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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The connection between Elizabethan ghostly superstitions and the fact that Shakespeare's Hamlet is replete with their presence is no coincidence. The writer discusses that while there is much discussion and disagreement throughout the play as to whether or not the ghosts actually exist, there is no doubt that they endured partly as legitimate apparitions who plagued the well-being of every man's soul, as well as being nothing more than one's over active imagination. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCghost.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
no doubt that they endured partly as legitimate apparitions who plagued the well-being of every mans soul, as well as nothing more than ones over active imagination. To be
sure, it requires much investigation -- both inwardly and in outward appearance -- to ascertain just how real Hamlets ghost truly is; only after significant consideration do the characters come
to the conclusion that there is, indeed, merit to its presence. For the typical Elizabethan, believing in ghosts was akin to presuming that the apparitions were Satan taking on the
appearance of the dead so as to jeopardize the deceaseds souls through his lies. "It is said that England is the most haunted country in the entire world" (Anonymous
rufford.html). Such application, which was both obvious and veiled at the same time, was also adopted by Shakespeares Hamlet, particularly in the first half of the play; no one
wants to assume responsibility for seeing the ghost when it initially reveals itself. It is only after great consideration that people actually begin to acknowledge the apparitions existence.
"The spirit that I have seen May be the devil; and the devil hath power To assume a pleasing shape; yea and perhaps Abuses me to damn me" (Shakespeare PG).
Elizabethan superstition with regard to ghosts helps to fuel the supernatural inferences in Shakespeares Hamlet, because the two entities mirror each other
so well. This particular period in time was such that ghosts were a common thing for people to believe truly existed; this acceptance of the undead returning from the
grave was closely related to their belief in witches, as well. It is not so unacceptable a task to understand how a part of the "unholy world" (Duermyer 10.19.97-23.56.11.html)
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