Hamlet has just fought with Gertrude and Claudius, and has decided to stay home, as opposed to going to college. Claudius told Hamlet he was not allowed to go, and Hamlet decided to stay for his mother. The, “O, that this too too solid flesh would melt…” soliloquy reveals the first thoughts of death that Hamlet has within the play. Not much has happened, but the King and Queen are married, and the ghost has been seen. As the first soliloquy, this is the first insight into Hamlet’s state of mind that the audience has.…
Hamlet’s second soliloquy of the play is very interesting because it is full of a raging spirit and the object of Hamlet’s ire is himself. Hamlet’s speech is fueled by his own rage of thinking on the ghost of his father and its missive. It (the speech) is also furthered by his impression of the player who just recently before gave his impassioned speech. Hamlet is livid with himself and it truly shows in his second soliloquy.…
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 general, while Hamlet’s famous “to be or not to be” soliloquy questions the righteousness of life over death in moral terms, as much of the speech’s emphasis is on the subject of death. However the significance of this quote to me is different because I did resort to extreme thoughts like Hamlet. I look at this famous line as it is up to you to be the best you can be, and life may knock you down a. I started high school with no confidence in myself, which led me to pretty much sleep through the first first semester—and if you don't believe me just ask Mrs. Todd, she remembers. The point I am trying to make is once I started believing in myself, and others did so with me, I was able to look past the things that brought me down in life and I hope you guys learn that as well, I let the negative things in life like my disability and my schooling situation bring me down like Hamlet and it has been because of this school I was able start fresh. Today I am very proud of all that I have accomplished and the changes I've gone through to lead me on the right path as I am now eligible for university this year— something I did not see myself being able to achieve. Hamlet was very important in teaching me what I wanted to be and what I did not want to…
It seems Hamlet is always questioning death; the uncertainty of it is unsettling to him. He wonders what happens when one dies, if one is murdered do they go to heaven, and of course the famous question he poses in act 3; To be, or not to be, that is the question. In this soliloquy, Hamlet is musing about death, but what kind of death and whose he might be referring to is not 100% clear. The speech holds many confusing and unanswered queries; he could be contemplating suicide, or he could be thinking of the risks that killing Claudius may behold. "Thus conscience does make cowards of us all, And thus the native hue of resolution, Is sicklied o'er with the pale case of thought" (III.i.91-93)…
In the play Hamlet, Shakespeare creates a rich emotional fabric in Hamlet's first soliloquy. From the first lines of the soliloquy, we can find such emotions as depression, disillusion, anger, and even the hatred and disgust for Hamlet's mother and uncle. The first line in the soliloquy shows us depression: "O! that this too too solid flesh would melt,/Thaw and resolve itself into a dew" (Shakespeare 42). Hamlet's depressive spirit is explained by that he is tired of life and wants to die. The reason for this is that all of the events, like King Hamlet's death or Claudius's marriage with Gertrude, Hamlet's mother, which happens with the Prince press on him. As for the being disillusion about the Queen, when she marries Claudius, Hamlet asks himself "why, she would hang on him,/As if increase of appetite had grown" (Shakespeare 42). Hamlet feels disillusioned about his mother because after two months when his father dead, she married Claudius. In Hamlet's opinion his mother betrayed his fathers love. Also Hamlet feels too angry with his uncle, so he compares Claudius with his father, who was "so excellent a king" and says about the new king "that was, to this,/Hyperion to a satyr" (Shakespeare 42). The young Prince can't understand how his uncle can be a better king than his father. Hamlet is angry with Claudius because that "satyr" married his mother and called Hamlet his son, without asking his opinion or wish. Hamlet is not only angry with his uncle, but also he hates Claudius: "My father's brother, …/within a month,/Ere yet the salt of most unrighteous tears/Had left the flushing in her galled eyes" (Shakespeare 44). Hamlet hates his uncle because Claudius seduced his mother. But the strongest emotion Hamlet has in my mind is disgust about his mother: "a beast, that wants discourse of reason" (Shakespeare 42). Young Hamlet thinks that his mother betrayed his father love while marrying Claudius. Also Prince thinks that his mother is like all other women, he…
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 soliloquy Hamlet is clearly quite depressed and even suicidal. This is evident from the heartfelt plea that makes to die “O! that this too too solid flesh would melt”. Hamlet is painfully aware however, that his flesh is indeed solid and sturdy and shows no sign of melting into “dew” however much he desires it.…
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.…
DECAY AND CORRUPTION. (Hamlet) “O, that this too too sullied flesh would melt,/ Thaw, and resolve itself into a dew!/or that the everlasting had not fixed /His canon ‘gainst self-slaughter! Oh God, God,/How weary,stale, flat, and unprofitable /seem to me all the uses of this world!” (1,2,Lines 129-134.)…
Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark is a story of a man searching for his true identity. Shakespeare uses soliloquies to show the readers and audience the true feelings and emotions of Hamlet. All seven soliloquies, each slightly different, proclaim Hamlet's inner conflicts and reasons for delaying his revenge. Hamlet is a very complex character. He doesn't really know who he is, but through his soliloquies we can trace Hamlet's search for his true identity.…
HAMLET: To be, or not to be--that is the question: Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune Or to take arms against a sea of troubles And by opposing end them. To die, to sleep-- No more--and by a sleep to say we end…
In the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare the “To Be or Not To Be”soliloquy has a strong connection of growth and uncertainty that is shown throughout the text using a motif and repetition of life and death and the simple and difficult ways of life.…
Mel Gibson’s evident emotional frustration makes Hamlet’s Third Soliloquy the superior performance compared to other modern interpretations. Effective dramatics and relevant props bring to life Hamlet’s troubled thoughts. When Gibson enters the crypt, it is obvious that he is pondering the benefits of death, as his demeanor is curious while looking around at the tombs. The skulls and dreary atmosphere assist Hamlet’s belief in suicide. He seems immersed in the idea of death, until he comes to an apparent realization.…
Just before this soliloquy, Hamlets play was about to start. There was conversation about this play from others in the kingdom. At this time, Hamlet is questioning himself about all of his life choices, will his plan really work out revealing that Claudius killed his father? Does he feel that all his efforts for revenge were pointless? I truly believe this soliloquy is a part in the play that Hamlet begins to reflect on himself.…