There is a mysterious power in this Universe, whom we may call Fate or Destiny that operates in the Universe and is responsible for the manner in which things take shape. Shakespeare’s Hamlet’s task obviously is not only to avenge his father’s murder but to purge society of the evil which infects it. Hamlet has to play an important, constructive role in weeding out the cancer that is eating out the state of Denmark. Whereas Morrison’s Sethe struggles with the haunting memory of her slave–past and the retribution of “Beloved” the Ghost of the infant daughter whom she has killed in order to save her from the living death of slavery. In other words, Beloved deals with not only ’reconstructed memory’, but also ‘deconstructed history’. This article is an attempt to analyze the use of supernatural element in Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Morrison’s Beloved. Shakespeare and Morrison both have treated the presence of supernatural element as a physical representation of mental doubts and suspicions. In psychoanalytical terms, “Beloved” can be seen as an embodiment of Sethe’s traumatic past and Ghost in Hamlet as Hamlet’s own conscience urging and spurring Hamlet to revenge.