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 | | Hamlet's illogical delay in killing his uncle, Claudius, while in prayer, despite Hamlet's possession of incriminating evidence, leads to the first bucket of unnecessary blood, the blood of Polonius, being spilt. |
 | | While it is good that Hamlet finally decides to kill his uncle, yet his motivation is not out of logic, but out of self-indignation. |
 | | Hamlet's final resolution to kill Claudius is too weak, based on rash reasoning, and leads, as a result of great delay, to the deaths of Rosencrantz, Guildenstern, Ophelia, Laertes, the Queen, and Hamlet, himself. |
| www.msu.edu /user/kunzfran/e122.htm (1818 words) |
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