He was neither a preacher nor a reformer, yet his universality seeks no bounds. Shakespeare is not only a poet of England, but also he is the artist of all people and all ages. The same is the case with Claudius and Gertrude in the Shakespearean tragedy Hamlet. All this wrongdoing takes place both in literature and real life. It is perhaps in the nature of man that he deliberately commits an offense and this wrongdoing leads him towards the way to disturbance and turmoil. Nature has its own criteria of taking revenge and man has to suffer a lot consequently. The above lines have been taken as an extract from Shakespearean wonderful play Hamlet, which presents before the readers a moral lesson that by doing wrong with others for nothing not only may jeopardize one’s peace of mind but also one’s life is surely ruined in the course of time sooner or later. The beauty of the world! The paragon of animals”! (Hamlet Act II, Scene II, Lines 308-313) In form, in moving, how express and admirable! How noble in reason! How infinite in faculty!
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |