Here is the second part.

Thank you very much.

1) If death,unlike sleep, is an end in itself, then it is desirable and therefore preferable to life's suffering. Once we have
2) As in sleep there is the possibility of dreaming, Hamlet wonders if there will be dreams after death, once we have shaken off the turmoil of this present life.
3) It is for the fear of something after death that human beings are so reluctant to take their own lives would rather bear earthly sorrows and troubles grunting and sweating under a weary life (I need to rephrase this).
4) The fear of something after death expressed in the image of the unknown country from which no traveller comes back paralyses the will and prevents human beings from committing suicide.
5) The kind of thought which prevents men from self-destruction is not far from a moral conscience. This conscience makes cowards of us all (or makes us cowards?) and turns the natural colour of resolution pale and sick. (is there a verb for "turn sick"? Shakespeare uses "sicklied").
6) As a consequence, actions of great pitch (rephrase), like currents of water, are made to change direction by the conscious thought.