Vehement insulting ironic casual Answer: I believe " vehement " is the correct answer. It means that it shows strong, powerful, passionate speech and tone.
It puts the reader in the place of the Elizabethan who has to pay fines for eating meat
Answer: Hamlet appears to be despondent and suicidal at the start of the soliloquy. This may be seen in his earnest wish to die, "O! that this too solid flesh would dissolve!"
Explanation: Hamlet is acutely aware, however, that his flesh is firm and durable, and that, no matter how much he loves it, it shows no indication of melting into "dew."