Tell Them: Secrets Exposure and the Consequences That Follow Shut Your Mouth. What lurks in the darkness has a way of haunting you. Open up the. What haunts you has a way of coming into the light. Secrets, a thought kept to oneself due to possible harm or embarrassment of oneself or another. Such notions will always find a way out, whether wanted to be relieved of the thought or not. Not only does As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner prove this through Dewey Dell’s secret and its effects along with Anse’s true desires of how to spend his money, but Hamlet by Shakespeare, too, exemplifies this all throughout the play as Hamlet’s ending shows ultimate secrecy through the reveal of who killed the King” In addition, The Dog by César Aira illustrates …show more content…
However, as most believed this to be an accident, Hamlet knew deep down that a secret must be let out about the murderer’s true harm to his father. He knew that his father had been killed by someone, and he felt sure he knew who he was. While out, Hamlet came upon the ghost of his late father who proclaimed he wanted “Revenge his foul and most unnatural murder.” Hamlet questioned this as he felt unsure what he was witnessing in the moment, however, the ghost explains, “Murder most foul, as in the best it is, (b)ut this most foul, strange, and unnatural.” Hamlet exclaims who knew of such a thing and responded, “Haste me to know ’t, that I, with wings as swift (a)s meditation or the as Hamlet suspected, leading Hamlet to prove his father’s murder, while keeping all this information secret. He grows wary of all around him and nearly goes insane as he begins to question his love, Ophelia, on her true intentions with him. Hamlet asks Ophelia whether she is “honest” and “fair” then explains he had loved her but also tells her, “I loved you not.” Ophelia feels deceived and Hamlet shouts expletives towards her and expresses she should “go to the nunnery,” another term for a …show more content…
He looked young, vigorous, supple: younger than me and more alive (the life had been leaking out of me all those years, like water from a bathtub), his barks resounding inside the bus with undiminished force, his jaws with their dazzling white teeth already closing on my flesh, his shining eyes that had not, for one moment, stopped staring into mine.” This quote, although long, holds an important message that everything may crash down and be destroyed when a secret is kept and not resolved. Such harmful acts on such an innocent creature kept secret will eventually come to light. Secrets may harm, but they seem to do much more. Sillier, and much less harmful, Oscar Wilde’s short story called The Importance of Being Earnest shows a different side to secrecy and lies. The story begins with a man named John, also known as Jack. Jack keeps his “brother” a secret from Algernon, who believes Jack’s name is Ernest. We see this as the story is quoted saying, “LANE: Mr. Ernest Worthing. Enter Jack. Lane goes out and he's a