Horatio didn't believe in ghosts. After seeing the ghost for the first time, he said the following:
Horatio: Before my God, I might not this believe
Without the sensible and true avouch
Of mine own eyes.
Hamlet : Act 1 Scene 1
Not real ghosts, presumably, but stage ghosts. Ghosts appear in the following Shakespearean plays: Hamlet, Julius Caesar, and Richard III. In Hamlet, the stage directions say only "Enter Ghost", which could mean that he entered through the same doors of all the other actors. Indeed in Act 1 Scene 5 he must enter through the same door as Hamlet as Hamlet is following him. The same can be said for Caesar's Ghost and the Ghosts in Richard III. They could also appear on the balcony. Using the trapdoor would have been awkward and ineffective.
Ghosts are not. However, demons are. Ghosts are spirits, and all spirits either go to heaven or hell, so no, but demons, as I said, are real.
Ghosts are not real. Whoever said this is..............nvm. Stop wasting time worrying about this and live your life!
Ghosts are a mythological apparition that haunts people. Often in media ghosts are portrayed as haunting, and even assaulting, people who either have something that said ghost is jealous of, or happen to disturb said ghost. In reality, ghosts are about as real as phlogiston, unicorns, and non-corrupt politicians.
Hamlet
Vampires arent real - they are mythical/ fictional creatures. they are said to live forever. but they never actually existed
Hamlet: My father! Methinks I see my father! Horatio: Where, my lord? Hamlet: In my mind's eye, Horatio.
Obama
They actually try to find out what is wrong with Hamlet in an earlier scene, Act II Scene 2. In Act III Scene I they make their report to Claudius of what they have found, or rather what they have not found. They do not tell Claudius the real reason they have not found it out, because the real reason is that they were so inept in their investigations that Hamlet almost immediately said "The king put you up to this, didn't he?" and after that they realized that they couldn't trust anything he said.
It was said by Prince Hamlet in Shakespear's play Hamlet.
"Where is your father?" (said to Ophelia)
Polonius said this to Ophelia.