HamletGrosset & Dunlap, 1909 - 220 sider |
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Side xxi
... tion in man , and whether this Prince , by reason of his over- great melancholy , had received those impressions , divin- ing that which never any had before declared ; like such as are saturnists by complexion , who oftentimes speak of ...
... tion in man , and whether this Prince , by reason of his over- great melancholy , had received those impressions , divin- ing that which never any had before declared ; like such as are saturnists by complexion , who oftentimes speak of ...
Side xxxvii
... entrances him in medita- tion on the awful realities of the invisible world so that , while nerved by a sense of the duty , he is at the same time shaken by a dread of the responsibility . Thus the xxxvii PRINCE OF DENMARK Introduction.
... entrances him in medita- tion on the awful realities of the invisible world so that , while nerved by a sense of the duty , he is at the same time shaken by a dread of the responsibility . Thus the xxxvii PRINCE OF DENMARK Introduction.
Side lxvi
... tion at court was Hamlet's own fault . Consequently , for double reasons , Polonius forbids his daughter to have any intercourse with the prince ; first , because the prince was a cypher , and then again , because the King might become ...
... tion at court was Hamlet's own fault . Consequently , for double reasons , Polonius forbids his daughter to have any intercourse with the prince ; first , because the prince was a cypher , and then again , because the King might become ...
Side 7
... tion of night , no elaborate information conveyed by one speaker to another of what both had immediately before their senses ; and yet nothing bordering on the comic on the one hand , nor any striving of the intellect on the other . It ...
... tion of night , no elaborate information conveyed by one speaker to another of what both had immediately before their senses ; and yet nothing bordering on the comic on the one hand , nor any striving of the intellect on the other . It ...
Side 10
... tion of the desired , yet almost dreaded , tale , —this gives all the suddenness and surprise of the original appearance : ' Peace ! break thee off : look , where it comes again ! Note the judgment displayed in having the two persons ...
... tion of the desired , yet almost dreaded , tale , —this gives all the suddenness and surprise of the original appearance : ' Peace ! break thee off : look , where it comes again ! Note the judgment displayed in having the two persons ...
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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