Hamlet is the most ironic of his works, and, perhaps because of this dominating irony, the appeal of Hamlet has been broader, more mighty, and more close to the heart of com mon life than any other tragedy since Eschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. The Dane has stood for generations, a number who embodies the sharpest difficulties man has to Confront, sin and punishment; the most poignant secrets, life and death. Hamlet is profoundly tragic in its presentation of fundamental contrasts, engaging an ironic beliefs of life, a insight of the baffling, secret, double-faced appearances of ...