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Hamlet


This is the perfect example show how he thinks too much. Although Hamlet is full of purpose, he lacks the ability to carry out his intentions.
             Another theory that acts against Hamlet is his excessive melancholies. Hamlet experiences rejection from Ophelia, anger from the murder of his father, remarriage of his mother and betrayal from his friends. Guildenstern and Rosencrantz are sending by the King and Queen to spy on him. Ophelia is lies to him. He is alone he has no one to talk to and no one he can trust. Hamlet says "To be honest, as this world goes, is to be one man picked out of ten thousand."(2, 2, 194-195) He is sad about the world. How he says the world is "weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable" (1, 2, 137) To Hamlet the world is useless, boring, and purposeless. Hamlet is unhappy with his life and where he lives that he calls "Denmark is a prison"(2, 2, 262) Hamlet, besieged by guilt and self-contempt, remarks in his second soliloquy of Hamlet of the emotion this player showed despite the fact that the player had nothing to be emotion about. Hamlet observed that he himself had all the reason in the world to react of the player. Hamlet calls himself a "rogue and peasant slave" (2, 2, 577) and a "dull and muddy-mettled rascal" who, like a "john-a-dream" (2, 2, 594-595), can take no action. Next, Hamlet's third soliloquy, the famed "To be or not to be-lines (3, 1, 64), remarking of his own inability to act.
             Hamlet again sets out to avenge his father's death. Hamlet then catches Claudius in prayer, a rare time he will find Claudius alone. Hamlet, again, begins to think how Claudius will have had his sins forgiven and that he wants to damn Claudius's soul. Hamlet is refuses to kill Claudius during prayer. Hamlet wishes to get revenge when Claudius's soul may be damn and black as hell. By waiting for the right time he loses his chance to achieve revenge.
             When he is drunk asleep, or in his rage,.


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