Year12English–Hamlet'sEulogy(deliveredbyHoratio)SimoneSchulzLords,ladiesandcitizensofElsinore, whattreasurelost.ItiswithgreatsorrowthatIstandbeforeyouinthisdifficultday,inthisdifficulttime.Idonot knowwhattosaynorhowtosayitWeareallheretohonour,rememberandpayrespecttothemostremarkable Princewecouldeverknow,PrinceHamletofDenmark,belovedsonofthelateKingHamletandQueenGertrude, royalcourtierandloyalfriend.Toall...



TheLiteraryGeniusOfWilliamShakespeare'sRomeoAndJuliette, Othello,KingLear,AndMacbeth
intriguingandwell-knownplaywrightandisconsideredtobethefaceofliteratureThroughthebrainstormingof hisgreatestplaysRomeoandJuliette,Othello,KingLear,andMacbeth,justtonameafew,Shakespeare'smost famousplayseeminglyenoughisHamletThisplayismostlyevokedforitsintrinsicworthhowever,ithasits imperfections.Shakespearewillforeverliveonastheliterarygeniusofthecenturybecauseoftheinternal tragediesheenduredthatgavehimtheopportunitytoexpresshis
TheTrueAuthorOfShakespeare:OxfordianPosition
Hamlet'sandOxford'slifeparalleledinthesamematterInHamlet,OpheliadoesnotwanttobemarriedtoHamlet (Bethell1).BethellstatesthatOxfordthoughthiswifewasnottruthfultohimwhenhewasawayonanEuropean tour(1).OxforddiscreditedthefactthathewasthefatherofOphelia'sfirstborn(Bethell1).Aftertheincident, OxfordandOpheliawerenotasfondofeachotherastheyusedtobe(Bethell1)ThisrelatestowhenHamletsaid toPolonius,"Conceptionisablessing,butnot...
Hamlet,ByWilliamShakespeare
unnaturalmurderMurder!Murdermostfoul,asinthebestitis;Butthismostfoul,strangeandunnatural" (Hamlet,1.525-28)InAct1,Scene5ofShakespeare'sHamlet,theGhost,whichcanbeeitherinterpretedas Hamlet'slatefatherorafigmentofHamlet'simagination,commandstheyoungHamlettotakerevengeforthe deathoftheformerKingofDenmark.Inthisiconicscene,youngHamlettakesheedoftheGhost'swordsandit setsforwardinmotiontheplotforrevenge.ThroughoutShakespeare's...
AComparisonofHamletandMcmurphyin"OneFlewoverthe Cuckoo'sNes
AComparisonofHamletandMcMurphyin"OneFlewOvertheCuckoo'sNest"Itissuggestedthatinmodern literature,thetrueelementoftragedyisnotcapturedbecausetheprotagonistisoftenofthesamesocialstatusas theaudience,andtherefor,hisdownfallisnottragicThisopinion,Ifind,takeslittleconsiderationofthetimesin whichwelive.Indeed,mostmodernplaysandliteraturearenotaboutmonarchsandthemaincharacterisoften equaltothecommonperson;this,however

