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Scene III. A room in the castle.

Chapter 11830 wordsCompleted

In a room at Elsinore, King Claudius meets Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. He confides that he dislikes Hamlet’s “madness” and fears its spread, ordering the two friends to accompany Hamlet to England in order to rid the kingdom of the threat. The pair agree to carry out the king’s commission. After they exit, Polonius enters. He tells Claudius that he intends to hide behind the tapestry in Gertrude’s closet to listen to whatever is said between mother and son, hoping to discover the cause of Hamlet’s behavior. Claudius thanks him and departs. Left alone, Claudius launches into a long soliloquy, acknowledging his fratricide, expressing that his guilt cannot be cleansed by prayer, and wrestling with the impossibility of true repentance. He questions whether mercy can absolve a murder, and laments his “black” soul. Hamlet then enters unseen. He reflects on the king’s prayer, debating whether to kill Claudius now that the king appears to be seeking forgiveness. Hamlet argues that striking a man during prayer would send his soul to heaven, which would not be true revenge. He resolves that the murder must wait for a time when the king is not praying, and he continues to plot his revenge, noting that his mother’s “physic” only prolongs her suffering. The scene ends with Claudius rising, noting that words without thoughts do not reach heaven, and exiting.

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Through chapter 11

A ghost resembling the late King of Denmark appears on the battlements of Elsinore, witnessed by the night watch of Bernardo, Marcellus, and Horatio, who resolve to tell Prince Hamlet. Claudius dispatches envoys to Norway, grants Laertes permission to return to France, admonishes Hamlet for lingering grief and orders him to remain in Denmark; Hamlet delivers a bitter soliloquy lamenting his mother’s swift remarriage and the state of the world, then learns from Horatio, Marcellus, and Bernardo about the ghost of his father and vows to keep watch that night. Laertes prepares to leave for France, urging Ophelia to distrust Hamlet’s romantic overtures as politically dangerous; Polonius delivers his famous counsel to Laertes and warns Ophelia that Hamlet’s promises are unreliable and should be avoided. Hamlet, Horatio, and Marcellus meet the Ghost on the castle platform; Hamlet, defiant, insists on following the specter despite their protests, and the Ghost leaves the scene with him, prompting Marcellus to remark that something is rotten in the state of Denmark. The Ghost reveals that King Hamlet was poisoned by his brother Claudius, commands Hamlet to avenge his death while sparing his mother, and Hamlet vows to feign madness and swears Horatio and Marcellus to secrecy. Polonius dispatches his servant Reynaldo to spy on Laertes in France; Ophelia tells Polonius that Hamlet behaved erratically after their encounter, prompting Polonius to conclude Hamlet is lovesick; Polonius reports this to King Claudius and Queen Gertrude, who decide to enlist Hamlet’s school friends Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to discover the cause of his madness; Hamlet meets Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, who reveal they were sent by the King and Queen; later a troupe of actors arrives, and Hamlet, thrilled by a speech about a king’s murder, vows to use their play to expose Claudius’s guilt. Polonius instructs Reynaldo to spy on his son Laertes in France, and Ophelia reports Hamlet’s disheveled, frantic behavior to Polonius, leading him to conclude Hamlet’s madness is love‑driven and to resolve to inform King Claudius. Claudius commissions Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to discover the cause of Hamlet’s odd behaviour; Polonius reports to the court that Hamlet’s madness may stem from Ophelia’s affection and his father’s death, and proposes to place Ophelia near Hamlet to observe him; Norwegian ambassadors Voltimand and Cornelius deliver news of peace with Fortinbras and a royal tribute of three thousand crowns; Hamlet meets the returning friends, mocks Polonius, delivers his “What a piece of work is a man” soliloquy, and decides to stage a play reenacting his father’s murder to catch the king’s conscience. Hamlet delivers his famous “To be, or not to be” soliloquy and then cruelly rebuffs Ophelia, urging her to “get thee to a nunnery”; Claudius and Polonius interpret his behavior as love‑driven madness and resolve to send Hamlet to England after the upcoming play. Hamlet organizes the play that reenacts his father’s murder, directs the actors, and asks Horatio to watch King Claudius’s reaction; the performance (“The Murder of Gonzago”/“the Mouse‑trap”) is staged, Claudius abruptly calls for lights and exits, confirming his guilt; Hamlet resolves to exploit this proof and steels himself for further action against his mother. Claudius commissions Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to escort Hamlet to England, hoping to remove his dangerous madness; Polonius decides to hide behind the arras in Gertrude’s closet to eavesdrop on her conversation with Hamlet; Claudius delivers a guilt‑laden soliloquy about his murder of King Hamlet and his inability to be truly pardoned; Hamlet, hearing Claudius pray, resolves not to kill him while he is in prayer and muses on the proper way to exact revenge, planning to wait for a better moment.