Hamlet's Seven Soliliquys

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Hamlet’s seven soliloquys reveal a lot about his character; however most of them really show that he has high morals and standards, though he is quite indecisive. He explores these characteristics through questioning himself and constantly reassuring that his actions are what he should really do. Shakespeare has put in a lot of soliloquies throughout Hamlet to give us an insight into his and other characters mental process and thoughts in the play. During Hamlets first soliloquy he gives us a lot of information about his feelings about his father’s death and thoughts on his mother’s remarriage telling us; “a beast, that wants discourse of reason, would have mourn’d longer” which tells us that he believes his mother should have mourned over her husband’s death longer than to get remarried so soon after. As we progress through his soliloquys in the play we see changes in Hamlet’s emotions and feelings towards what he eventually wants to do. By the third soliloquy we have found out about Hamlet’s fathers ghost and that Claudius was the one who killed him. Hamlet is angered by this and assures that he will only think of getting revenge on Claudius. Later he realizes that he should stop procrastinating and hurry up and avenge his father, but he doesn’t have the courage to do it. Hamlet also expresses the possibilities that the ghost could have been the devil. Although hamlet gets upset with himself he believes that the play he arranged would display Claudius’ guilt and then he will know for sure he killed his father. This reveals to the audience that Hamlet is a procrastinator and he is a coward. In Hamlet’s fifth soliloquy he contemplates the idea of suicide, he suggests that maybe the only reason we choose life is because we know so little about death other than it Is final. After contemplation Hamlet decides not to take his own life. Hamlet’s mental status grows

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