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Hamlet

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Fate. Is There a Method To This Madness?
Fate has been a gear to our society’s motor for an eternity and will continue to be just that. It’s truly what makes the world go ‘round and is what keeps people curious “Wait, what exactly is fate?” you may already be asking. Well, fate is the development of events beyond a person's control, regarded as determined by a supernatural power. In short terms, it’s stuff happening without your control, and most often as a coincidence or for the better. This thing called “fate” was an extremely relevant concept in William Shakespeare’s play, Hamlet, back in 1599, yet is still prevalent in yours and my everyday life 500 years later.
Do you ever think about all the stuff you do everyday? You get up, shower, brush your teeth, get dressed, eat breakfast, do some last minute homework, talk to your parents, and get dressed before even heading out the door to school. That’s a lot of stuff! What if you take extra long in the shower and end up missing your ride, but that same morning someone brought a gun to school? No one was hurt, fortunately, but because you took that extra time in the morning you were absent from a possible dangerous scenario. Some might say it was that “supernatural power” that made you stay in the warm shower on that cold winter morning for just a little longer. I’ll let you in on a secret, those people are right. Things like this can happen everyday, little wake me ups that remind you to count your blessings and that some things do happen for a reason. You’ll notice that these scenarios happen frequently in hamlet, but they are also happening to you and I everyday.

In the beginning of the play Hamlet, by William Shakespeare, the forsaken Hamlet is approached by his father’s ghost, revealing to the former his duty to Fate; Hamlet must avenge his father’s death in order to ultimately cleanse Denmark from its rottenness. Here, Hamlet feels the burden that Fate has put upon his shoulders. “The time is out of joint: O cursed spite, that ever I was born to set it right!” (I, 5, 188-189) Hamlet undoubtedly feels that he was born to avenge his father’s death, and he vows to devote his life to the duty of revenge. Here, “...Hamlet realizes that he is the man upon whom the fate of the kingdom -his kingdom really-depends” (228). This scene reminds me of a quote by Les Brown, “Just because Fate doesn't deal you the right cards, it doesn't mean you should give up. It just means you have to play the cards you get to their maximum potential.” What Les is saying and what can be applied to Hamlet here is that sometimes you get stuck in a bad scenario, but those are the times where you can really show your potential strength and power. Hamlet should avenge in his fathers memory by reviving Denmark as his father should’ve. It’s a tough scenario most obviously, but it builds character, and as Heraclitus once said “A man’s character is in his fate.”
Although he does not ultimately show it, Hamlet tries to take Fate into his own hands. Hamlet becomes obsessed with his mother’s injustice to his dear father. He finds that he must restrain himself from letting his deep-rooted disturbance with his mother veer him away from the duty that Fate has set before him. Before the bedroom scene, he must say to himself, “I will speak daggers to her, but use none” (III, 2, 367). Hamlet should not be letting these thoughts go this far; his duty is to take revenge on Claudius, not his mother. Hamlet seems more preoccupied about ending the incestuous relationship than actually avenging the murder. Also, the scene in which Hamlet sees the King in action of praying and speaking words of repentance should not be overlooked. Here, he thinks about his duty, and ponders whether or not he should fulfill it at the moment. Not knowing that Claudius’ words have no heartfelt meaning, Hamlet decides that it would not satisfy him if his act of revenge would send the seemingly repentant Claudius to Heaven. He reveals that he wants to take revenge on Claudius when his heart is sinful and “Then trip him, that his heels may kick at Heaven/And that his soul may be as damned and black/As Hell, whereto it goes” (III, 3, 93-95). Hamlet should not be taking these matters into consideration. Fate has declared it Hamlet’s duty to take revenge on King Claudius, but not to determine where his soul will rest.
Hamlet moves from trying to comprehend Fate to accepting Fate for what it is. In the final act, he admits to Horatio, “There’s a divinity that shapes our ends,/Roughhew them how you will” (V, 2, 10-11). Here, he realizes that Fate will ultimately have its way, no matter how one tries to meddle with it. It is evident that Hamlet has given up trying to interfere with Fate. He realizes that death will come upon a person when it will come, and that one should be ready to accept this undeniable fact. Essentially, this is what Hamlet means when he says to Horatio, “There’s special providence in the fall of a sparrow . If it [death] be now, ‘tis not to come; if it be not to come, it will be now; if it be not now, yet it will come. The readiness is all” (V, 2, 198-201). After my first, and hopefully only, car accident, I was forced to accept fate for what it is. Napoleon Bonaparte illustrates my scenario both figuratively and literally with saying, “
There is no such thing as accident; it is fate misnamed.” I accepted that I had unfortunately crashed my car, but also looked at it from different perspectives. It very well could’ve been a sign to drive safer, for maybe next time I wouldn’t be as lucky as to come out so unharmed. Maybe it was a wake up call for my family and I to never take anything for granted, for as it could’ve taken my life. Whatever it was, it must’ve been for a reason and I will accept that unknown reason as fate and hope that it was for the better of me.
It should also be noted that throughout the play, there is a certain fate which seems to protect Hamlet so that he may fulfill his public responsibility to his kingdom-to cleanse Denmark of its rotten royalty. Hamlet just happened to have his father’s signet with him at a crucial time. He also happened to be the only one to be whisked onto the deck of a pirate ship. “As surely as there is a special providence in the fall of a sparrow, in the life of this prince there is a special fate at work beyond mere good fortune or luck” (230).

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