Shakspeare's tragedy of Hamlet, with notes, extr. from the old 'Historie of Hamblet' &c., adapted for use in schools by J. Hunter |
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Seite x
... desire to study the play in its language , forms of thought , allusions , & c . , as well as in its delineations of character . Such notes and criticisms are intro- duced as may excite the popular mind to take an interest in ...
... desire to study the play in its language , forms of thought , allusions , & c . , as well as in its delineations of character . Such notes and criticisms are intro- duced as may excite the popular mind to take an interest in ...
Seite xiv
... desire , and thereby to entrap Hamblet in his subtleties , and cause him of his own accord to fall into the net prepared for him , and thereby evidently show his secret meaning . His device was thus ; that King Fengon should make as ...
... desire , and thereby to entrap Hamblet in his subtleties , and cause him of his own accord to fall into the net prepared for him , and thereby evidently show his secret meaning . His device was thus ; that King Fengon should make as ...
Seite xvi
... desire that guided the daughter of Roderick to embrace the tyrant Fengon , and not to remember Horvendile , unworthy of so strange entertainment , neither that he killed his brother traitorously , and that she being his father's wife ...
... desire that guided the daughter of Roderick to embrace the tyrant Fengon , and not to remember Horvendile , unworthy of so strange entertainment , neither that he killed his brother traitorously , and that she being his father's wife ...
Seite xvii
... desire of revenging his death is so engraven in my heart , that , if I die not shortly , I hope to take such and so great vengeance , that these countries shall for ever speak thereof . Nevertheless , I must stay the time , means , and ...
... desire of revenging his death is so engraven in my heart , that , if I die not shortly , I hope to take such and so great vengeance , that these countries shall for ever speak thereof . Nevertheless , I must stay the time , means , and ...
Seite xviii
... desire that before had moved her to affect King Fengon , to engraff in her heart the virtuous actions of her lawful spouse , whom inwardly she much lamented , when she beheld the lively image and portraiture of his virtue and great ...
... desire that before had moved her to affect King Fengon , to engraff in her heart the virtuous actions of her lawful spouse , whom inwardly she much lamented , when she beheld the lively image and portraiture of his virtue and great ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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