Friday, February 10, 2017
Hamlet and Heart of Darkness
With either the literature out in the world patchy themes overlap. The carry Hamlet by William Shakespeare is a tragic tail of betrayal, retaliation and redemption. In the novel midpoint of Darkness by Joseph Conrad the primary(prenominal) compositors case Marlow journeys through the congou River where faces tragedy, death and the decent into dark. both of these pieces of literature share the themes of magic trick versus cosmos, self identity and madness. sometimes someones first impression or thoughts office not always bushel to reality. In Hamlet, Claudius is seen as a loving step make Hamlet only if in reality he killed Old Hamlet to adopt the throne for himself. In the mention O villain, villain, smiling beatified villain! My tables. Meet it is I set down. That one whitethorn smile, and smile, and be a villain (Shakespeare 70). This quote shows how Claudius is seen as a happy and honest man only if in reality he is a snake who betrayed his brother. Similarly i n gist of Darkness, Marlow sees a man named Mr. Kurtz as idolizes him and is mesmerized by the square up that man must buzz off, (Conrad 22). In reality when he meets Mr. Kurtz he sees that the man he idolized was nothing and a crazed maniac that was pampered and spoiled, (Conrad 40) by the darkness of the jungle. It seems as if al of the congou tea is different from what Marlow first expected. The full-page trading route was cluttered with diseased bodies and constant attacks by natives. Even when Marlow reached the trading postal service he expected to reckon a fortress with gravid wooden walls but or else he found wager with the heads of natives mounted on top. In both novels the theme of appearance versus reality is seen passim both pieces of literature and is usually experienced by the main character expecting one thing but instead the reality existence a lot different.\ndecision oneself- identity is a chance upon step to the characters development throughout the story. Hamlet had a transform in his identity when his father�...
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