Hamlet, Bind 4Lippincott, 1877 |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 86
Side 16
... madness for Ophelia's love , the symptoms are made much stronger in the original copy . [ See Q ,, lines 788–792 . ] It is curious that , in Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy , we have the stages of melancholy , madness , and frenzy ...
... madness for Ophelia's love , the symptoms are made much stronger in the original copy . [ See Q ,, lines 788–792 . ] It is curious that , in Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy , we have the stages of melancholy , madness , and frenzy ...
Side 20
... madness is an- nounced by degrees . First comes Ophelia to describe that pitiful act in which he had seemed to bid her an everlasting farewell . Then the King talks of Hamlet's ' transformation , ' and sets the court - sponges to suck ...
... madness is an- nounced by degrees . First comes Ophelia to describe that pitiful act in which he had seemed to bid her an everlasting farewell . Then the King talks of Hamlet's ' transformation , ' and sets the court - sponges to suck ...
Side 29
... madness . It is immediately preceded by the command of her father : And here Ofelia , reade you on this booke , And walke aloofe , the King shal be vnseene ; ' and , as in the true and perfect copy , it closes with the entreaty , Lady ...
... madness . It is immediately preceded by the command of her father : And here Ofelia , reade you on this booke , And walke aloofe , the King shal be vnseene ; ' and , as in the true and perfect copy , it closes with the entreaty , Lady ...
Side 128
... madness and raving of the Prince's with great astonishment . But it seems to us that this is not genuine madness , but rather a feigned [ simulirte ] madness . We must contrive to have him removed from here , if not from life ...
... madness and raving of the Prince's with great astonishment . But it seems to us that this is not genuine madness , but rather a feigned [ simulirte ] madness . We must contrive to have him removed from here , if not from life ...
Side 144
... madness , I must speak my opinion of our poet's conduct in this particular . To conform to the groundwork of his plot , Shakespeare makes the young Prince feign himself mad . I cannot but think this to be injudicious ; for , so far from ...
... madness , I must speak my opinion of our poet's conduct in this particular . To conform to the groundwork of his plot , Shakespeare makes the young Prince feign himself mad . I cannot but think this to be injudicious ; for , so far from ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
action actors Amleth appears blood cause character of Hamlet Claudius copy Corambis court courtiers crime critics death deed Denmark doubt drama edition effect England exit eyes father fear feeling feigned madness Fengon Fortinbras friends German Ghost give Goethe Hamlet plays hand hath haue heart Heaven hero Horatio Horvendile Hubert Languet human idea insanity intellectual kill King Laertes Lear Leartes look Lord loue Marcellus means melancholy mind moral mother murder nature never night noble Norway Ofel Ofelia Ophelia Orvandill Osric passages passion persons Philip Sidney piece play players poet Polonius Prince Hamlet Quarto Queen racter rapiers reason revenge Rosencrantz and Guildenstern says scene seems Shakespeare Shakespeare's Hamlet ſhall soliloquy soul speak ſpeake speech spirit stage thee things thou thought tion tragedy tragic true truth uncle uttered vengeance Voltaire whole Wittenberg words