Of all Shakespeare's works, Hamlet is probably the most controversial and striking one. No matter at what stage of your life, when you have experienced a rich and profound spiritual life, when you have perfected your personality and rediscovered a brand-new yourself, you can always find something in Hamlet that you think should be immortal. Because it talks about the choice of life, and the life path that a person who lives in a specific historical and living environment chooses when facing his unique destiny and the common destiny of all mankind, only the limited experience accumulated from the past can rely on and rely on. In a sense, his experience also represents our own experience, and the fate he faces is something we have to face at some stage of our lives. Facing the existence of despair, we explore the truth in contradictions, seek the truth in fog, act in difficulties, and rebuild the value system and spiritual building in a world that has lost standards and measurable standards. ...
Hamlet is profound, melancholy, kind, upright, knowledgeable, alert and rational, and he is a humanist. He hates evil, ignorance and narrowness. He hoped to achieve great things and build a democratic, free and humane society, but the reality disappointed him. He wants to avenge his father, but he is worried that political changes will lead to domestic political turmoil. Therefore, he was hesitant and unhappy, which was the root of his deep melancholy and delay in taking action, and also the crisis of humanism in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Hamlet is imperfect. Sometimes his choices are irrational and impulsive, such as when he stabbed Polonius, who he mistakenly thought was the king, in anger. However, perhaps it is his irrational choice and expression of human weakness that makes us accept and agree with his artistic image from the bottom of our hearts, because we can often see his shadow in ourselves. ...
Hamlet also cherishes his feelings very much. When he pretended to be crazy to avoid the persecution of the king, he still couldn't help but miss Ophelia. He couldn't bear to make her suffer from pretending to be crazy, but he wrote her a little poem at the risk of being suspected by the king: "You should doubt that the stars are fire;" ; Doubt whether the sun moves; Doubting truth is a liar; But never doubt my love. That's it. Hamlet constructed his own tragedy in his choice of fate. It turned out that he could completely succumb to his own fate and not inquire about the truth about his father's death, but Hamlet's character did not allow him to live a mediocre life with a question, so he resolutely embarked on the road of finding the truth. Since then, as long as any choice he makes is slightly different, his fate and the fate of others will eventually change, but his experience has prompted him to make decisions that he thinks are correct but actually fatal again and again. Finally, Hamlet did not regret his choice. He just hoped that Horatio would "take a painful breath for him". To tell my story. " Because everyone's choice is unique and unrepeatable in a specific historical situation, it is meaningless to assume here that Hamlet can go back to the past and choose again. All of us are like this. It can be said that there is a Hamlet in each of us, and every choice we make is unique and irreplaceable, which will directly affect our future destiny. There is no standard to measure whether our choice is correct or not. We must accept all the consequences of our choice, as Hamlet said, "The unknown will live behind me!" " Maybe the problem we have to face is not as serious as "to be or not to be". However, in this chaotic world full of risks, it will not be easy to make every choice. In this world where there is no measure of good and evil except the goal, make a brave choice and accept your destiny frankly.