Do you know Shakespeare’s longest play? Here’s a clue, “To be or not to be, that is the question.” Hamlet is the answer. This play has been translated into 75 languages, even Klingon! We discovered a plethora of quotes:
“Brevity is the soul of wit.”
“Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.”
“The lady protests too much, methinks.”
“…dog will have his day”
“…sweets to the sweet”
“…to thine own self be true”
Shakespheare shows his wonderful wordsmithery as he weaves this timeless tale of brotherly love that took a wrong turn reminiscent of Cain and Abel. Hamlet’s father was poisoned by his power hungry brother and a month later this unsavory fellow becomes Hamlet’s stepfather when he marries Hamlet’s mom, prompting the classic line, “Frailty, thy name is woman.”
The reader is bombarded with an abundance of themes:
Truth vs Deception
Thought vs Action
Madness vs Revenge
Mortality-we are all shuffling off this mortal coil…
For those that aren’t squeamish about the main character talking to a skull, fighting in a freshly dug grave, and dueling with poisoned weapons this is the play to be read, just remember it lives up to the name tragedy. Instead of “Get thee to a nunnery” one might get thee to a library or a bookstore to meet Hamlet and “friends”.
One funny quote was when Hamlet was asked what he was reading he replied, “Words, words, words.” Please join Kate and I as we recap Shakespeare’s tragedy in which Hamlet tells the lovely Ophelia, “I must be cruel, only to be kind.” What is going on in this guy’s head?