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The Tragedy Of The Ghost Of Late Hamlet

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“Oh I die, Horatio,” breathes young Hamlet, the Danish prince and philosopher, spluttering his final words to his best friend before he closes his eyes for eternity. A few steps away near the throne lies Claudius, brutally stabbed and very much still; the King is dead, and the revenge of the Ghost of late Hamlet is fulfilled. However, these two bodies are not the only ones that are inanimate. Splayed across the court are the helpless limbs and lolling heads of Laertes and Gertrude, whose departures were not meant to be. Neither did Rosencrantz, Guildenstern, and Polonius nor did the lovely, blossoming Ophelia need to face perennial sleep; the lives of seven, including Hamlet himself, deserves to prevail but, of course, does not. William Shakespeare
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