206k views
2 votes
Reread lines 57-73. What mood has Shakespeare established

so far? Cite textual evidence in your response.

1 Answer

1 vote

Answer: The mood that Shakespeare creates at the beginning of "Hamlet" is dark and suspenseful.

Step-by-step explanation:

A mood is a literary element that the author uses in order to evoke certain feelings in his audience.

At the very beginning of Shakespeare's "Hamlet", a dark and frightening atmosphere is established. First of all, the king has recently died, and people are still in a state of shock. To make a situation more chilling, the two guards encounter the late king's ghost in heavy darkness. The appearance of the king's ghost serves as a foreshadowing of the bad events that are going to take place. As Horatio describes it:

"In what particular thought to work I know not,

But in the gross and scope of mine opinion

This bodes some strange eruption to our state."

User Domskey
by
8.0k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.