Shakspeare's tragedy of Hamlet, with notes, extr. from the old 'Historie of Hamblet' &c., adapted for use in schools by J. Hunter |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 37.
Pàgina
... thoughts his content ; they make him dream waking , there's his pleasure . imagination is never idle , it keeps his mind in a continual tion , as the poise the clock : he winds up his thoughts often , and often unwinds them ; Penelope's ...
... thoughts his content ; they make him dream waking , there's his pleasure . imagination is never idle , it keeps his mind in a continual tion , as the poise the clock : he winds up his thoughts often , and often unwinds them ; Penelope's ...
Pàgina
... thought more numerous than necessary . Thomas Overbury says of one of his Charact ' Where the gate stands open , he is ever seekin stile , and where his learning ought to climb , creeps through . ' This description , unfortunately to a ...
... thought more numerous than necessary . Thomas Overbury says of one of his Charact ' Where the gate stands open , he is ever seekin stile , and where his learning ought to climb , creeps through . ' This description , unfortunately to a ...
Pàgina
... thoughts of getting rid of life by self - murder . Hamlet read and thought much , has passed happy hours v Ophelia , has lived for the most part in a charmed worl imagination and sentiment ; he is constitutionally deficien that quality ...
... thoughts of getting rid of life by self - murder . Hamlet read and thought much , has passed happy hours v Ophelia , has lived for the most part in a charmed worl imagination and sentiment ; he is constitutionally deficien that quality ...
Pàgina
... thought of feigning mad- ss — the device of assuming an antic disposition , which would we them an unwonted freedom , and which might always be ntrolled by his habitual intellectual strength . It comes then this - that there was ...
... thought of feigning mad- ss — the device of assuming an antic disposition , which would we them an unwonted freedom , and which might always be ntrolled by his habitual intellectual strength . It comes then this - that there was ...
Pàgina
... thought and rd all that meets his piercing , passionless , comprehensive se , as he looks on Hamlet from without . Coleridge , in his y , contemplates his subject from within : and the result ws the superiority of his method . The sum ...
... thought and rd all that meets his piercing , passionless , comprehensive se , as he looks on Hamlet from without . Coleridge , in his y , contemplates his subject from within : and the result ws the superiority of his method . The sum ...
Frases i termes més freqüents
arms beseech blood body Cæsar courtier Danes dead dear death Denmark devil doth drink e'en earth edition England Enter HAMLET Exit eyes faith father fear Fengon follow Fortinbras friends gentleman Gertrude Ghost give grave grief Guil hand hast hath hear heart heaven Hecuba Henry IV HISTORIE OF HAMBLET Honest Whore honour Horatio Horvendile Jonson's Julius Cæsar killed King of Denmark lady Laer Laertes leave look lord Hamlet Love's Labour's Lost madness majesty means mind mother murder nature night noble Norway Note o'er Ophelia play players Plutarch Polonius pray prince Pyrrhus Queen revenge Richard II Rosencrantz and Guildenstern SCENE Shakspeare Shakspeare's soul speak speech spirit Swear sweet sword tell thee There's thine thing thou thought uncle villain virtue word youth