y true statement, this paper should have given the reader some insight onto one of the many ailments that troubled Hamlet. I believe that in order for Hamlet, and the rest of Denmark to avoid the troublesome butchery at the end of the play, it would have been advisable for them to send Hamlet back to Wittenberg. It is not good to keep one out of joint, for that person will try to find some way to get back into joint. All and all, Hamlet has fulfilled the role that he set out to fulfill. By the end of the play, Hamlet made a rough and rocky transcendence from price of scholars to a prince of action. By they end of the play, Hamlet had no need to think, for action was his newfound friend. Even Fortinbras, in the last scene, saw that Hamlet had the makings of a very, very admirable king. Bibliography Bibliography Bevington, David. Twentieth Century Interpretations of Hamlet. Prentice-Hall, Inc. Englewood Cliffs. N.J.1973 Boyce, Charles. Shakespeare A to Z. Roundable Press, Inc. New York. N.Y. 1990 Coleridge, Samuel T. Shakespearean Criticism. Vol I. J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd. London, England. 1960 Halliday, F. E. Shakespeare & Criticism. Berald Duckworth & Co, Ltd. London, W.C. Holland, Norman N. Psychoanalysis & Shakespeare. Octagon Books. New York. N.Y. 1976 Jenkins, Harold. Hamlet. Methuen & Co. Ltd. UK. 1982 Quinn, Edward. The Major Shakespearean Tragedies. The Free Press. New York. N.Y “Tragedies of William Shakespeare and Sonnets: Commentary.” Http://futures.wharton.upenn.edu/~tariq58/hamlet/cheat/criticism%20on%20hamlet.htm. 12/18/98 ...