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Hamlet Speech In Hamlet

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Shakespeare’s famous play Hamlet is a tragic play in which, one of the most famous speeches ever written was said. The speech “To be or not to be” was spoken by hamlet in Act 3, the first scene, in the famous “nunnery scene”. It referred to as soliloquy, the staging of this scene¬ considerably was to test Hamlet by King Claudius and Polonius. They were trying to figure out if Hamlet was truly mad or pretending to be, Hamlet by then surely knew who killed his father because of the earlier appearance of the Ghost. The tragedy of Hamlet is complicated but as it is read increasingly, a knot is untied, and you see hamlet differently every time, the monologue is basically a fluctuating argument Hamlet has with himself over committing suicide or …show more content…

Perhaps the most important part of the soliloquy is when the question is introduced “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” (3, 1, 59-61), hamlets asks himself the question of whether life is meaningful to him or not if killing his uncle was the only answer to him, as much as try’s avoiding it he can never. Hamlet goes deeper in his imaginative portrayal of death, he believes his death only but sleep and can easily subdue his fear from it, “To die- to sleep- No more; and by a sleep to say we end The heartache, and the thousand natural shocks” (3, 1, 63-65) his feeling towards death has changed due to his past experience, although he further on in the soliloquy speaks of how his dreams are like death to him he imaginatively sees the afterlife and doesn’t know if he wants to depart to such a place “To die- to sleep. to sleep- perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub! for in that sleep of death what dreams May come” (3,1, 68-69). Hamlet has a moment in which he feels respect for the life he is given, and this contradicts his first quotes which really describe his suicidal intention for an easy ending to his life, “When we have shuffled off this mortal coil, must give us pause. There's the respect that makes calamity of so long life” (3, 1, 70-72), the fact that hamlet is actually a prince and to him there is way more at stake than just committing

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