Hamlet Analytical Essay

517 Words3 Pages

The author managed without falling into moralism or rejection of traditional values, expressing the internal discord and suffering that a person is experiencing at the time of family breakdown. This story filled with melancholy and full of bitter truths about the nature of human relationships. It was not an easy read, but interesting, as of usual stories has been written about how people fall in love, but not about the most difficult moment of the separation. This process is full of the pain, anger, violence and the difficulty of breaking with a sense of guilt and a sense of betrayal. Indeed, the main character creates a sense of truthful, hard, sometimes even shocking story with the skillfully chosen tone with is very frankly in conjunction …show more content…

What is more honest: leave, following his inclination, and in an instant to destroy everything that had to bring the love of their children, or to steel himself and left, hiding the rest of the life of self-contempt and indifference to his wife? Trying to sort out the chaos of thoughts and emotions, character compares his situation with the experience of other men like a father, brother, friends. On the one hand, there is an example of his father and another generation of human and other moral principles and foundations of life. For him, never existed the question of what it means "to be a father," he was just him and no doubt of his duty to his wife and children, and if he ever thought about leaving, it was because he believed in the "ideals of chivalry" and in duty to support and protect the family. On the other hand is an another example of Victor, which a few years ago has gone through a divorce and now he is in absolute freedom and loneliness and very happy with his new life. The exact opposite of Victor will be the university friend Asif, happy family man, a religious man, one-piece, solid life principles. He is convinced that the most important thing for a man a sense of responsibility and that the marriage is an eternal struggle and the wisdom is to appreciate what we