HamletMcClure, Philips, 1901 - 136 sider |
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Side 40
... falls to such perusal of my face As he would draw it . Long stay'd he so ; At last , a little shaking of mine arm , And thrice his head thus waving up and down , He raised a sigh so piteous and profound As it did seem to shatter all his ...
... falls to such perusal of my face As he would draw it . Long stay'd he so ; At last , a little shaking of mine arm , And thrice his head thus waving up and down , He raised a sigh so piteous and profound As it did seem to shatter all his ...
Side 44
... fall'n thereon , Let me be no assistant for a state , But keep a farm and carters . KING . We will try it . QUEEN . But look where reading . sadly the poor wretch comes Away , I do beseech POLONIUS . you , both away : I'll board him ...
... fall'n thereon , Let me be no assistant for a state , But keep a farm and carters . KING . We will try it . QUEEN . But look where reading . sadly the poor wretch comes Away , I do beseech POLONIUS . you , both away : I'll board him ...
Side 55
... falls . But as we often see , against some storm , A silence in the heavens , the rack stand still , The bold winds ... fall On Mars's [ 55 ] ACT TWO THE FIRST SCENE.
... falls . But as we often see , against some storm , A silence in the heavens , the rack stand still , The bold winds ... fall On Mars's [ 55 ] ACT TWO THE FIRST SCENE.
Side 56
William Shakespeare. And never did the Cyclops ' hammers fall On Mars's armour , forged for proof eterne , With less remorse than Pyrrhus ' bleeding sword Now falls on Priam . Out , out , thou strumpet , Fortune ! " This is too long ...
William Shakespeare. And never did the Cyclops ' hammers fall On Mars's armour , forged for proof eterne , With less remorse than Pyrrhus ' bleeding sword Now falls on Priam . Out , out , thou strumpet , Fortune ! " This is too long ...
Side 59
... fall a - cursing , like a very drab , A scullion ! Fie upon ' t ! foh ! About , my brain ! Hum , I have heard That guilty creatures , sitting at a play , Have by the very cunning of the scene Been struck so to the soul that presently ...
... fall a - cursing , like a very drab , A scullion ! Fie upon ' t ! foh ! About , my brain ! Hum , I have heard That guilty creatures , sitting at a play , Have by the very cunning of the scene Been struck so to the soul that presently ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Adieu arras brother Dane daughter dead dear death Denmark Dost thou doth drink E. H. SOTHERN e'en earth Elsinore Enter HAMLET Enter HORATIO Exeunt ROSENCRANTZ Exit Exit GHOST eyes faith Farewell foils follow Fortinbras foul FRANCISCO friends gentlemen GHOST give grace grief HAMLETA TRAGEDY hand hath hear heart heaven Hecuba hell hold honest honour HORATIO and MARCELLUS is't Jephthah King of Denmark lady LAERTES leave look Lord Hamlet lordship madam majesty MARCELLUS and BERNARDO marry mother murder night noble Norway o'er offence OPHELIA OSRIC passion play PLAYER KING PLAYER QUEEN poison'd POLONIUS pray Priam Pyrrhus rapiers Re-enter revenge REYNALDO ROSENCRANTZ and GUILDENSTERN SECOND CLOWN Sings skull sleep speak speech spirit Swear sweet Sweet lord sword tell thee There's thine thing thou hast thoughts thy soul to-night tongue trumpet twere twill University Library villain wager What's words