HamletPenguin UK, 7. 4. 2005 - Počet stran: 400 'The Mona Lisa of literature' T. S. Eliot |
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... Laertes arrives with riotous supporters she tries to protect the King; as she says, he is not responsible for the death of Polonius. She reports the death of Ophelia to Laertes, not to her husband. 'Let's follow, Gertrude', he exhorts ...
... Laertes arrives with riotous supporters she tries to protect the King; as she says, he is not responsible for the death of Polonius. She reports the death of Ophelia to Laertes, not to her husband. 'Let's follow, Gertrude', he exhorts ...
Strana
... Laertes might be attributed to a contrived antic disposition, but Hamlet says otherwise: 'But I am very sorry, good Horatio, | That to Laertes I forgot myself' (V.2.75–6). It is not that there are insufficient signs of subjectivity in ...
... Laertes might be attributed to a contrived antic disposition, but Hamlet says otherwise: 'But I am very sorry, good Horatio, | That to Laertes I forgot myself' (V.2.75–6). It is not that there are insufficient signs of subjectivity in ...
Strana
... Laertes, and Laertes plots with the King. When Ophelia calls Hamlet 'Th'observed of all observers' (III.1.155) she means he has been admired and imitated; in fact, he is becoming the object of a comprehensive surveillance. Hamlet reacts ...
... Laertes, and Laertes plots with the King. When Ophelia calls Hamlet 'Th'observed of all observers' (III.1.155) she means he has been admired and imitated; in fact, he is becoming the object of a comprehensive surveillance. Hamlet reacts ...
Strana
... Laertes for possession of Ophelia. The operations of patriarchal authority are evident in the Polonius family. Laertes's wish to return to France is granted readily by his father and the King; when we first see Ophelia she is being told ...
... Laertes for possession of Ophelia. The operations of patriarchal authority are evident in the Polonius family. Laertes's wish to return to France is granted readily by his father and the King; when we first see Ophelia she is being told ...
Strana
... Laertes. He wants Reynaldo to gain confidences about his son's behaviour by attributing to him 'wanton, wild, and usual slips' (II.1.22). Reynaldo is anxious about bringing Laertes into disrepute, but Polonius is happy to countenance ...
... Laertes. He wants Reynaldo to gain confidences about his son's behaviour by attributing to him 'wanton, wild, and usual slips' (II.1.22). Reynaldo is anxious about bringing Laertes into disrepute, but Polonius is happy to countenance ...
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