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The Tragedy Of Hamlet By William Shakespeare

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Shakespeare’s play, The Tragedy of Hamlet, seems to have a domino effect. As Hamlet tries to get his revenge, he brings ruin upon the kingdom. Hamlet is self-doubtful; he doubts himself to a point where he does not know what is true in his life. He constantly contradicts himself, causing many people, whose death was unintended, to die. In Williams Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Hamlet, in order to portray Hamlet’s tragedy, Shakespeare uses soliloquies, metaphors, symbolism, and anti-thesis. Shakespeare utilizes soliloquies to develop and offer insight into the characters and specifically Hamlet. In Act 1, Scene 2, Hamlet begins his first soliloquy by saying, “O, that this too too solid flesh would melt, Thaw and resolve itself into a dew” (I .ii.129-130). In this phrase itself, Shakespeare is using repetition, imagery and metaphor. He uses repetition to emphasize the flesh and imagery helps us to picture the flesh “melting.” The metaphor that is used here is Shakespeare comparing solid flesh to liquid dew. What Hamlet meant in this quote is that he wants to disappear almost as if he were to melt away, however, Shakespeare uses this method to bring the theme of death into the story. This is also expresses Hamlet’s feelings at the time; his father has just passed and his mother has remarried so quickly that Hamlet has not had enough time to mourn. Hamlet uses another metaphor when he says, “…’tis an unweeded garden that grows to seed; things rank and gross in nature” (I

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