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.