Hamlet - Hamlet's Soliloquy

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... communicated, Hamlet is saying, and therefore feeling, that the people that he could look up to in life have departed and that his entire world has been altered, "It is not nor it cannot come to good".

The distressed nature of Hamlet's mind is also communicated well by the imagery that is used throughout the soliloquy. At the start, Hamlet says that he wants his "too too solid flesh" to "...melt, thaw, and resolve itself into a dew". This goes alongside the later lines, "How weary, stale, flat and unprofitable seem to me all the uses of this world", where the build up of adjectives, one after the other, serves to highlight just how difficult it is for Hamlet to live in the world. ...

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