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The Challenges Of Anachronism In William Shakespeare's Hamlet

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An anachronism is a thing belonging or appropriate to a period other than that in which it exists. Throughout the play, this resembles Hamlet’s thoughts, emotions, and morals. Hamlet faces countless moral challenges that he must mostly take on alone. The only person that helps him is Horatio, whom he trusts dearly. It is through these challenges that shows a different type of thinking compared to other characters in the play. The way Hamlet responds, handles, and reacts to his moral issues tells the reader about his type of thinking and suggests that it is a newer age of reasoning. Hamlet represents a new type of thinking where he needs to justify his actions, he has a moral conscious, and his sense of personal integrity accounts for his hatred of deception.
Hamlet procrastinates the act of avenging his father due to his need to justify his actions to himself. After Hamlet receives information and commission from the ghost, he feels obligated to restore the great chain of being but needs to prove it truthful before he goes through with any action. “observe my uncle if his occulted guilt do not itself unkennel in one speech, it is a damned ghost that we have seen and my imagination's are as foul as Vulcan’s stithy” (3.2.78-83). Hamlet purposely puts on a plate intending to uncover Claudius's guilt. He will believe the ghost’s words to be faithful if Claudius shows visual signs of his guilty conscience about killing King Hamlet. Hamlet knows now that he must kill Claudius,

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