In Hamlet’s second soliloquy, he is consumed with anger and rage for the way his father met his fate. These overwhelming feelings get the best of him and overtake his morals while deciding how to come about this news. He will never forget what his deceptive and volatile uncle has done and will seek his father’s vengeance. In Hamlet’s third soliloquy he finds a way to use his anger and start seeking vengeance in a passive aggressive way. Hamlet wants to make sure that Claudius actually killed his father because the ghost could have possibly been a hoax. It could gave been a demon in his thoughts summoned by the anger and rage he has been feeling with the recent events of death and incest. He is not sure whether or not it was real or whether…