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Against hamlet was his mere unkindness towards mainly everyone hamlet potrays a worried being who has promblems which go deep
Claudius does not ask Hamlet what he has done with Polonius, although Rosencrantz and Guildenstern do. He asks Hamlet where Polonius is. His lines are "Now, Hamlet, where's Polonius?" and "Where is Polonius?". Hamlet answers, first that Polonius is at supper (not where he eats but where he is eaten) and second that Polonius is in heaven (where Claudius cannot go to find him). Then he adds, "But if indeed you find him not within this month you shall nose him as you go up the stairs into the lobby."
There are no publicly known songs that specifically go with each scene of Hamlet.
he was captured by pirates and they all fled to Ireland
Horatio plans to go meet Hamlet at Elsinore, which he does in Act 1 Scene 2. Horatio plans to meet Hamlet on the battlements, which he does in Act I Scene 4. Horatio plans to meet Hamlet at the play, and does in Act 3 Scene 2. Horatio has no plans to meet Hamlet in England.
Paris
Polonius is sure that Hamlet has gone mad with love for Ophelia. See these lines by Polonius in Act 2 scene 1: ~Polonius: Come, go with me! I will go seek the King;This is the very ecstasy of love,...Ophelia: ... I did repel his letters, and denied His access to me.Polonius: That hath made him mad;~ So Polonius thinks Hamlet is suffering from the "ecstasy of love" for Ophelia, which has driven him mad.
In theatres with a proscenium stage, it is possible to have a curtain (traveller) across the front of the stage. This would be drawn or raised at the beginning of the play. Hamlet was first performed and is commonly performed now on a thrust stage which has no curtain
Phobos and Diemos. Both are very small, as planetary satellites go, and both are suspected of being captured asteroids.
The king was praying at the time, and Hamlet thought that by killing him at that time, the king would go to heaven.
Hamlet says, "But, indeed, if you find him not within this month, you shall nose him as you go up the stairs into the lobby."
Claudius deals with Laertes first, before turning to Hamlet. He asks why he is still depressed. Hamlet, after a discussion with the Queen, makes a speech about how genuine his grief is. Claudius then tells him that he is mourning too much and should stop, that he is the heir to the throne, and that he won't be leaving Denmark to go back to university.