HamletGrosset & Dunlap, 1909 - 220 sider |
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Side vii
... passages which are not found in the Quarto , and contrasts favorably with it in the less important matter of typographical accuracy ( vide Notes , passim ) . The two edition represent , in all probability , two dis- tinct acting ...
... passages which are not found in the Quarto , and contrasts favorably with it in the less important matter of typographical accuracy ( vide Notes , passim ) . The two edition represent , in all probability , two dis- tinct acting ...
Side viii
... passages face each other . And a Bibliographical Preface by Samuel Timmins . Looke heere vpon this Picture , and on this . " Lithographic reprints were also issued by E. W. Ashbee and W. Griggs ; the text is reprinted in the Cambridge ...
... passages face each other . And a Bibliographical Preface by Samuel Timmins . Looke heere vpon this Picture , and on this . " Lithographic reprints were also issued by E. W. Ashbee and W. Griggs ; the text is reprinted in the Cambridge ...
Side ix
... passages " dis- tinguished by that blending of psychological insight with imagination and fancy , which is the highest manifestation of Shakespeare's genius " ; ( iii ) absurd misplacement ix PRINCE OF DENMARK Preface.
... passages " dis- tinguished by that blending of psychological insight with imagination and fancy , which is the highest manifestation of Shakespeare's genius " ; ( iii ) absurd misplacement ix PRINCE OF DENMARK Preface.
Side xi
... passage occurs in his " talk " with " a few of our triviall translators " : - " It is a common practice now a daies amongst a sort of shifting companions , that runne through every arte and thrive by none to leave the trade of Noverint ...
... passage occurs in his " talk " with " a few of our triviall translators " : - " It is a common practice now a daies amongst a sort of shifting companions , that runne through every arte and thrive by none to leave the trade of Noverint ...
Side xii
... passage in The Looking Glass for London and England , written by Lodge and Greene , probably before 1589 , which strikes me as a burlesque reminiscence of the original of Hamlet , Act I. Sc . ii . 184-240 ; Adam , the smith's man ...
... passage in The Looking Glass for London and England , written by Lodge and Greene , probably before 1589 , which strikes me as a burlesque reminiscence of the original of Hamlet , Act I. Sc . ii . 184-240 ; Adam , the smith's man ...
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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