soliloques of Hamlet
Hamlet’s Soliloquies In analyzing Hamlet’s soliloquies, it would be fair to say that Hamlet has accurately assessed his own problems. Despite his apparent decent in to madness, it is in his soliloquies that we see Hamlet’s ability to analyze, with rationality, his position on the issues at hand. Hamlet obviously grieves for many legitimate reasons. ... In Hamlet’s first soliloquy, we can see that Hamlet has not only lost his father, but to a man of inferiority. Hamlet describes the comparison of his father to his uncle as a “Hyperion to a satyr” (144). No one can replace his father in Hamlet’s heart or in standard amongst men.