HamletGrosset & Dunlap, 1909 - 220 sider |
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Side ix
... eyes have lost their sight , my tongue his vse : Farewell Horatio , heaven receive my soule " : " The rest is silence " Shakespeare's supreme test is here . A rapid examination of the first Quarto reveals the fol lowing among its chief ...
... eyes have lost their sight , my tongue his vse : Farewell Horatio , heaven receive my soule " : " The rest is silence " Shakespeare's supreme test is here . A rapid examination of the first Quarto reveals the fol lowing among its chief ...
Side xxx
... eyes have found and left dark . The most we can hope to do is , to start a few thoughts , not towards explaining him , but towards showing why he cannot be explained ; nor to reduce XXX Introduction TRAGEDY OF HAMLET.
... eyes have found and left dark . The most we can hope to do is , to start a few thoughts , not towards explaining him , but towards showing why he cannot be explained ; nor to reduce XXX Introduction TRAGEDY OF HAMLET.
Side xxxvi
... eye , as it does in his own ; else he will , in effect , be setting an exam- ple and precedent of murder , not of justice . Thus Hamlet's conscience is divided , not merely against his inclination , but against itself . However he ...
... eye , as it does in his own ; else he will , in effect , be setting an exam- ple and precedent of murder , not of justice . Thus Hamlet's conscience is divided , not merely against his inclination , but against itself . However he ...
Side xlvi
... eye for the true premises of the case ; and , being wrong in these , his very correctness of logic makes him but the more ridiculous . His method of coming at the meaning of men , is by reading them back- wards ; and this method , used ...
... eye for the true premises of the case ; and , being wrong in these , his very correctness of logic makes him but the more ridiculous . His method of coming at the meaning of men , is by reading them back- wards ; and this method , used ...
Side xlviii
... eyes of Hamlet she has drunk in pledges of his love , but has never heard the voice of her own ; and knows not how full her heart is of Hamlet , because she has not a single thought or feeling there at strife with him . Mrs. Jameson ...
... eyes of Hamlet she has drunk in pledges of his love , but has never heard the voice of her own ; and knows not how full her heart is of Hamlet , because she has not a single thought or feeling there at strife with him . Mrs. Jameson ...
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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