FAMOUS PLAYWRIGHT POET AND OTHERS
HAMLET
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
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Is it better to die, or to live with all of the horrible things that life throws at us?
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When people die in battle, is it fate, or the random result of fortune?
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Is it better to die in battle, or to die at sea?
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Why do people want to die?
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Detailed explanation-1: -Hamlet says ‘To be or not to be’ because he is questioning the value of life and asking himself whether it’s worthwhile hanging in there. He is extremely depressed at this point and fed up with everything in the world around him, and he is contemplating putting an end to himself.
Detailed explanation-2: -Hamlet is talking about the bad things that happen to us in life as being attacks by this personified ‘Fortune, ’ firing at us with deadly weapons. It is part of his reason for wanting to walk away from life. ‘Slings and arrows of outrageous fortune’ is a linguistic construct typical of Shakespeare.
Detailed explanation-3: -The soliloquy is essentially all about life and death: “To be or not to be” means “To live or not to live” (or “To live or to die"). Hamlet discusses how painful and miserable human life is, and how death (specifically suicide) would be preferable, would it not be for the fearful uncertainty of what comes after death.
Detailed explanation-4: -The quote is from Shakespeare’s play Hamlet. In act 3, scene 1 Hamlet contemplates the pain and unfairness of life: “To be or not to be? Whether tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, And by opposing end them…”