He decides to "put an antic disposition on" and to swear his friends to secrecy.
In Act I, after seeing the ghost, Hamlet goes a little loopy. It's not all that surprising.
We are informed of elder Hamlet's death by seeing his ghost appear.
The guards report of the Ghost and point out to the apparition when it appears in presence of Horatio.Both Hamlet and Horatio debate on the appearance of the Ghost .The guards presence is not explicit although they seem to be present at the tower.
MacBeth ends up seeing the ghost of his friend Banquo during his dinner party he throws in (and double check this) Act 4 i believe. Also, before MacBeth kills Duncan in Act 2 he sees a floating dagger as a hallucination. The ghost though, is Banquo.
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.
He could be crazy, and it could be all in his mind. Or it could be an illusion created by the devil to trick him into killing his uncle. Hamlet actually considers this possibility and as a result decides to test the Ghost's information.
In Act I, after seeing the ghost, Hamlet goes a little loopy. It's not all that surprising.
We are informed of elder Hamlet's death by seeing his ghost appear.
Hamlet is talking to the Ghost, which Gertrude can't see, which looks bizarre to her. For the first time, Gertrude sees Hamlet as seriously mentally ill, not just disturbed. Ironically, it's Gertrude whose perceptions are faulty in this scene.
The guards report of the Ghost and point out to the apparition when it appears in presence of Horatio.Both Hamlet and Horatio debate on the appearance of the Ghost .The guards presence is not explicit although they seem to be present at the tower.
MacBeth ends up seeing the ghost of his friend Banquo during his dinner party he throws in (and double check this) Act 4 i believe. Also, before MacBeth kills Duncan in Act 2 he sees a floating dagger as a hallucination. The ghost though, is Banquo.
The ghost tells Hamlet not to bother his mother.
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.
You cannot see the ghost hamlet
Do you mean, it's all a play so nothing in it is real? Because within the context of the story, the ghost is very real indeed. He is seen by a number of people including Horatio and Barnardo as well as by Hamlet. Hamlet is the only one who hears him speak, but what the ghost tells him is true, not a fiction created by Hamlet's brain. The ghost in Hamlet is as real as the ghost in any other ghost story, like A Christmas Carol, or The Ghost and Mrs. Muir.
if you are asking this for, say, a homework assignment, then I recommend you figure it out on your own, as your teacher could find this easily.The ghost in Shakespeare's Hamlet is Hamlet's father, who is dead. In Hamlet, Hamlet's father is killed by Hamlet's uncle. Hamlet's father's ghost (the ghost) comes back to basically tell Hamlet what happened, and to tell him (more or less) to have revenge on Hamlet's uncle.
If we talk about the ghost ,it was Hamlet's father King Hamlet's ghost and it appears four times throughout the play.