In lines 69-76, Hamlet gives several specific examples of why life is not pleasant. What are these examples?

Hamlet, the prince of Denmark, is one of Shakespeare's most famous tragic figures, is one of the many that gives lengthy, poetic, and often insightful monologues.
In the beginning of Act III, scene i, Hamlet gives what is perhaps the most famous monologue in all of Shakespeare's work, in which he ponders suicide: "To be, or not to be––that is the question." As the monologue continues, Hamlet reflects on the many things that make his life, and life in general, unpleasant.

For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,
The opressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely
The pangs of déspised love, the law's delay,
The insolence of office and the spurns
That patient merit of the unworthy takes
When he might his quietus make
With a bare bodkin? (Act III, sc. i, 69-76)

Here, Hamlet gives a list of the many cruelties and injustices of life.
First, Hamlet describes the way men age and the way their bodies and minds deteriorate over time. All humans are destined to age, and, eventually, to die, and Hamlet plays the role of an existentialist when he questions if life is thus even worth living. Next, by "the oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely," Hamlet refers to a general abuse of power by superiors or oppressors. He also refers to the arrogance and insults of proud men; Hamlet feels there to be an injustice in arrogance, and those who are proud and mighty look down on others.
"The pangs of déspised love" refers, of course, to unrequited love: there are few things more devastating and painful than truly loving someone and not having that love returned! Just like in other plays by Shakespeare (A Winter's Tale, Romeo and Juliet, Antony and Cleopatra), love, and love unrequited or unattainable, plays a significant role. The lines "The laws delay / The insolence of office" are Hamlet referring to a flawed and ineffective legal system that does not operate as properly as it could. Innocent men may be jailed and guilty men set free, and, all the while, trials take an exceptionally long time.
Thus, with the inevitable decay of aging, the general abuse of power, the insulting arrogance of proud and successful men, the devastation of unrequited love, and the inefficiency and flawed nature of the law, Hamlet ponders why all sensible men don't end their pain and suffering with a sharp knife?
Of course, Hamlet is simply being a depressed cynic and is forgetting the endless lists of things that make life enjoyable and wholly worth living.
https://slate.com/human-interest/2009/03/the-long-goodbye-hamlets-not-depressed-hes-grieving.html

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