Who is seeking revenge in Hamlet?
Chloe Ramirez
Updated on May 08, 2026
Keeping this in consideration, how does revenge play a role in Hamlet?
It is a play driven by a protagonist who spends most of the play contemplating revenge rather than exacting it. Hamlet's inability to avenge the murder of his father drives the plot and leads to the deaths of most of the major characters, including Polonius, Laertes, Ophelia, Gertrude, and Rosencrantz and Guildenstern.
Also, who is to blame for the tragedy in Hamlet? In Shakespeare's play Hamlet the blame for all the tragedies can be put on Claudius. His evil nature created downfall for many of the characters in the play. The murder of the King, the decisions Claudius makes, and how he manipulates Laertes all lead to tragic events occurring.
Beside this, who takes revenge in Hamlet?
Commanded by his father's ghost in Act 1 to 'Revenge his foul and most unnatural murder' by his brother Claudius, who has robbed him of his wife and throne as well as his life, Hamlet swears that 'with wings as swift / As meditation, or the thoughts of love,' he will 'sweep to [his] revenge' (1.5. 25, 29–31).
Is Hamlet justified in his revenge?
Hamlet is justified to obey the ghost and kill Claudius, who killed King Hamlet, the prince's father. He makes the claim after learning that Claudius killed his father. The ghost further reveals to Hamlet that Claudius conspired with his mother, Gertrude, to take over the leadership of the kingdom of Denmark.