of Wittenberg, that he must spend all of his days in deep contemplation. As a university student, Hamlet is used to nothing but thought and contemplation. Hamlet is not accommodated with the environment of politics. Hamlet suffers from a “superfluous activity of the mind.” (Coleridge. 35) He knows of nothing else but thought and reason. Unbeknown to Hamlet, his next task would soon bring him to be caught between being a man of though and a man of action. As the play progresses hamlet’s thought and reason takes on a great form. Most of Hamlet’s thoughts, like that of many scholars, are about that of the world and those things contained within them. “Characteristic of Shakespeare’s conception of Hamlet’s universalizing mind that he should make Hamlet think first . . . entirely.” (Mack. 39) Hamlet has come to terms with the fact that the world, even including his mother, is nothing but an un-weeded garden filled with evil. Hamlet’s one true problem is with himself. He sees his character as something most desirable; and the character of Horatio as even more coveted. Hamlet does not understand the life of his uncle, mother, and others within Denmark. For these people use no reason. What is a man if his chief good and market of his time be but to sleep and feed? A best, no more. Sure he that mad us with such large discourse, gave us not that capability and godlike reason to rust in us unused. (IV.IV.33-39) . Hamlet believes that life is useless if men do not use their great power of reason and intellect. In-fact men become evil, “stale, and flat.” The next show of Hamlet’s intellect is his question of everything. Whether it is the world as a whole or death itself; Hamlet finds a need to question all. The play Hamlet is filled with soliloquies in which Hamlet is questioning some action or feeling. This problem of Hamlet’s comes from his...

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