The Hamlet of Shakespeare's AudienceDuke University Press, 1938 - 254 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 9
Pagina 60
... soliloquies he hardly alludes to Ophelia . Each of the lovers attributes this unexplained coldness of the other to falsity ; and Ophelia seems to have good reason to take Ham- let's renunciation of his former declarations of love as ...
... soliloquies he hardly alludes to Ophelia . Each of the lovers attributes this unexplained coldness of the other to falsity ; and Ophelia seems to have good reason to take Ham- let's renunciation of his former declarations of love as ...
Pagina 129
... soliloquies save one are his . In comparison with the first quarto , furthermore , the dramatist apparently much more than doubled the King's lines to make the full final text : the part of Claudius , in fact , is lengthened more than ...
... soliloquies save one are his . In comparison with the first quarto , furthermore , the dramatist apparently much more than doubled the King's lines to make the full final text : the part of Claudius , in fact , is lengthened more than ...
Pagina 175
... soliloquies was not a mere social pose ; another type of melancholy , per- haps the most common in Elizabethan thought , came down from the medieval tradition of chivalric love , and arose from the unhappy restraint forced on the ardent ...
... soliloquies was not a mere social pose ; another type of melancholy , per- haps the most common in Elizabethan thought , came down from the medieval tradition of chivalric love , and arose from the unhappy restraint forced on the ardent ...
Inhoudsopgave
HAMLETS SCHOOLFELLOWS | 17 |
LORD CHAMBERLAIN POLONIUS | 34 |
OPHELIA AND LAERTES | 54 |
12 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
actors appears audience Bernardo Bestrafte Brudermord bethan bitter calls Chamberlain character choleric contemporary court courtier critics Crown Prince death declares Denmark depiction Divine Right doubt Dover Wilson drama dramatist E. K. Chambers Elder Hamlet Elizabethan England expression father fool Fortinbras furthermore gentleman Gertrude's Ghost gives gravediggers hero Horatio Ibid ideal incest insane interpretation James killing King Claudius King Hamlet King's Laertes later learned London lonius lord Lord Chamberlain love affair lover Macbeth madness Marcellus marriage Measure for Measure melancholy moreover mother motives murder once Ophelia Osric perhaps person play plot poisoned political Polonius present writer Prince's Professor Bradley quarto Queen Gertrude question refers regicide Renaissance revenge Rosencrantz and Guildenstern royal royalty says scene scholar seems Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's Hamlet Sir E. K. Chambers social soldier soliloquies speare's speech struggle suggests sure tells theme theory thou throne tion tragedy word young youth