How come it has taken me this long to get around to reading Hamlet! It is an amazing play that captures so much of what it means to be human in any era. The lines in this play are phenom. My favorite one is said by the horrible King Claudius. Yea I know “to be or not to be” is supposed to be the famous line in this play but who cannot love and feel the impact of what the antagonist says:
“My words fly up, my thoughts remain below: Words without thoughts never t
The play of Hamlet is multifaceted. In Hamlet, there is the conundrum of justifying the killing or letting of a murderer live, the issue of suicide and accidental murder, the position of women’s roles, religious ideas dealing with the afterlife and reality of ghosts, and the issue of friendship and family relations. The story Hamlet is about the main character, Hamlet, and the horribly awkward position he is put into. He is asked to avenge his father, the king, by killing his uncle the new king. Hamlet is initially plagued with indecision because of the right or wrongness of such an act or inaction. In the end, when he himself is dying, his mother has been poisoned, and a bunch of other important people (including his lover) have died, he finally decides to kill his uncle. As complicated as the character Hamlet’s plight is, I think his uncle is much more complex and more human. Hamlet represents more of a philosophical situation whereas Claudius represents more so than Hamlet, a human.
Emotionally, we can relate to Claudius. I know that sounds crazy because most of us have never murdered for power (let alone murdered our own brother), but we can still relate because with Claudius we see the torment of a sinful life and the struggle to be repentant. Claudius says, “Try what repentance can: what can it not? Yet what can it when one cannot repent? O wretched state! O bosom black as death!” How many times do we face this same issue? How many times do we not want to give up a vice that we enjoy? Or how hard is it to be sorry for what we have done because we enjoy the benefits we have reaped from our sin even when our conscience sears us? Even more beautiful and emotionally stirring is Claudius’s next plea, “Help, angels! Make assay! Bow, stubborn knees; and, heart with strings of steel, Be soft as sinews of the newborn babe!” He asks for a repentant heart! This is biblically accurate to human necessity for God’s help in bringing about true repentance. Often times we struggle with those parts of our heart that will never conform to God, and they must be circumcised by God and His Word. “No, a person is a Jew who is one inwardly; and circumcision is circumcision of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the written code. Such a person’s praise is not from other people, but from God” Romans 2:29. Claudius knows by written law and even a sense of heart that what he has done is wrong but he lacks true full-fledged repentance. We see in him guilt but not conviction. We know that Claudius is human because Shakespeare makes it a central part of the plot to see that he does suffer some level of conviction and guilt for what he has done. In fact, for Hamlet to get closer to making his decision about carrying out vengeance on his uncle, he puts on a play to see if he can reveal his uncles’ guilt.
As much as Claudius is a villain, he is also an amazing character and clearly human. He is someone we can connect with and see ourselves in even though we don’t like him. In fact, it might just be because we see a picture of ourselves in him that we dislike him. It could also be why we can, to our own disgust, sympathize with him. Claudius is real, his heart is real, and his human nature that damns him is real. We can see our plight of sin and unwillingness to let it go in King Claudius, the “incestuous, murderous, damned Dane” and we can learn from it. We can come to better understand the truth of who we are, how we struggle, and how to overcome and repent. Claudius shows us the ugliness of unrepentant sin and its spiral. He, as a character in a play, also shows us inadvertently the beauty of the cross and our need for it.