T.S. Eliot's 1919 essay "Hamlet and His Problems" argues that Shakespeare's Hamlet is an artistic failure because the play does not adequately convey Hamlet's emotions through external events (the objective correlative). Eliot claims Hamlet attempts to portray too many complex emotions, like Hamlet's disgust for his mother Gertrude's incestuous marriage, without sufficient dramatic events to evoke these feelings in the audience. However, the document argues Eliot fails to consider how an Elizabethan audience would have understood Hamlet's intense emotions given the cultural context of the time regarding marriage and family. It asserts Shakespeare accurately portrayed the genuine rage Hamlet and original viewers would feel toward Claudius for his crimes, and Eliot