How Does Hamlet Present Pizza In Hamlet

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Hamlet and Pizza. These two things may not seem like they have much in common, but the Prince of Denmark and the best dinner dish ever created may have more in common than many think. Despite being created three hundred years apart and having no distinguishable similarities at first, the main character of Hamlet and Pizza are both simple on the surface yet have complexities that many would dismiss as a futile effort to compare two things that were never meant to be compared. Even still, this essay will make it look like I know what I'm talking about even though I don't.

Hamlet and Pizza, two highly revered things in their respective fields. Hamlet is a complex character with many different emotions that he experiences throughout the play. The feelings that Hamlet expresses through his actions range from lust to pure anger and denial. For example, in Act 1, Hamlet displays his …show more content…

When talking to Horatio in Act 1 Scene 2, Hamlet shows his underlying anger at both the new King Claudius and his mother Queen Gertrude, remarking, “I prithee, do not mock me, fellow student I think it was to see my mother’s wedding,” showing his disgust that the wedding between his father’s death and his mother's wedding with Claudius. He goes on to say, “Thrift, thrift, Horatio. The funeral baked meats Did coldly furnish forth the wedding tables,” furthering his disgust and anger at how sudden the wedding between his uncle and his mother was. This anger and disgust is one of Hamlet’s most basic emotions that appear in Act 1. Further into the play, these emotions develop into much more complex emotions that begin to show the range that Hamlet’s emotions occupy. In

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