To haunt them.
It is a sign of strange violence which is about to take place.
Marcellus and Barnardo assume that Horatio, being an educated man, will have studied Speaking to Ghosts 101 at Wittenberg University and will know how to talk to it.
Ghosts are definitely scared of lights. Yes, lights can really kill ghosts.
Only Hamlet hears it speak. Gertrude cannot see it, but Horatio and the guards can. Is it a real thing or is it a trick of the fog on the battlements, which Hamlet sees as the ghost and imagines speaking? Or maybe is it a bit of both?
The duration of Ghosts of the Abyss is 3540.0 seconds.
The duration of Summer with the Ghosts is 1.42 hours.
He ruled the Underworld and kept the ghosts of the dead from returning to the earth.
He does not rule, he guards the Gates and keeps the ghosts from returning to the Earth.
read the bible
Not at all. There are many other possible reasons why there may be ghosts in an area.
No, for two reasons :- 1) there are no such things as ghosts. 2) if you believe there are such things as ghosts, then they are spirits of the DEAD and can therefore not LIVE anywhere, even in woods.
To confront
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 believeWithout the sensible and true avouchOf mine own eyes.Hamlet : Act 1 Scene 1
Assuming that you believe that ghosts exist, it would be logical to think that a ghost who had believed a cross would repel ghosts in life would believe this in its afterlife and therefore be repelled. However, if the ghost did not have any such associations with crosses in life, why would it fear a cross in the afterlife?
Marcellus and Barnardo assume that Horatio, being an educated man, will have studied Speaking to Ghosts 101 at Wittenberg University and will know how to talk to it.
There are no scientific reasons to believe in ghosts, no-one has ever found scientific evidence of ghosts which can only mean they are illusions of the mind.
Marley‘s ghost said they where going to appear.
Piggy, being logical and rational, rejects the idea of ghosts as superstition and irrational belief. He believes in tangible, concrete things that can be proven, and views talk of ghosts as nonsensical and unhelpful in their survival on the island. His anger likely stems from frustration with others' focus on mystical beliefs instead of practical, real-world solutions.