Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Macbeth

This paper discusses Shakespeare’s two tragedies Hamlet and Macbeth, which relate life as a study of passion.

By all critics, at one time or another, William Shakespeare has been variously referred to as the master playwright, brilliant in his portrayal of nearly every facet of action, plot, character; in short, a genius of dramatic expression rarely equaled in his or our time. It is a tribute of course that one-third of all books written is directly or indirectly related to this man. But I do not only wish to praise a man who has already been praised beyond this writer’s ability, but to expound on one of his themes frequently, and, again, brilliantly woven into many if not most of his plays. This being the theme of the supernatural, present, specifically, in Hamlet and Macbeth, which will provide the necessary backdrop for our discussions of the supernatural theme.

The use of the supernatural in Shakespeare’s works…