Shakespeare's HamletAmerican Book Company, 1911 - 176 Seiten |
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Seite 4
... means of general reasoning . He is a great moral- izer ; and what makes him worth attending to is , that he moralizes on his own feelings and experience . His speeches and sayings are as real as our own thoughts . Their reality is in ...
... means of general reasoning . He is a great moral- izer ; and what makes him worth attending to is , that he moralizes on his own feelings and experience . His speeches and sayings are as real as our own thoughts . Their reality is in ...
Seite 12
... means of the play still leaves him incapable of the last decisive act of vengeance . Not so , however , with the King , who , now recognizing his foe in Hamlet , does not delay to dispatch him to a bloody death in England . But there is ...
... means of the play still leaves him incapable of the last decisive act of vengeance . Not so , however , with the King , who , now recognizing his foe in Hamlet , does not delay to dispatch him to a bloody death in England . But there is ...
Seite 17
... means so simple , by strokes so few and so unobtrusive , that we take no thought of them . It is so purely natural and unsophisticated , yet so pro- found in its pathos , that , as Hazlitt observes , it takes us back to the old ballads ...
... means so simple , by strokes so few and so unobtrusive , that we take no thought of them . It is so purely natural and unsophisticated , yet so pro- found in its pathos , that , as Hazlitt observes , it takes us back to the old ballads ...
Seite 36
... you . Ophelia . Do you doubt that ? 1 Held . 2 ་ ་ My necessaries are embark'd , " i.e. , my baggage is on board the vessel .. 3 Means of conveyance . Laertes . For Hamlet and the trifling of his favor 36 [ ACT I. SHAKESPEARE .
... you . Ophelia . Do you doubt that ? 1 Held . 2 ་ ་ My necessaries are embark'd , " i.e. , my baggage is on board the vessel .. 3 Means of conveyance . Laertes . For Hamlet and the trifling of his favor 36 [ ACT I. SHAKESPEARE .
Seite 39
... means vulgar . Those friends thou hast , and their adoption tried , Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel ; But do not dull thy palm with entertainment Of each new - hatch'd , unfledg'd comrade ' . Beware Of entrance to a quarrel ...
... means vulgar . Those friends thou hast , and their adoption tried , Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel ; But do not dull thy palm with entertainment Of each new - hatch'd , unfledg'd comrade ' . Beware Of entrance to a quarrel ...
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Bernardo blood body breath Cæsar Castle character Comedy comes Dane daughter dead dear deed Denmark doth drink e'en earth Elsinore England Enter HAMLET Enter KING Exeunt Rosencrantz Exit Ghost eyes faith Farewell father fear follow Fortinbras friends gentleman Gertrude Ghost give grave grief guilty hast hath hear heart heaven Hecuba hold Horatio in't is't Jephthah Julius Cæsar King of Denmark lady Laertes leave look Lord Hamlet madness main action Majesty Marcellus marry means mother murder nature night noble Norway Note o'er Ophelia Osric passion play players plot poison poison'd pray Priam public theater Pyrrhus Queen rapier Reënter revenge Reynaldo Rosencrantz and Guildenstern scene Second Clown Shakespeare Sings sleep soul speak speech spirit stage Swear sweet sword tell theater thee There's thine thing thoughts tongue tragedy twere villain Voltimand word youth