4.) During act III, scene IV, line 30, Hamlet, in order to see Gertrude’s reaction, indirectly accuses her of being a part of Claudius’ atrocity by saying that what he has done (killed Polonius) is as bad as killing a king and marrying his brother. Once Gertrude hears this, confused, she repeats “as kill a king?” and asks him what she has done to cause him to be so rude to her, assuring that, like his father’s ghost had said, she was only weak and she had nothing to do with his assassination.…
One of the most prominent similarities between the two is the alienation they felt from their mothers. Despite the love they both share for their respective mothers, they also felt the most pain from them. Hamlet, prior to his father’s murder, had a great deal of compassion and respect for his mother Gertrude (citation). However things changed after his mother’s re-marriage to the king’s brother. Devastated by his father’s loss Hamlet falls into to a deep depression. While grieving for his father Hamlet is continuously confronted by Claudius, his step father, and his mother Gertrude asking what possibly could be the source for his pain. After revealing he is troubled by his father’s death, Gertrude tells Hamlet that he must stop grieving; everybody dies so he mustn’t be sad (1.2.68-73). Hamlet is offended by his mother’s ease to just forget, and with a sarcastic retort he tells his mother that the sorrow depicted from his appearance is only a fraction of the sadness he is truly experiencing. This indicates Hamlet’s first true instance of alienation. Hamlet is forced to combat his sorrow on his own, as the only person who could possibly relate to him has entirely moved on. Upon the discovery of the true details pertaining to his father’s death Hamlet plots revenge against Claudius. Hamlet stages a play that demonstrates the true means of his father’s…
For the most part, this Hamlet's soliloquy is the crisis of the play. It is when Hamlet fail to kill Claudius at prayer although he has the inner certitude that he is the murderer of his father. And this is obviously due to his consciousness. This soliloquy emphasizes in one way or another the universal human thought: to act or not to act in front of a situation requiring immediate action, always ask inner questions, make difficult choices and sometimes be tugged by his or her choice. Shakespeare uses, thereby, Hamlet to reflect on situations in the current life on which people are unable to have control, or difficult events to overcome, just because consciousness pushes them to understand that every action has its consequences and leads them…
in all words Hamlet is talking to his mother (gertrude) hinting his depression,the whole fact of his mother marrying his fathers uncle already sickens him, and the fact that his mother show no grief or sadness about king hamlet ( Hamlets father) hurts hamlet more and that whole crazy sitoution is whats making him act so depressed and gloomy. Yet his mother and claudius completely void out their incest marriage, they put all his gloom from just his fathers death.…
Opening to Act three, Hamlets first known soliloquy " To be or not to be" suggest the idea of suicide to the readers. "The sling and arrows of outrageous fortune"(3.1.1-3). William Shakespeare, staying that love is being hit with a million arrows while his heart yearns for his love of Opehila. They both had some conflicting backgrounds and became inactable for each other. As the play grew further and further , it suggested an idea that the soliloquy provided knowledge about the affection towards each character.…
Often times life will present one with a situation where the best decision is to take action. In William Shakespeare’s “Hamlet”, Hamlet’s second soliloquy reveals Hamlet’s initial inability to take action due to his lack of courage.…
At the beginning of the play Hamlet seems sane. Although he does express disappointment in his mother for dating his own uncle, his feelings are reasonable. He is grieving towards his father’s recent death. In act 1, scene 2, Hamlet begins to express his depression when he says:…
In the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare, the main character Hamlet is seen as a very emotional person. His emotions change all the time throughout the play so he attempts to act crazy so nobody knows what’s going on with him. When he acts crazy to hide his emotions, it affects everyone else but, Hamlet does not realize it. The emotions that he shows in the play are sorrow, anger and guilt.…
The tone of Hamlet's first soliloquy begins as sad and depressed as Hamlet contemplates suicide. The tone changes to angry and bitter while Hamlet ponders the relationship between his mother and his uncle. Through Shakespeare's use of diction and syntax he shows Hamlet's disapproval of this relationship.…
Since Hamlet is understandably disturbed by the sudden death of his father and his mother's hasty marriage to his uncle, King Claudius, the abnormality of his behavior to some extent also understandable. Hamlet is naturally withdrawn, dark, and morose in the wake of these traumatic events. And, by the same token, when he gives vent to his abject mood with lines like "How…
Hamlet experiences many states of mind throughout the play such as depression, sadness, and anger. In Act 1 of the play we learn that Hamlet's father is dead; shortly after his mother marries his uncle Claudius who becomes the king. Hamlet is said to be very gloomy and not himself, but this doesn't come as a…
Laurence Olivier Hamlet 1948 was my favorite soliloquy. Although the character itself is thinking about suicide, the actor doesn’t portray as if he really wants to die. He knows deep down inside that it would be stupid to end his character’s life because things aren’t going his way just yet. The music gives the viewer the idea that Hamlet is absolutely unsure about taking his own life. When he pulls out the knife a big bang sounds off, which gave me the sense that Hamlet was going to kill himself right then, but then he thinks about what he has been through and why he just wants to end all of his problems. The position of his body demonstrates his attitude and mood. Obviously he’s on a edge of a cliff alone where he is to himself and can contemplate…
Throughout the play, Hamlet is driven to avenge his father’s death and expose the lies of Polonius, Gertrude, Ophelia, and Claudius who attempted to deceive him. In order to be successful Hamlet puts on his own act and even a play to reveal the truth. There is an obvious change between his personality in private and public. His public persona is over exaggerated and childish at times but it’s revealed to the reader that it’s only an act. He puts on a show in order to get the characters around him to perceive him as crazy. Yet his private persona contrasts his actions in public. Through Hamlet’s soliloquies, he give the readers insight into he is truly feelings. In the play there is a distinct yet intentional difference in Hamlet’s personality,…
Hamlet's inner monologues reveal much about what he is feeling and also aids in understanding the nature of the Oedipal complex within the character. Aspects of the Oedipal complex can be seen Hamlet's first soliloquy where Hamlet speaks to himself, revealing his personal expression of pain and suffering. The main cause of Hamlet's torment is the remarriage of his mother to his uncle and not the death of his father. When Hamlet says: "With such dexterity to incestuous sheets! It is not, nor it cannot come to good. / But break my heart, for I must hold my tongue" (1.2. 157-9), he is disgusted by his mother's affection toward Claudius because he believes it is incestuous. It can also be deduced the Hamlet is more concerned with the marriage of his mother than the death of his father. Unconsciously, Hamlet believes that because his father is dead, all his competition is gone and Claudius marrying his mother does not fit in with what Hamlet wants - taking his object of desire away…
Initially, each soliloquy spoken by Hamlet communicates the personality that he holds. His characteristics are explored though the personal attacks geared towards himself for not acting on his morals, and the constant need that he has to confirm that his actions are correct. In Hamlet’s first soliloquy, he explains why it is that he is so upset about everything that has happened thus far. Originally, Hamlet refers to the world as being useless and meaningless to him, comparing it to a business that is showing no progression, “How weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable/ Seem to me all the uses of this world!” (I.ii.133-134) Within this same soliloquy, Hamlet also expresses his feelings towards his mother’s speedy marriage to his uncle, the current King of Denmark. “O God, a beast that wants discourse of reason/ Would have mourn’d longer-married with my uncle,/ My father’s brother – but no more like my father/ Than I to…