Hamlet
Hamlet is portrayed as a troubled person throughout the soliloquy. One he can be heard moaning and groaning wishing he could escape from his skin and self. ‘oh that this too too solid flesh would melt, I wish my temporal/physical self could disappear,’ he is heard.
Hamlet can be said to be a man full of cursing and complaints. In his self-talking, he wishes the creator had not given man the power to end his own life. His troubled heart seems to wander in search of someone, a thing or a place to put blame on for all afflictions and troubles he’s going through.
In his soliloquy, Hamlet seems to compare situations of different nature and background.
He sees all the uses of this world as an “unweeded garden” and in it, nothing good can come out of it.
He goes on to wonder the reason behind possessing all he has and gets no value or a good use of the possessions.
Hamlet is seen as a man who is torn in the heart but also as a man who has accepted his fate to a point of daring to remain silent regardless of what befell him.
He never ceased to compare events and situations. Whether of good or bad past.
” so excellent a king; that was, to this, Hyperion to a satyr; so loving to my mother,” showed his reserved feelings to the two different kinds of people who seem to have been close to his mother.
Throughout the soliloquy, Hamlet exudes a character of a brave and intelligent young man by wanting to remain silent even after the frailty of his mother, who, despite the loss of her husband, quickly remarried. This shows how much respect he had for his mother and her decisions even if they never were right in his eyes.