Shakespeare utilizes Claudius and Gertrude …show more content…
Referencing , It is almost as if “Hamlet is torn between doing what his father has commanded of him, and what he and all of society knows what is morally right ().” Immediately following Hamlet's conversation with the Ghost of his father he seems determined to fulfill his wishes in avenging his death, but his hesitation is later proven during Claudius’s repentance. While Claudius is kneeling and praying, Prince Hamlet is lurking behind him with a sword giving him the ability to carry out his revenge, However he hesitates while …show more content…
His intentions are stated in the book of Isaiah where Babylon's sudden fall is compared to the fall of Satan. Satan seeked to “make himself like the most high” (NIV Bible, Isaiah 14:15). According the biblical accounts, Satan was once an honored angel in heaven, next to Christ, but when God said to His Son, Jesus, "Let us make man in our image," Satan wished to be consulted concerning the formation of man, and because he was not, he was became filled with jealousy, and hatred. His desire to receive the highest honors in heaven next to God, resulted in his expulsion from heaven along with all the angels who had supported him in questioning the authority of God. Before his rebellion Satan was one of God’s highly exalted angels, but he desired to be God himself, and not his