Hamlet's Attitude Towards Death It’s evident that Hamlet’s attitude towards death, as well as his reasons for avoiding his own, changes throughout the play. At first, Hamlet mourns for his late father who had mysteriously died, however, his mother moves on as if it were nothing to her, and quickly marries Claudius, Hamlet’s uncle. Hamlet is of course disturbed by the marriage and by how nonchalant everyone is of the King’s death to where he believes that life is meaningless for him, leading him to contemplate suicide later on. Changes later progress for his thoughts on suicide, more importantly his own reasons to avoid doing so to the point where Hamlet doesn’t kill himself by the end of the play.
As Act I plays, Hamlet falls into a depression
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However, soon Ophelia comes, keeping Hamlet from thinking of suicide, and giving him reason to keep living by reminding him that he needs to find out if Claudius did in fact kill Hamlet’s father. Soon after proving to himself the Claudius is the murderer, Hamlet’s want for revenge comes back.
Lastly, as Hamlet gets his first chance into getting revenge on Claudius, he stops himself; ...And now I’ll do’t. And so am I revenged. That would be scanned: A villain kills my father, and for that I, his sole son, do this same villain send To heaven…. (3.2.76-82)
Hamlet begins fighting with himself if it would be a good idea to kill Claudius now, while he is praying. Hamlet feels that if he kills his uncle now it wouldn’t do much good since Claudius would only go to heaven. Hamlet’s thoughts on death for his uncle changes from being a rush for revenge into a more tactical reasoning against himself. Therefore, this leads into Hamlet’s new reason to not kill himself; Hamlet does not want to go to hell for killing a praying