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Hamlet And Laertes By William Shakespeare

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Shakespeare’s characters Hamlet and Laertes, in the play Hamlet, attempt to attain revenge for their fathers, but contrast in their approaches to achieving revenge, and their view of life as a whole, their failures revealing the inevitability of fate. Just as Hamlet’s inaction hinders him from achieving his goal of killing Claudius, Laertes’s impetuosity similarly leads him astray from his goal their inability to achieve these goals. The power of fate is thereby revealed through the futility of human actions due to the looming and palpable presence of human mortality. The downfall of each hero due to their respective Hamartias contrast to the outcomes of those who submit to fate, conveying the message of the inevitability of human …show more content…

This regret and his indecision indicate that Hamlet’s true internal conflict was not with Claudius, but that was merely a manifestation of a deeper problem, that being a conflict with death, and its inevitability. Hamlet’s unhappy death reflects a lack of fulfillment during his lifetime showing the power of fate, as all his actions were not due to his own choices and did not bring him happiness. Laertes’ death is similar to Hamlet in this aspect despite his vastly different personality and actions. Laertes’s external conflict as established before is his conflict with Hamlet, who killed Polonius, his father. However, like Hamlet, this conflict remains after his death. Though he kills Hamlet he chooses to forgive Hamlet, begging him to “Exchange forgiveness with me, noble Hamlet./Mine and my father’s death come not upon thee” (Act 5 Scene 2 362,363). This shifts his external conflict to Claudius who he blames for his father’s death instead, but is unable to take revenge for his father due to his wounds in an ironic twist of fate, his believed free will results in him unable to fulfill his external purpose in life as his actions “Hath turn 'd itself on me” (Act 5 Scene 2 348). Laertes too dies with regret as he is also unable to resolve his internal conflict which is his moral dilemma, desiring revenge but unsure of what costs he must pay to attain it. This conflict is not

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