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Hamlet Character Essay

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A lot about a character shows when that character steps back and says what they are thinking aloud. This is the case for Prince Hamlet. William Shakespeare’s play “Hamlet” features Prince Hamlet, who is depressed about his father’s death and his mother remarrying so soon. Hamlet is visited by the ghost of his father and is ordered to get revenge for his father’s death. Hamlet devotes himself to the task, but because of his nature,he enters deep melancholy and even apparent madness. Throughout the play, Hamlet can be seen being very noble but indecisive at the same time. Hamlet’s soliloquies reveal a lot about his character. However, they mainly show the readers how he can be noble but is indecisive. He can also be viewed as someone in a deep state of depression. These values are shown through his actions of insulting himself for not acting upon what he believes in and continuously reassuring himself that what he does is correct, as well as his word choice and feelings that are expressed out loud to himself during the seven soliloquies. In Hamlet’s first soliloquy, the readers can infer that hamlet is depressed about his father’s death and his mother remarrying his uncle. Hamlet says, “how weary, stale, fat, and unprofitable, seem to me all the uses of this world” (Act 1, Sn 2. 135-136). This statement is expressing Hamlet’s feelings towards his own life and how there is no meaning. Hamlet also says during his soliloquy, “She married. O most wicked speed, to post with such dexterity to incestuous sheets. It s not nor it cannot come to good, but break, my heart, for i must hold my tongue” (Act 1, Sn. 2, Ln. 157-160). Hamlet is clearly upset over his mother being remarried quickly after his father passed away. He feels as though as his heart is breaking, it needs to break in silence. He won’t speak up about his feelings, possibly leaving him more depressed about the situation. During a few of the seven soliloquies, Hamlet insults himself for not speaking out on his beliefs and questions a lot of things about his life. Therefore, showing the indecisive side of him. One key component to Hamlet showing the readers how he is indecisive is when he says, “to be, or not to be? That is the question” (Act 3, Sn. 1,

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