HamletGrosset & Dunlap, 1909 - 220 sider |
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Side xix
... dead , and made an end of him . Hamblet then has a long interview with his mother , who weeps and torments herself , being sore grieved to see her only child made a mere mockery . He lays before her the wickedness of her life and the ...
... dead , and made an end of him . Hamblet then has a long interview with his mother , who weeps and torments herself , being sore grieved to see her only child made a mere mockery . He lays before her the wickedness of her life and the ...
Side xx
... dead . Fengon and his courtiers were then at their banquet , and Hamblet's ar- rival provoked them the more to drink and carouse ; where- in Hamblet encouraged them , himself acting as butler , and keeping them supplied with liquor ...
... dead . Fengon and his courtiers were then at their banquet , and Hamblet's ar- rival provoked them the more to drink and carouse ; where- in Hamblet encouraged them , himself acting as butler , and keeping them supplied with liquor ...
Side xxxv
... dead comes in to heighten and sanctify an affection for the living . Even if his mother too had died , the loss , how- ever bitter , would not have been baleful to him ; for , though separated from the chief objects of love and trust ...
... dead comes in to heighten and sanctify an affection for the living . Even if his mother too had died , the loss , how- ever bitter , would not have been baleful to him ; for , though separated from the chief objects of love and trust ...
Side li
... dead men's bones , and its still stranger tran- sitions of the grave , the sprightly , the meditative , the solemn , the playful , and the grotesque , make it one of the most wonderful yet most natural scenes in the drama . — In view of ...
... dead men's bones , and its still stranger tran- sitions of the grave , the sprightly , the meditative , the solemn , the playful , and the grotesque , make it one of the most wonderful yet most natural scenes in the drama . — In view of ...
Side 4
... dead king's ghost , who is invisible and inaudible to the queen . ACT IV The king and queen and their counselors agree that Ham- let must be banished . He is sent to England under guard of two schoolmates . Sealed orders for his death ...
... dead king's ghost , who is invisible and inaudible to the queen . ACT IV The king and queen and their counselors agree that Ham- let must be banished . He is sent to England under guard of two schoolmates . Sealed orders for his death ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
beauty blood character copy Danes daughter dead dear death Denmark doth doubt drink effect Enter Hamlet Exeunt Exit eyes father fear feeling folio Fortinbras friends gentleman Ghost give grace grief Guil hand hast hath hear heart heaven Horatio ISRAEL GOLLANCZ Jephthah Julius Cæsar King king of Denmark king's lady Laer Laertes leave look Lord Chamberlain's men Lord Hamlet madness majesty Marcellus means mind mother murder nature night noble o'er omitted in Qq.-I. G. Ophelia Osric passage passion play players poison'd Polonius pray prince probably Pyrrhus Quarto Queen question rapier reading reason revenge Rosencrantz and Guildenstern scene seems sense Shakespeare Sings soul Spanish Tragedy speak speech spirit Swear sweet sword tell thee thing thou thought tion tongue tragedy true William Shakespeare words