Why Is Hamlet's First Soliloquy

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In Hamlet, Shakespeare presents many speeches in where they show comparisons between each other. These comparisons are shown when Hamlet laments his father’s dead and his mother’s marriage to Claudius. This is shown in Hamlet’s famous soliloquy’s when he had said, “O, that this too too solid flesh would melt…But Break, my heart; for I must hold my tongue” (1.2.130-159). The primary function of this soliloquy is to present Hamlet’s distress and madness. Hamlet not only shows a great intensity of anguish, but he also shows that it was wrong for his mother to marry a person who had killed her husband. Another important soliloquy is when he takes vengeance for his father’s dead by performing a play in where he seeks if Claudius is guilty or not and whether or not the ghost of Old Hamlet was telling the truth. This is when Hamlet had said, “O,…show more content…
The first soliloquy’s primary function is revealing Hamlet’s reasons for despair. Hamlet shows total madness for his mother because she has married someone who killed her husband. Hamlet compares himself to Hercules in order to show that he is developing lack of self-esteem for himself. This first speech is similar to the second speech in that they both connect to the cause of why he seeks vengeance for his father. The second speech solidifies the point where the ghost of Old Hamlet had told new Hamlet the cause of his death. This leads to the point in where Hamlet has to devise a plan in order to let Claudius admit his guilt of killing his own brother. Hamlet does this play to presents the murder scene in where Claudius kills his brother in his sleep. Shakespeare reveals that Hamlet is scared to actually have the intention to kill Claudius right away. So this is why he does the play. Moreover, these two speeches connect to each other because it shows that Hamlet has to do something before admitting that something is

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