In attempt to get revenge for his father, Hamlet kills Polonius, but as consequence for that, King Claudius exiles Hamlet to England. Where King Claudius had already arranged for a fight between Ophelia’s Brother Laertes and Hamlet. Hamlet then told Horatio how he planned to overcome Claudius’s scheme to have him murdered …show more content…
A tragic hero will evoke both our pity and our terror but never is completely good nor is the hero ever completely evil. To justify the tragic effect, the hero will appear better than we are, in the sense that he is of higher moral worth. The hero will have to suffer a decline from a state of being happy to one of being sad, brought about by his tragic flaw. Making the King confess took a lot of strategic planning and also with logical thinking. According to the portrayal of the ghost, Hamlet was faced with a supernatural conundrum, in which he had to decide whether the ghost was evil or sending a message from the dead. The ghost claimed to be Hamlet’s father and even revealed he had been murdered by his own brother, who had taken the crown from Hamlet’s father. After some thought, a chance arose for Hamlet to catch King Claudius showing a sign of regret for murdering his own brother, taking the crown from him, and also taking his wife at the same