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The Theme Of Suicide In Shakespeare's Hamlet

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Suicide in Shakespeare’s time was a controversial issue. On one hand, it held the theme of Christians, who associated suicide with humiliation and disappointment. Someone who committed suicide would be denied a Christian burial in consecrated ground as further punishment. However, on the other hand, the growing Renaissance tradition saw suicide as a noble and courageous act. Someone who committed suicide would be denied a Christian burial in consecrated ground as further punishment. In The Tragedy of Hamlet, Shakespeare scrutinizes suicide through the moral, religious, and aesthetic events that occurred in Hamlet’s life, revealing his belief, in …show more content…

He wouldn’t have to see his uncle have the throne that Hamlet himself should own, he would no longer feel the pressure to get revenge for his father’s death, and see his own mother and uncle behave incestuously. He also considers that sleep will come along with dreams and nightmares. He is not so sure that he will be willing to take on those nightmares that come to him in sleep. The concept of “conscience does make cowards of us all” portrays his conscience making him a coward by keeping him from doing the right thing, but also accusing him of being a coward makes him one. Hamlet’s moral conscience weighs heavily on him as he is torn between living in pain or dying in vain.
Hamlet also treats suicide from a religious point, which he exposes the differences between his Catholic view to a more Protestant view. In Shakespeare’s time, everyone knew that pursuing suicide was a mortal sin, in which you’d be condemned to Hell. Hamlet has the inability to act upon his suicidal thoughts because suicide can control when people die, which Catholics believe in an eternal life and not one where people can control when they die. “To die, to sleep. To sleep, perchance to dream-ay, there’s the rub, for in that sleep of death

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