Hamlet’s To be, or not to be soliloquy is explores the notions of existence through a philosophical evaluation of bearing through ‘the whips and scorns of time’ and an examination of the ‘sleep of death’ after one finishes their time on earth. The use of pronouns ‘we’, ‘us’ and ‘who’ insinuate that this debate as an impersonal reflection rather than an emotionally driven deliberation to end his life. The themes and notions of death, religion and fate are explored through this soliloquy in the context of the futility and hardships of life. Death, the underlying theme of this soliloquy, is considered over existence in the circumstance that death is a dreamless sleep, a release from all the world’s misery. However
Hamlet’s To be, or not to be soliloquy is explores the notions of existence through a philosophical evaluation of bearing through ‘the whips and scorns of time’ and an examination of the ‘sleep of death’ after one finishes their time on earth. The use of pronouns ‘we’, ‘us’ and ‘who’ insinuate that this debate as an impersonal reflection rather than an emotionally driven deliberation to end his life. The themes and notions of death, religion and fate are explored through this soliloquy in the context of the futility and hardships of life. Death, the underlying theme of this soliloquy, is considered over existence in the circumstance that death is a dreamless sleep, a release from all the world’s misery. However