Shakespeare's HamletH. Holt, 1914 - 252 Seiten |
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Seite xxi
... mind , ever puts himself in mind ; at last does all but lose his purpose from his thoughts , yet still without recovering his peace of mind . Coleridge's view is scarcely less familiar : In order to understand him , it is essential that ...
... mind , ever puts himself in mind ; at last does all but lose his purpose from his thoughts , yet still without recovering his peace of mind . Coleridge's view is scarcely less familiar : In order to understand him , it is essential that ...
Seite xxii
... mind quite abnormal and induced by special circumstances a state of profound melancholy . " " All these elements - the great action laid upon a soul unfit ( for the time at least ) for the performance of it , the excess of ...
... mind quite abnormal and induced by special circumstances a state of profound melancholy . " " All these elements - the great action laid upon a soul unfit ( for the time at least ) for the performance of it , the excess of ...
Seite xxiii
... one's own conclusions about Claudius and Gertrude , Ophelia , Polonius and Laertes , and Horatio , are far too great to be anticipated here . Much has been written about all of them , and when one's own mind Hamlet xxiii.
... one's own conclusions about Claudius and Gertrude , Ophelia , Polonius and Laertes , and Horatio , are far too great to be anticipated here . Much has been written about all of them , and when one's own mind Hamlet xxiii.
Seite xxiv
William Shakespeare John Livingston Lowes. about all of them , and when one's own mind is made up , a comparison with others ' judgments has its value . But that belongs after , not before , one's own study . Much the same thing is to be ...
William Shakespeare John Livingston Lowes. about all of them , and when one's own mind is made up , a comparison with others ' judgments has its value . But that belongs after , not before , one's own study . Much the same thing is to be ...
Seite xxvii
... mind , and the play will greatly gain in interest if we keep them , as we read , in our mind too . The questions scattered through the notes , particularly in Act I , are designed to aid in acquiring that sort of mental alertness . They ...
... mind , and the play will greatly gain in interest if we keep them , as we read , in our mind too . The questions scattered through the notes , particularly in Act I , are designed to aid in acquiring that sort of mental alertness . They ...
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action actor audience blood character Claudius dead dear death Denmark doth drink earth Elizabethan England Enter HAMLET Exit father fear Folio follow Fortinbras friends gentlemen Gentlemen of Verona Gertrude Ghost give Guil Hamlet Hamlet means hast hath hear heart heaven Henry Horatio is't Julius Cæsar King King's Laer Laertes Laertes's look Lord Hamlet Love's Labour's Lost Macbeth madness majesty Marcellus Merchant of Venice mind mother murder nature night noble Norway Observe Ophelia Osric passage passion phrase play players Polonius Polonius's pray probably Queen question reference revenge Romeo and Juliet Rosencrantz and Guildenstern scene Second Quarto sense Shake Shakespeare soliloquy soul speak speech spirit stage sweet tell theaters thee There's thing thou thought tragedy Twelfth Night Winter's Tale word