Sean Berube Profile picture
May 27 17 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Hamlet is the greatest play of all time

It also asks one of the most disturbing questions in all of literature

Not, “To be or not to be?”

But a simpler 2-word question:

It drove Hamlet insane, and still haunts readers to this day…🧵 Image
The central question of Hamlet is the opening line:

“Who’s there?”

On the surface it's a simple question - a guard asks it as a stranger approaches

But there's far more to this question than meets the eye:

It hauntingly lingers throughout the entire play Image
As a plot recap, Hamlet is visited by the ghost of his Father, who reveals:

“My brother murdered me. Avenge me!”

Hamlet then swears a dreadful vow:

“From the table of my memory

I'll wipe away all trivial fond records…

And thy commandment all alone shall live” Image
Hamlet promises to erase all morality except vengeance

However, this vow sends him into a deep turmoil of paranoia, cynicism, and insanity

By act 3, he loses his will to live:

“To be or not to be? That is the question”

Why does he despair? It goes back to the opening line Image
“Who’s there?” is not just a guard’s question

It’s a question Hamlet keeps asking as he debates whether or not to avenge his Father

It’s the very question that leads to his spiritual collapse Image
Hamlet first asks “Who’s there?” when the ghost appears:

He wonders if its a real ghost, or a vision, or a demon

Here, Hamlet begins doubting his senses

But his uncertainty doesn’t stop there Image
After hearing of the murder, Hamlet starts asking “Who’s there?” to his community

His uncle, his mother, and the court of Denmark:

“Are you all who you claim to be? Or are your liars and murderers?”

Unhealthy paranoia begins to rot his soul Image
Next, Hamlet asks “who’s there?” to himself:

He wonders if he’s insane, or a coward, or both

His skepticism isolates him. He becomes a stranger in his own body

Finally, Hamlet turns his doubt to Heaven itself: Image
“To be or not to be? That is the question?”

Hamlet becomes suicidal

He doubts whether life itself is even good:

“Who’s there… Are you there, God?”

Hamlet, doubtful of reality, can no longer bear existence itself Image
This is the point:

Hamlet’s vow to murder Claudius destroyed his moral foundation

Without morality, he cannot know good from evil, nor truth from lies

And without that, he cannot know anyone. Not even himself Image
"Who’s there?" Is a cry of existential dread

Without truth, Hamlet cannot know God, neighbor, or self

He loses all certainty, and his very will to live

This then, is why Hamlet is the “first modern man” Image
Modern man, like Hamlet, is plagued by doubt

He’s skeptical of truth, morality, and even his own identity

So Hamlet’s despair is a warning:

Abandon truth and morality, and life becomes unbearable

However, Hamlet’s doubt points to a solution too: Image
“Who’s there?” teaches us that relationship is the root of reality

Hamlet's misery came from his isolation:

Becoming a stranger to God, man, and self

But man was made for relationship, and relationship is perfected by love Image
To love is to will the Good of God and neighbor

When you seek to know and love God and others, you begin to know yourself

The answer to “who’s there?” becomes clear:

“I am who am” Image
So to live well is to love well:

To know God and neighbor, and will the Good towards them, is to know yourself

Destiny then, is not asking "who's there?"

It's answering "who's there?" through a constant, charitable love that desires Goodness for all Image
If you want to go even deeper into Hamlet, join me at the Athenaeum book club tonight at 8pm EST!

athenaeum-book-club.circle.so/join?invitatio…
Bonus:

I offer faith-based fitness coaching for Christian men looking to:

- Get fit
- Grow in their faith
- Learn the great books

If interested, DM me "fitness" to discuss!

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More from @SeanBerube4

Sep 24
Vladimir Lenin hailed him as “The Titan of the Revolution”

Dostoevsky warned he was a genocidal maniac

Here’s the story of the most evil communist of all time — the man who sent Russia into an uproar…🧵 Image
Sergey Nechayev was born on Sept 20, 1847 in Ivanovo, Russia

He was raised in poverty, and as a teenager, supported himself as a waiter

His career didn’t last long — he despised poverty and the powerful

Aged 18, he moved to Moscow, vowing to wreck society and eat the rich Image
Moscow was rife with revolutionary fervor — Communism was the new fad

Nechayev attended university classes, and was radicalized

He frequented underground revolutionary movements like The Decembrists

The goal of these groups — destroy society through violence and terror Image
Read 22 tweets
Sep 5
Dostoevsky’s best writing isn’t his fiction

It’s a letter to his brother — written 30 minutes after a gun was pressed to his head

He explains how cheating death flipped his understanding of life’s meaning:

In a flash he found God, and a fire that fueled his writing career:🧵 Image
As a young adult, Dostoevsky was a radical socialist

He was a member of the Petrashevsky Circle:

A revolutionary group that sought to tear down Russia’s Regime

Many members were extremists. Some even advocated terrorism

Soon, the government caught on… Image
Their circle was raided and arrests were made, including Dostoevsky

The Tzar considered the group a serious threat and sentenced them to death:

Dostoevsky had one month left to live Image
Read 20 tweets
Sep 3
Alexander Solzhenitsyn was the “writer who took down an empire”

His work Gulag Archipelago details the horrors of life in the USSR, and made a global mockery of the evil regime

Here are some excerpts from Gulag that explain how to destroy an evil empire...🧵 Image
“The object of life is not prosperity as we are made to believe, but the maturity of the human soul.”

Solzhenitsyn learned this in prison: tyrants can take everything from you but your soul...

Being virtuous is the ultimate rebellion

You fix the world by fixing yourself Image
“the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?”

Spiritual maturity is painful:

You have evil inside of you, but true growth comes from sacrificing the bad habits that harm your soul Image
Read 14 tweets
Aug 29
Tolstoy had it all — fame, fortune, and stardom — but it nearly killed him:

He realized he had wasted his life, and wanted to die

Instead, he wrote a little known masterpiece:

It reveals the truth about human nature, the soul, and how to live a life that truly matters…🧵 Image
Tolstoy shared his insights in his novella “The Death of Ivan Ilyich”

It follows the lucrative career of a lawyer, Ivan Ilyich, who on his death bed, regrets that his life was a waste

The story uses his death to ask, “what does a meaningful life look like?” Image
The story begins by tracking Ivan’s life

He had a good up-bringing and was well-educated, prospering in his studies

He was praised for his ambitions, but this same praise was dangerous for his young, impressionable mind… Image
Read 20 tweets
Aug 21
Samson is the worst hero of the Bible — an impious warlord ensnared by lust

Yet his fatal flaw was worse than sexual sin

He fell for a timeless snare that has destroyed men throughout history

Here’s the root of Samson’s downfall, and how to avoid the same fate…🧵 Image
Samson was a judge, or military leader of Israel

His birth was providential, preceded by an angel’s announcement:

“You will conceive and give birth to a son…

the boy is to be a Nazirite to God from the womb” (Judg. 13:3–5) Image
A Nazirite vow meant:

- No wine
- No touching the dead
- No cutting of the hair

This vow made you holy, or literally “set apart,” to God

As such, Samson was destined for holiness since birth Image
Read 16 tweets
Aug 20
Thomas-Alexandre Dumas is the most inspiring man you’ve never heard of

Born a slave, he went on to become France’s greatest general alongside Napoleon… and that wasn’t even his best achievement!

He actually inspired France’s all time greatest novel, written by his own son…🧵 Image
Dumas was born in Haiti, 1762, of mixed descent

His Father had big ambitions for him to succeed in life, but there was a problem:

Due to his African mother, Dumas was a slave and denied rights

To free him, his father devised the unlikeliest of plans… Image
His father sold Dumas to a fellow Frenchman

How was this helpful?

The Frenchman would take Dumas to France:

Slavery was illegal there, so he would be free by default

His father, meanwhile, used the proceeds of the sale to accompany his son in France Image
Read 16 tweets

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