Some Remarks on the Tragedy of Hamlet Prince of Denmark, Written by Mr. William ShakespeareW. Wilkins, 1736 - 52 pages |
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Page 2
... least insisted on , which will , however , put every Thing he has produc'd in its true and proper Light . He had ( beyond Difpute ) a inoft unbound- ed Genius , very little regulated by Art . His particular Excellency confifts in the ...
... least insisted on , which will , however , put every Thing he has produc'd in its true and proper Light . He had ( beyond Difpute ) a inoft unbound- ed Genius , very little regulated by Art . His particular Excellency confifts in the ...
Page 3
... least not put in the Light they ought to be , I hope I fhall deferve my Rea- der's Thanks , who will thereby , I imagine , receive that Pleasure which I have always done upon any new Discovery of this fort , whe- ther made by my own ...
... least not put in the Light they ought to be , I hope I fhall deferve my Rea- der's Thanks , who will thereby , I imagine , receive that Pleasure which I have always done upon any new Discovery of this fort , whe- ther made by my own ...
Page 41
... least Purgatory for him to pass through , as we find even in a virtuous Prince , the Father of Hamlet . Page 310 . Enter the Queen and Polonius , and after- wards Hamlet , WE are now come to a Scene , which I have always much admired ...
... least Purgatory for him to pass through , as we find even in a virtuous Prince , the Father of Hamlet . Page 310 . Enter the Queen and Polonius , and after- wards Hamlet , WE are now come to a Scene , which I have always much admired ...
Page 50
... least as much as I poffibly can : Nor do I think it neceffary to make an oftentatious Shew of Learning , or to draw quaint Parallels between our Author and the great Tragick Writers of Antiquity ; for in Truth , this is very little to ...
... least as much as I poffibly can : Nor do I think it neceffary to make an oftentatious Shew of Learning , or to draw quaint Parallels between our Author and the great Tragick Writers of Antiquity ; for in Truth , this is very little to ...
Page 53
... least Experience has fhewn it frequently ) that thofe Pieces wherein the fantastick Rules of Criticks have been kept strictly to , have been generally flat and low . We are to confider , that no Dra- matick Piece can affect us but by ...
... least Experience has fhewn it frequently ) that thofe Pieces wherein the fantastick Rules of Criticks have been kept strictly to , have been generally flat and low . We are to confider , that no Dra- matick Piece can affect us but by ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abfurdity alfo almoſt Amlethus appear Audience Author Beauties becauſe Befides Behaviour beſt Caufe cauſe Character Circumſtances Comick Confequence Converfation Courſe Critick Cuſtom Death Defign defire Denmark Deſcription Diction Dignity Dramatick elfe exprefs'd faid fame Father Fault feems fent ferve fhall fhews fhocking fhort fhould Filial Piety fince fome fpeak Friendſhip ftill fuch a Piece fuitable fuppofe furely Gerutha Ghoft Ghoſt give greateſt Hamlet himſelf Horatio Impofition juſt King Laertes Laertes's laft laſt leaft leaſt lefs Madneſs Majeſty moft moſt muft muſt Nature neceffary nefs never Norway obferve Occafion Ophelia Paffions Perfons Play pleafing pleaſe Pleaſure Poet poffible Polonius Prince Hamlet Prince's Profe Puniſhment racter raiſe a Laugh Reaſon Repreſentation repreſented Revenge Romeo and Juliet Scene ſeem Sentiments Sequel Shakespeare's Sophocles Spectators Spectre Speech ſtrong take Notice Taſte Tenderneſs thefe themſelves Theobalds theſe Lines Thing thofe thoſe Tragedy Tragick Writers Ufurper Underſtandings uſe virtuous whole
Popular passages
Page 19 - Like Niobe, all tears; why she, even she, — O God ! a beast, that wants discourse of reason, Would have mourn'd longer, — married with my uncle, My father's brother, but no more like my father Than I to Hercules...
Page 19 - That it should come to this! But two months dead: nay, not so much, not two: So excellent a king; that was, to this, Hyperion to a satyr; so loving to my mother That he might not beteem the winds of heaven Visit her face too roughly.
Page 19 - Why, she would hang on him, As if increase of appetite had grown By what it fed on ; yet, within a month, Let me not think Frailty, thy name is Woman...
Page 11 - What art thou, that usurp'st this time of night, Together with that fair and warlike form In which the majesty of buried Denmark Did sometimes march?
Page 33 - England ; which design, had it taken effect upon his life, he never could have revenged his father's murder.
Page 21 - I have not mentioned the incest of her marriage, which is so obvious a provocation ; but cannot forbear taking notice, that when his fury is at its height, he cries, " Frailty, thy name is Woman...
Page 46 - Ophelia's madnefs was chiefly for her father's death, or for the lofs of Hamlet. It is not often that young women run mad for the lofs of their fathers. It is more natural to...
Page 49 - Denmark, as he had the dying voice of the prince. He in a few words gives a noble character of Hamlet, and ferves to carry off the...
Page 55 - And the more I read him, the more I am convinced, that as he knew his own particular Talent well, he study'd more to work up great and moving Circumstances to place his chief Characters in, so as to affect our Passions strongly, he apply'd himself more to This than he did to the Means or Methods whereby he brought his Characters into those Circumstances.
Page 4 - But the Province of an Editor and a Commentator is quite foreign to that of a Poet. The former endeavours to give us an Author as he is ; the latter, by the Correclnefs and Excellency of his own Genius, is often tempted to give us an Author as he thinks he ought to be.