![]() Hamlet says his “uncle-father and aunt-mother” are wrong: he’s only insane some of the time (2.2.359). Hamlet cheers up a little when Rosencrantz mentions the arrival of a troupe of players (actors). Rosencrantz and Guildenstern admit they were. ![]() ![]() They say to visit him, but Hamlet angrily demands whether they were summoned by the King and Queen. He launches into a long speech about the beauty of the world and nobility of man, all of which looks to him like dust and fails to delight him. Hamlet responds, “then tis none to you there is nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so” (2.2.245-246).
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