HamletGrosset & Dunlap, 1909 - 225 էջ |
From inside the book
Էջ xxviii
William Shakespeare. It would seem , then , that the reason assigned in the text of 1603 refers to a period when ... seems , at all events , worth considering . Its bearing as to the time of the later text is obvious enough , and ...
William Shakespeare. It would seem , then , that the reason assigned in the text of 1603 refers to a period when ... seems , at all events , worth considering . Its bearing as to the time of the later text is obvious enough , and ...
Էջ xxx
... seems to understand him better after a little study than after a great deal , and that the less one sees into him , the more apt one is to think he sees through him ; in which re- spect he is indeed like nature herself . We shall not ...
... seems to understand him better after a little study than after a great deal , and that the less one sees into him , the more apt one is to think he sees through him ; in which re- spect he is indeed like nature herself . We shall not ...
Էջ xxxi
... seem to have conquered a thing , we are apt to put off that humility towards it , which is both the better part of wisdom , and also our key to the remainder . This complexity of facts supposes the material of in- numerable theories ...
... seem to have conquered a thing , we are apt to put off that humility towards it , which is both the better part of wisdom , and also our key to the remainder . This complexity of facts supposes the material of in- numerable theories ...
Էջ xxxii
... seem to prove but that one , though they would really afford equal proof of fifty others . Hence , there come ... seems the more real for this very cause ; our inability to see through him , or to discern the source and manner of ...
... seem to prove but that one , though they would really afford equal proof of fifty others . Hence , there come ... seems the more real for this very cause ; our inability to see through him , or to discern the source and manner of ...
Էջ xxxiii
... seems to have wished to exemplify the moral necessity of a due balance between our attention to the objects of our senses , and our meditation on the workings of our minds , -an equilibrium between the real and the imaginary worlds . In ...
... seems to have wished to exemplify the moral necessity of a due balance between our attention to the objects of our senses , and our meditation on the workings of our minds , -an equilibrium between the real and the imaginary worlds . In ...
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Common terms and phrases
beauty blood character copy Danes daughter dead dear death Denmark doth doubt drink earth effect Enter Hamlet Exeunt Exit eyes father fear feeling folio Fortinbras friends gentleman Gertrude Ghost give grace grief Guil hand hast hath hear heart heaven Horatio ISRAEL GOLLANCZ Jephthah Julius Cæsar King lady Laer Laertes leave look Lord Chamberlain's men Lord Hamlet madness majesty Marcellus means mind mother murder nature never night noble o'er omitted in Qq.-I. G. Ophelia Osric passage passion play players poison'd Polonius pray Prince probably Pyrrhus Quarto Queen question reading revenge Rosencrantz and Guildenstern scene seems Senecan sense Shakespeare soul Spanish Tragedy speak speech spirit Swear sweet sword tell thee thing Thomas Kyd thou thought tion tongue tragedy true William Shakespeare words