Hamlet's Outrageous Thoughts In the play Hamlet by Shakespeare, Hamlet speaks with passion. In his two very long soliloquies that represents his despair and inferiority. Soliloquies present the idea of a character's feeling and thoughts out loud despite the fact that there are either crowds during the speaking of the soliloquy or rather, alone. The tone and content of the two soliloquies are represented as negative and full of hatred towards specific characters in the play. In this play, Hamlet's soliloquy presents the idea of hatred towards his uncle whom he insults as "remorseless, treacherous, lecherous, kindless villain!" (2.2.607-608). His speech is targeted towards his mother who she has decided to marry Hamlet's uncle just because she could not stand alone without another man beside her and Hamlet describes her as "incestuous" (1.2.162) and with such sadness and …show more content…
Although his mother in very much a parent like advice says, "good Hamlet, cast thy nighted colour off...Thou know'st 'tis common; all that lives must die/passing through nature to eternity." (1.2.70-75). The Queen attempts to calm Hamlet down by calmly speaking to him to take his funeral face and the black clothes off and that all living things do die for a reason. Although the Queen's motherly advice seems to work on Hamlet with his response as "ay, madam, it is common" (1.2.76), he still cannot mourn enough for his father's death. On the other hand, his mother seems to have gotten over King Hamlet's death a little too quickly for Hamlet's likings. In the soliloquy Hamlet says "a little month, or ere those shoes were old/With she followed my poor father's body" (1.2.151-152), he cannot get over how the Queen had been so close with King Hamlet and now despite the fact that he is dead, not only has she got over the love for King Hamlet, but she married a man; a man from her own family, Claudius the uncle of