Hamlet travestie: with burlesque annotations1811 |
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Pagina vi
... bring into ridicule and contempt those authors against whose works they are directed . That this objection will hold , when applied to works of inferior merit , or to such as are deficient in sense or genius , is freely admitted ; but ...
... bring into ridicule and contempt those authors against whose works they are directed . That this objection will hold , when applied to works of inferior merit , or to such as are deficient in sense or genius , is freely admitted ; but ...
Pagina 2
... bring him back again . Besides , ' tis common : all that live must die- So blow your nose , my dear , and do not cry . Hamlet . Aye , Madam , it is common . Queen . If it be , Why seems there such a mighty fuss with thee ? Hamlet . Talk ...
... bring him back again . Besides , ' tis common : all that live must die- So blow your nose , my dear , and do not cry . Hamlet . Aye , Madam , it is common . Queen . If it be , Why seems there such a mighty fuss with thee ? Hamlet . Talk ...
Pagina 19
... bring these jockeys where my son is . SCENE VII . Another Room in the Palace . Enter HAMLET . · Hamlet . I think my plan will hit - they're caught , egad ! And all the family believe I'm mad . [ Exeunt . Guild'stern and Rosencrantz just ...
... bring these jockeys where my son is . SCENE VII . Another Room in the Palace . Enter HAMLET . · Hamlet . I think my plan will hit - they're caught , egad ! And all the family believe I'm mad . [ Exeunt . Guild'stern and Rosencrantz just ...
Pagina 38
... bring a house upon his back ; Tell him his pranks may get him soon a kicking , And that your grace has sav'd him many a licking . I'll go and hide myself behind the curtain . Now mind your eye- Queen . I'll tip it him for certain ...
... bring a house upon his back ; Tell him his pranks may get him soon a kicking , And that your grace has sav'd him many a licking . I'll go and hide myself behind the curtain . Now mind your eye- Queen . I'll tip it him for certain ...
Pagina 42
... brings thee here now ? Thou com'st thy tardy son to chide , I fear now . I own thy commission , as yet , is not quite done ; Don't be in a hurry , and all shall be right done . Thee of thy promise I come to remind , Sir : - ( Bass ) A ...
... brings thee here now ? Thou com'st thy tardy son to chide , I fear now . I own thy commission , as yet , is not quite done ; Don't be in a hurry , and all shall be right done . Thee of thy promise I come to remind , Sir : - ( Bass ) A ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
actors Cheer d'ye dear Denmark wore Derry die game dish'd doubt drink Enter HAMLET Enter HORATIO Enter KING Exeunt Exit Hamlet Exit Queen expose That dirty father gallopping randy dandy gammon GENTLEMEN Gertrude Ghost give grave Gravedigger Guild Guildenstern HAMLET and HORATIO HAMLET TRAVESTIE Hamlet's the lad hath Heigho Hey randy dandy hungry mouser is't J. M. RICHARDSON Jack Frost JOHNSON Laertes latten Marcellus meaning Merry Andrew mother never night nose Ophelia Ophelia's the maid Osrick Palace pantomime passage play poet poison'd Polonius POPE Pray prologue quarto Queen of Denmark Ri tol tiddy Rosen ROSENCRANTZ says Horatio SCENE sitting upon pins SONG.-HAMLET soon STEEVENS swear tell a dray-horse thee THEOBALD there's thou Tol de rol tomb-stone trumpet's tantarara Trumpets and Drums Tune twas twill WARBURTON wdst what's whilst Zounds
Populaire passages
Pagina 86 - Shakespeare was godfather to one of Ben Jonson's children, and, after the christening, being in a deep study, Jonson came to cheer him up, and asked him why he was so melancholy. ' No faith, Ben,' says he, ' not I, but I have been considering a great while what should be the fittest gift for me to bestow upon my godchild, and I have resolved at last.' ' I prythee, what ? ' says he. ' I' faith, Ben, I'll e'en give him a dozen good Latin (latten) spoons, and thou shalt translate them.
Pagina 53 - And will he not come again? And will he not come again? No, no, he is dead; Go to thy death-bed, He never will come again. His beard was as white as snow All flaxen was his poll, He is gone, he is gone, And we cast away moan: God ha
Pagina 71 - How science dwindles, and how volumes swell. How commentators each dark passage shun, And hold their farthing candle to the Sun.
Pagina 36 - And it's oh! dear! what can the matter be? Dear! dear! what can the matter be?
Pagina 104 - Hawkins is of opinion that tan-ta-ra-ra is not exactly imitative of the note of the trumpet, which is tan-ia-ra-ra-ra ; but Dr. Burney assures me that it was not until about the middle of the seventeenth century that this innovation in trumpetology was known, when it was introduced by one Hans Von Puffenblowenschwartz, trumpeter to the gallant Prince Rupert.
Pagina 23 - O, I wish it were my turn to-morrow! But, perchance, in that sleep we may dream, For we dream in our beds very often — Now, however capricious 't may seem, I've no relish for dreams in a coffin.
Pagina 3 - I'd give if a sure way I knew, How to thaw and resolve my stout flesh into dew ! How happy were I if no sin was self-slaughter ! For I'd then throw myself and my cares in the water. , Derry down, down, down, derry down. How weary, how profitless, — stale, and how flat, Seem to me all life's uses, its joys, and all that : This world is a garden unweeded...
Pagina 107 - ... goes on in a train of philosophical reasoning that leaves the reader in astonishment Johnson, with true piety, adopts the fanciful hypothesis, declaring it to be a noble emendation, which almost sets the critic on a level with the author.