"Versus" means against. Your question (which is not a question or sentence of any kind) suggests that possibly Hamlet was fighting against his inability to decide. If he could decide to fight against it, it looks like he was able to decide after all.
Hamlet decides to take revenge on his father god that's easy and totally wrong. Hamlet couldn't take revenge on his father because he was already dead, and he wouldn't even if he were alive. It's his uncle he wants to take revenge on, but not until Act 1 Scene 5. At the end of Act 1 Scene 2, he's just heard from Horatio that a ghost has been spotted on the battlements, and Hamlet resolves to go up to the battlements that very night and find out what's going on.
He admonishes himself not to hurt his mother, but to be verbally harsh with her.
Revenge his father's murder. He does this in Act 1 but doesn't get around to it until Act 5.
darna
nope
The Ghost tells this to Hamlet in the play. It means that Hamlet should not harm Gertrude but rather let Heaven (and subsequently God) decide her fate.
The last scene in Act III is the closet scene in which Hamlet kills Polonius, Gertrude recognizes that Claudius may have murdered Hamlet Senior and the Ghost makes a reappearance telling Hamlet to get on with it.
Claudius is not indisicive like Hamlet is. Claudous decieds that he wants a kigndom and a girl. BAM He kills Hamlet's father and gets both. However Hamlet can't decide on anything. He can't even decide whether to live or not. "To be or not to be..."
Hamlet asks Horatio to minutely observe the reactions of Claudius while watching the play. Hamlet considers that his own opinion may be prejudiced, thus he appoints Horatio as a neutral or third party observer to ensure an objective view.
Whether Hamlet runs around the throne room is a matter for the director to decide. There are no stage directions or lines which require him to do so. It can be a good call. When Keanu Reeves played Hamlet (yes, I was there), you only noticed him when he was running around like a maniac; at all other times everything and everybody else on stage became much more interesting than Hamlet. In that particular case, running around did make him seem more insane.
Hamlet is contemplating suicide. He is deciding whether he should kill himself, "not to be", or to live, "to be". He doesn't kill himself because it would be a sin.
The Ghost tells this to Hamlet in the play. It means that Hamlet should not harm Gertrude but rather let Heaven (and subsequently God) decide her fate.
Hamlet suggests that he may act crazy. The audience does not know how Hamlet will avenge his father's death. It is not yet known whether Hamlet will fulfill his father's wish.
Hamlet finds Claudius praying for forgiveness after the play. He decides that if he were to kill Claudius at that moment, Claudius would go to heaven rather than to hell. Hamlet decides to wait until he finds Claudius sinning, in order to kill him.
You could argue either.In the scene when Hamlet attempts to kill Claudius but decides against it is the most significant for this question (So I will be referring to it.) The cause could arguably be 3 things: Hamlet's fear, Hamlet's scheming, or Hamlet's procrastination.Scheming - Hamlet himself says he would rather kill Claudius when he is 'drunk, asleep or in his rage, or in th'incestuous pleasure of his bed' - as Claudius is praying in thie scene, Hamlet could be rationally thinking when it may be better to kill him, in order to send him straight to hell.Procrastintion - As Hamlet's hamartia (tragic flaw) is his lack of action, the reason for him not killing Claudius in this scene could indeed be Hamlet's procrastination, or 'overthinking' of the situation at hand - if another Shakesperian hero such as Macbeth was placed in the same position as Hamlet, the whole play would be complete in one scene. Instead, Hamlet overanalyses the situation before doubting himself.Fear - it could be argued that Hamlet doesn't kill Claudius for fear of what may happen afterwards; most importantly, the throne Hamlet must take. This could be an underlying cause of Hamlet's procrastination.What is obvoius in this scene however is that it is a turning point in the play. If Hamlet had killed Claudius here, Gertrude wouldn't have died, nor Laertes, Ohelia or himself. This proves that Hamlet's lack of action does eventually lead to his downfall.As Shakespeare does not map out to the audience what is the real cause of Hamlet's lack of action, the reader/viewer must decide for themselves.
The ghost tells Hamlet to lay off his mother and get on with the revenge against Claudius. This echoes his command in Act 1 "nor let thy soul contrive against thy mother aught." Some productions imply that the ghost is not real in this appearance, but only a figment of Hamlet's overwrought mind, as everybody could see the ghost at the beginning of the play.
Case by case. You need to compute the area for each and then decide. The terms do not imply anything about which is larger.
He asks them to swear not to tell about the ghost's visit and why Hamlet may appear crazy.
The last scene in Act III is the closet scene in which Hamlet kills Polonius, Gertrude recognizes that Claudius may have murdered Hamlet Senior and the Ghost makes a reappearance telling Hamlet to get on with it.
Adoption Stories - 2003 The Hager Hamlet was released on: USA: 7 May 2003
Claudius is not indisicive like Hamlet is. Claudous decieds that he wants a kigndom and a girl. BAM He kills Hamlet's father and gets both. However Hamlet can't decide on anything. He can't even decide whether to live or not. "To be or not to be..."
His demeanor seemed to imply the worst. I would not imply that.