The Poetry of Shakespeare's Plays, Volume 10 |
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Page 43
... Hamlet as a whole has not the con- centration and intensity of the passage quoted above ; indeed , in his next speech Hamlet describes his dead father in the earlier conventional idiom : Hyperion's curls , the front of Jove himself , An ...
... Hamlet as a whole has not the con- centration and intensity of the passage quoted above ; indeed , in his next speech Hamlet describes his dead father in the earlier conventional idiom : Hyperion's curls , the front of Jove himself , An ...
Page 133
... Hamlet at the beginning of the other . Both are disillusioned , Troilus by his mistress , Hamlet by his mother ; Troilus has lost his dearly loved eldest brother , Hamlet his father . The difference is that for Troilus the way is clear ...
... Hamlet at the beginning of the other . Both are disillusioned , Troilus by his mistress , Hamlet by his mother ; Troilus has lost his dearly loved eldest brother , Hamlet his father . The difference is that for Troilus the way is clear ...
Page 140
... Hamlet's , ' It is such a kind of gain- giving as would perhaps trouble a woman ' . This subdued and ominous ... Hamlet , particularly , of course , in the character of Hamlet himself , and this is perhaps the main secret of the almost ...
... Hamlet's , ' It is such a kind of gain- giving as would perhaps trouble a woman ' . This subdued and ominous ... Hamlet , particularly , of course , in the character of Hamlet himself , and this is perhaps the main secret of the almost ...
Contents
Chapter Page | vii |
EARLY PLAYS AND POEMS | 53 |
SONNETS AND LYRICAL PLAYS | 74 |
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