The imagery of disease and decay permeates the text. From the unweeded garden of the world to the iconic skull of Yorick in the graveyard, Shakespeare reminds the audience of the inevitability of death. Hamlet’s obsession with mortality levels the playing field; he notes that a king may pass through the "guts of a beggar." This nihilistic streak is balanced only by the play’s final act, where Hamlet moves from questioning fate to accepting it, famously stating, "The readiness is all." Conclusion
"To be or not to be, that is the question" - a phrase that has become synonymous with existential crises and philosophical debates. This iconic line is just one of the many thought-provoking moments in Viljamas Sekspyras' (or William Shakespeare's) timeless masterpiece, "Hamletas". Viljamas Sekspyras Hamletas Pdf 133
Let us imagine page 133 begins with Ophelia’s return of letters: “Take these again, my lord.” In Lithuanian: “Paimkite juos atgal, pone.” The formal Jūs (you, polite) instead of tu (familiar) — a linguistic wall. Hamlet’s reply: “I did love you once” becomes “Aš tave kažkada mylėjau” — past tense, irreversible. On this page, love curdles into cruelty. The number 133, in binary (10000101), is asymmetrical — like the love between Hamlet and Ophelia. It is also the atomic number of an unconfirmed element, temporarily named Unpenttrium . Unstable. Radioactive. Like Denmark. The imagery of disease and decay permeates the text