Shakespeare's Tragic Heroes: Slaves of Passion |
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Page 133
... death resembled for all the world , either a most deepe and sound sleepe , or a voiage farre remote into foraine parts , in which a man is long absent from his native country ; or else thirdly , an utter abolition and finall dissolution ...
... death resembled for all the world , either a most deepe and sound sleepe , or a voiage farre remote into foraine parts , in which a man is long absent from his native country ; or else thirdly , an utter abolition and finall dissolution ...
Page 134
... death is destruction , there cannot be fear of what is not , Cardan says , and he concludes : Death dooth take away more evylles , then it bringeth , and those more certeyn.3 It is thus in the accepted tradition that Hamlet argues in ...
... death is destruction , there cannot be fear of what is not , Cardan says , and he concludes : Death dooth take away more evylles , then it bringeth , and those more certeyn.3 It is thus in the accepted tradition that Hamlet argues in ...
Page 135
... death , The undiscovered country from whose bourn No traveller returns , puzzles the will And makes us rather bear those ills we have , Than fly to others that we know not of ? But here Hamlet turns from the thought of death and life to ...
... death , The undiscovered country from whose bourn No traveller returns , puzzles the will And makes us rather bear those ills we have , Than fly to others that we know not of ? But here Hamlet turns from the thought of death and life to ...
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Common terms and phrases
action affections ambition anger appearance appetite Aristotle Banquo Blazon of Jealousie blood bloud body brain Cassio cause chapter choler cold complexion Cordelia courage cries death deed Desdemona desire Devil discussion doth English envy evil excess explains fall of princes father fear fortune French Academie fury ghost Gloucester Goneril grief Hamlet hath hear heart Holland's Plutarch humours Iago Ibid imitation judgement justice Kent King King Lear Lady Macbeth Laertes Lavater Lear Lucius Annaeus Seneca lust Macduff madness maner melan melancholy adust mind Mirror for Magistrates moral philosophy mortal sin murder naturall nature Newton Ophelia Othello passion play poetry Polonius punishment rage reason Renaissance revenge says scene Seneca sensible soul Shakespeare shame shew sleep soliloquy sort speak spirits teaching temperance thee theme things thinking Thomas thou thought tragedy translation Treatise unto vengeance vertue vices virtue witches wrath