HamletClarendon Press, 1912 - 143 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 31
Side xi
... lines . And betrays the gap . Sometimes he caught only a word or two , with such dauntless results as this : A fault gainst nature , and in reasons Common course most certaine . 6 > If you will look at 1. ii . 102 f . you will see that ...
... lines . And betrays the gap . Sometimes he caught only a word or two , with such dauntless results as this : A fault gainst nature , and in reasons Common course most certaine . 6 > If you will look at 1. ii . 102 f . you will see that ...
Side xii
... lines and the approximately 3,900 lines of the Second Quarto represents a difference not in action but in speech . Much the same things are done , only the first version tells us less about them . Of the positive differences most are ...
... lines and the approximately 3,900 lines of the Second Quarto represents a difference not in action but in speech . Much the same things are done , only the first version tells us less about them . Of the positive differences most are ...
Side xiii
... lines as his Spanish Tragedy . Much was already done for him by the old story . What he did not find he added , with the eye of an expert for stage effects . All this Shakespeare took over . He too had laughed , like the rest of the ...
... lines as his Spanish Tragedy . Much was already done for him by the old story . What he did not find he added , with the eye of an expert for stage effects . All this Shakespeare took over . He too had laughed , like the rest of the ...
Side xiv
... lines , that the thing was old- fashioned and of the former age . The play - scenes in II . ii and III . ii are more difficult to explain . Both are meant to be in an older style , to have the crust of time upon them . Since this was ...
... lines , that the thing was old- fashioned and of the former age . The play - scenes in II . ii and III . ii are more difficult to explain . Both are meant to be in an older style , to have the crust of time upon them . Since this was ...
Side xv
... lines as these , part of another debate , from Kyd's Cornelia : Tis not for frailtie or faint cowardize That men ( to shunne mischaunces ) seeke for death ; But rather he that seeks it showes himselfe Of certaine courage gainst ...
... lines as these , part of another debate , from Kyd's Cornelia : Tis not for frailtie or faint cowardize That men ( to shunne mischaunces ) seeke for death ; But rather he that seeks it showes himselfe Of certaine courage gainst ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
action Amleth Ben Jonson Bernardo blood body Coleridge comes Danes daughter dead dear death Denmark dost doth earth England Enter HAMLET Exeunt Exit eyes Farewell father fear follow Fortinbras gentleman Gertrude Ghost give good-night grace grief groundlings Hamlet plays hast hath head hear heart heaven Hecuba hold honour Horatio Horwendil in't is't Julius Caesar keep lady Laertes look Lord Hamlet Macbeth madness majesty Marcellus matter means mind mother murder nature never night Norway o'er Ophelia original sense Osric passion phrase play players poison'd Polonius pray Priam Pyrrhus Quarto Queen reason revenge Reynaldo Richard II ROSENCRANTZ and GUILDENSTERN SCENE Second Clown Shake Shakespeare sleep soul speak speare's speech spirit stand story sweet sword tell thee There's thine thing Thomas Kyd thou thought tongue uncle VOLTIMAND Whe'r wind Wittenberg word youth