HamletClarendon Press, 1912 - 143 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 28
Side vi
... madness of Hamlet , the baffling of the courtiers , the two interviews , the two eaves- droppings , the voyage to Britain , and the fatal message : every- thing almost but the method of the end , which is here grotesque but successful ...
... madness of Hamlet , the baffling of the courtiers , the two interviews , the two eaves- droppings , the voyage to Britain , and the fatal message : every- thing almost but the method of the end , which is here grotesque but successful ...
Side xiii
... madness . Its hero is delirious , circuitous , abounding in self - reproach , a ' waster of unfruitful words ' . The resemblance between the plays was noted . They are spoken of together by contemporaries , and sometimes confused ...
... madness . Its hero is delirious , circuitous , abounding in self - reproach , a ' waster of unfruitful words ' . The resemblance between the plays was noted . They are spoken of together by contemporaries , and sometimes confused ...
Side xix
... madness , Horatio , gives a clue to the maze . A kind of wild reason looks England out of everything that he says and does . The least consequent of voyage . his adventures , the voyage to England , is kept , but it is explained . In ...
... madness , Horatio , gives a clue to the maze . A kind of wild reason looks England out of everything that he says and does . The least consequent of voyage . his adventures , the voyage to England , is kept , but it is explained . In ...
Side xxv
... Stage , 1660–1706 ) . ' The best part , I believe , that ever man acted ' ( Pepys , Diary , Aug. 31 , 1668 ) . Fielding , Tom Jones , bk . xvi . , ch . 5 . 2 His feigned madness . might have expected to find . INTRODUCTION XXV.
... Stage , 1660–1706 ) . ' The best part , I believe , that ever man acted ' ( Pepys , Diary , Aug. 31 , 1668 ) . Fielding , Tom Jones , bk . xvi . , ch . 5 . 2 His feigned madness . might have expected to find . INTRODUCTION XXV.
Side xxvi
... madness . It was an expedient , and it served two ends . It covered a strange- ness of manner which he could neither conceal nor control ; and it gave an outlet for his distempered thought . The feigning , we may suppose , was easy . In ...
... madness . It was an expedient , and it served two ends . It covered a strange- ness of manner which he could neither conceal nor control ; and it gave an outlet for his distempered thought . The feigning , we may suppose , was easy . In ...
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