CAN SOMEONE HELP ME WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST AND 35 POINTS
In Act III, scene iv, moderate insight is given into Queen Gertrude's character when she says:

“O Hamlet, speak no more:/Thou turn'st mine eyes into my very soul,/And there I see such black and grained spots/As will not leave their tinct.”

What is Gertrude revealing about herself here?

Question 9 options:

She feels guilty for her sins and yet she cannot face the reality of what she has done.


She feels like her marriage to Claudius has had a negative effect on her complexion.


She cannot bear Hamlet's feigned madness any longer.


She is angry with Hamlet for trying to get her to admit to a crime that she had no part in.

Respuesta :

I believe that the answer that makes the most sense is " She feels quilty for her sins and yet she cannot face the reality of what she has done." this to me makes sense because she talks about him turning her eyes into her  very sould which sounds a lot like self reflection, then the next part where she describes "such black and grained spots" can be describing her own sins and how she feels about them.