The next soliloquy Hamlet has after seeing the ghost of his father is in Act II, Scene ii after the players, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, have left him alone. In this soliloquy ("what a rogue and peasant slave am I"), Hamlet expresses his frustration with the fact that the actor could create tears in an instant about a fictional character, but he has lost his actual father and cannot even do anything about it. Through this he also decides on the plan to try and catch Claudius' guilt.
No it would not gramtically it would be a good answer
I think it is successful.
What Mark Twain is basically saying here is that pilots need
to be of the ability to make judgement calls, and the ability to make good
judgement calls depends on whether or not one is intelligent. He
takes his point further by saying that, basically, intelligence is genetic—one
is either born with intelligence or one is not.
His point is, if one is not born with “brains” (intelligence), one
cannot be a pilot because intelligence (according to this statement of Twain)
cannot be acquired.