Your can find an accurate summary of 'Hamlet' from many different places. We have a wide variety of information at our fingertips with the web. We can also visit a library to find out about plays such as 'Hamlet'.
Hamlet asks himself why, if an actor can get emotional about a fictional person he doesn't even know, Hamlet cannot get just as emotional about his own father.
The Lost Boy by David Pelzer is an awesome book. If you can't go read it, you do not deserve to get a summary of chapter one.
because it'S life
no one can write it for you read poems and annotate!
The duration of One Hamlet Less is 1.17 hours.
Many investors will only read the executive summary, so if you are hoping to get funding, you need to have the best possible executive summary. Otherwise, no one will bother to learn about your business.
No one necessarily "made" Hamlet, Shakespeare wrote it.
it's what you write on your homework after you read the story yourself
Claudius was the brother of old King Hamlet (father of Prince Hamlet the hero of the play). When King Hamlet died, Claudius became king and married his widow Gertrude (Prince Hamlet's mother). Hamlet felt that it was too soon after his father's death for them to marry and also there used the idea that your husband or wife siblings were your siblings so to marry them was a kind of incest. So Hamlet wasn't very keen on his uncle to begin with - then he saw his father's ghost and found that Claudius had murdered his father. Read the play or at least see the film - the one with Mel Gibson isn't bad. Or read the prose version in Lamb's Tales from Shakespeare. It is worth studying properly.
Hamlet was the "hero," and certainly in the tragic sense, but he is also perhaps an anti-hero. Although Hamlet is probably the closest thing that the play has to a hero, it is more accurate to say that the play is not so one-dimensional as to be a conventional "hero" story. After all, it is a tragedy.
Frequently. Hamlet is one of the bloodiest plays in all of Shakespeare.
is means greasy. It does not refer to 'semen' which one might think from the context that you read it in in Hamlet (i.e. his mother and her relationship with the new king, Hamlets jealousy).