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Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead And Hamlet Analysis

Decent Essays

Shakespeare and Stoppard were one of most well known playwrights during their respective centuries they lived in. Shakespeare’s publication of Hamlet became a very popular play to read and watch. In Hamlet, the main character, Prince Hamlet, is in a great dilemma. His father is killed by his uncle Claudius, so then Claudius is able to take the throne and become the King of Denmark. Hamlet finds this out from the ghost, and Hamlet is not sure how to avenge his father’s death or whether he should even attempt to. In Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, the main characters, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, engage in philosophical conversations about the afterlife and free-will vs fate. In Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Stoppard …show more content…

Guildenstern says, “...-it would be presumptuous of us to interfere with designs of fate…”(Stoppard 110).They cannot have their way in life. They have a talk with the actor and the actor tells them that they can just follow the script. The Player says,”Follow directions-there’s no choice involved”(Stoppard 80). So both of the plays share the same concept with the theme of fate vs. free-will. In both plays, the main characters believe that they can’t control their destiny and that they are born to follow instructions. Both of the main characters accept their fate, but there is a huge difference in how they accept their fates. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern do a coin toss and coin lands heads 156 times in a row. Rosencrantz doesn’t question this and just blindly accepts it. The characters have no wit and just think everything is controlled by fate. On the other hand, Hamlet analyzes what his fate is and actually understands his fate. He understands his duty towards his family, and does not happily accept his fate, but yet he accepts it. He questions what the ghost tells him to do. He questions validity of the ghost’s statement by putting Claudius in that mousetrap.After he finds out the ghost was speaking the truth, he then accepts his fate. In Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, the theme of fate vs. free-will is incorporated from Shakespeare’s of Hamlet. Both the novels depict the theme similarly by expressing that fate is

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