Noah Mammone Miss Wides English 11:2 6 May 2024 Selfish Ambition: The Ultimate Destruction Pain, agony, destruction; these are fears that humans have had ever since the Fall of Man. Interestingly enough, these fears all stem from the choices that we make. This is seen through the works of Hamlet, As I Lay Dying, The Temporary Job, and The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Each one of these works demonstrates specific examples of how humans interact with each other and how that correlates with ultimate destruction. In Hamlet, there is the death and destruction of many of the main characters, such as the King, the Queen, Hamlet, and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. In As I Lay Dying, one can slowly watch as an entire family begins to tear itself …show more content…
Each book and character offers different insight on what to do to avoid the ultimate destruction that these characters face. Hamlet is one of the most famous plays ever written by Shakespeare. It has drama, plots, and death spread throughout. Nine of the eleven main characters end up losing their lives in this play. What led to this demise? Let's look at Hamlet and King Claudius’s intentions and how that caused their colleagues' deaths. In the play, Hamlet discovers that King Claudius, Hamlet's uncle, has killed Hamlet's father in order to take his place as king. Hamlet wishes to seek revenge for his father's death. This need for revenge ends up causing the deaths of Polonius, Ophilia, Rosencrantz, Guildenstern, Laertes, and King Claudius. King Claudius wishes to secure his spot as king, ensuring that no one will challenge his rule. He sees that Hamlet is in the way of this goal and ends up trying to get rid of him. Through this attempt, he ends up killing Gertrude and Hamlet. Now why did these intentions cause so much death? How could these simple ambitions turn so sour? The answer lies in observing how each of these motives is for personal