The letter informs Horatio that Hamlet substituted Rosecrans' and Guildenstern's names for his own on the death warrant they were taking with them to the King of England, and that he was captured by pirates who held him for ransom and delivered him back to Denmark.
He was informed by the guards of ghost at night. Horatio & Hamlet went to investigate .He saw his father's ghost who informed him of foul play as the cause of his death.
"My lord, I came to see your father's funeral"
"Prithee do not mock me, fellow student, I think it was to see my mother's wedding."
"Indeed, my lord, it followed hard upon."
One of the overarching themes of Hamlet is the questioning of real verses feinted insanity. At the start of the play Hamlet is suicidal, restraining himself only because it woul be considered a sin in the eyes of the church. After the encounter with the ghost of his father, Hamlet goes through a visible transformation. This convinces all characters, save for Horatio, believe him to be mad. At the end of the play, Hamlet kills Claudius, but not before being mortally wounded and poisoned. All traces of madness are gone and Hamlet finds himself at peace at having avenged his father. He tells Horatio to tell the story to the world so that they may learn from them.
Hamlet's ship was attacked by pirates. The pirates agreed to return Hamlet to Denmark for a price. He sent word to Horatio and asked him to get ready to meet him. We also learn that his traitorous friends, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, have met with some dire circumstances.
Prince Hamlet learns that his Uncle Claudius poisoned and murdered his brother and Hamlet's father, King Hamlet. Also he learns that there is an afterlife, and what's more, the doctrine of Purgatory is true. He need never call death "the undiscovered country from whose bourne no traveller returns" again.
== == Hamlet's relationships with the characters around him tend to reflect on the existenestial questions so prevalent in Shakespeare's works. For example, his relationship with his foil (a foil being a character in contrast with the protagonist in order to highlight a particular trait or action of the protagonist). Hamlet's thought instead of action is contrasted with Fortinbras, and their relationship represents the line between just action that turns men into beasts ( What is a man if his chief good and market of his time be but to sleep and feed? (IV. iv.) ) versus pure thought ("a thought which, qurtered, hat but one part widom and ever three parts coward" (IV.iv) ) In the end, the fact that the one rational character Horatio, is left on stage presuades the audience to the idea that a middle ground is necessary between the two.
your mom is the exposistion
If the secret is that Hamlet intends to kill Claudius, the correct answer is "false." We learn during the play that Hamlet has told Horatio, but there's nothing about Hamlet telling Marcellus of his intent to kill Claudius.
One of the overarching themes of Hamlet is the questioning of real verses feinted insanity. At the start of the play Hamlet is suicidal, restraining himself only because it woul be considered a sin in the eyes of the church. After the encounter with the ghost of his father, Hamlet goes through a visible transformation. This convinces all characters, save for Horatio, believe him to be mad. At the end of the play, Hamlet kills Claudius, but not before being mortally wounded and poisoned. All traces of madness are gone and Hamlet finds himself at peace at having avenged his father. He tells Horatio to tell the story to the world so that they may learn from them.
Marcellus thinks that Horatio may know how to speak to a ghost because he is a University Man. I guess Marcellus assumes that's the kind of thing you learn at a University.
no ahahahaa
Hamlet sends letters through the pirates that captured, and inadvertently saved him. He sends letters to Horatio, Claudius, and Gertrude. Claudius's one is meant to taunt him. The pirates use someone named Claudio as an intermediary--presumably he's a courtier, but we never see him.
Hamlet's ship was attacked by pirates. The pirates agreed to return Hamlet to Denmark for a price. He sent word to Horatio and asked him to get ready to meet him. We also learn that his traitorous friends, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, have met with some dire circumstances.
Prince Hamlet learns that his Uncle Claudius poisoned and murdered his brother and Hamlet's father, King Hamlet. Also he learns that there is an afterlife, and what's more, the doctrine of Purgatory is true. He need never call death "the undiscovered country from whose bourne no traveller returns" again.
Rosencrantz is (probably only was) a friend of Hamlet. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern (often considered one) spy on Hamlet the whole time for Claudius. They are constantly in between a plot that they have no idea about (Hamlet versus Claudius) and never learn of their real reason for their trip to Denmark. They probably had no idea that they were going to executed either.
The ghost confirms what Hamlet's "prophetic soul" suspected: Claudius killed his father. He gives many useful details about the murder that Hamlet can use to try to prove it. Hamlet also learns details about the afterlife, but he seems to ignore this. In a later scene, he even talks about the afterlife as somewhere nobody ever comes back from!
The land is essentially worthless.
== == Hamlet's relationships with the characters around him tend to reflect on the existenestial questions so prevalent in Shakespeare's works. For example, his relationship with his foil (a foil being a character in contrast with the protagonist in order to highlight a particular trait or action of the protagonist). Hamlet's thought instead of action is contrasted with Fortinbras, and their relationship represents the line between just action that turns men into beasts ( What is a man if his chief good and market of his time be but to sleep and feed? (IV. iv.) ) versus pure thought ("a thought which, qurtered, hat but one part widom and ever three parts coward" (IV.iv) ) In the end, the fact that the one rational character Horatio, is left on stage presuades the audience to the idea that a middle ground is necessary between the two.
You learn about history by reading what happened when that person wrote,and what happened at that time. Culture