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Search results 861 - 870 of 1751 matching essays
- 861: Hamlet - Why Did Hamlet Delay Killing The King?
- ... which made it a sin. Hamlet says to his mother in Act III:4, "Have you not eyes? You cannot call it love. O shame! Where is thy blush?" These successive shocks deepen Hamlet’s depression. In Act II:2 Hamlet says to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, "I have of late…lost all my mirth." He falls deeper and deeper into the slough of fruitless brooding. In his first soliloquy he says ...
- 862: Hamlet - The Love Of Hamlet For Ophelia
- ... His cannon ‘gainst self-slaughter … how weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable seem to me all the uses of this world." (1.2.131-134). Throughout the play, Hamlet teaches the audience the depths of his depression through soliloquies. Hamlet not only regards the world with pessimism, but he also has suicidal feelings. Hamlet displays thoughts of self that questions the worth of living. The foremost cause for his exasperation and aggravation ...
- 863: Hamlet - The Character Of Hamlet
- ... Hamlet is immature, sarcastic, and takes action during the heat of passion which is very much like the behavior of the youth in the 1990’s. Love, control over action, and the ability to overcome depression are just a few ways to prove maturity. It is obvious Hamlet loves Ophelia in his own way "... the celestial and my soul’s idol, the most beautified Ophelia ..." (Hamlet. II, ii, 109-110), but ...
- 864: Hamlet - Soliloquies
- ... God! How weary, stale, flat and unprofitable Seem to me all the uses of this world (I, ii, 135-140). Through these lines it is obvious that Hamlet is in the midst of a deep depression. He has no control over the "uses of the world." Hamlet compares Denmark to an "unweeded garden" to symbolize the corruption within his country, that is seeded within Claudius and his incestuous marriage to Gertrude ...
- 865: Hamlet - He Loves Her? He Loves Her Not?
- ... stale, flat, and unprofitable seem to me all the uses of this world." (14 Act 1 Scene 2 Line 131). It is through his soliloquy’s that the audience learns the depths of Hamlet’s depression. Hamlet not only regards the world with pessimism, but he also has suicidal feelings. The main reason at this point for his anger and frustration, is his mother’s abrupt marriage to Claudius. The actions ...
- 866: The Crucible
- ... to wipe out any other issue. How could one deal with such enormities in a play? "The Crucible" was an act of des- peration. Much of my desperation branched out, I suppose, from a typical Depression--era trauma--the blow struck on the mind by the rise of European Fascism and the brutal anti-Semitism it had brought to power. But by 1950, when I began to think of writing about ...
- 867: The Broken Heart
- ... that long but in reality it is only a short period of time. According to Donne, love is very powerful and causes the widespread destruction to thousands. Donne also uses the image of despair and depression. In the second stanza, he says "Ah, what a trifle is a heart, if once into love’s hands it come!" In these lines Donne gives us the image of a hand of love and ...
- 868: Modern Economic Theories
- ... opposites of the Supply Side and Keynes' theories are well matched theories, but it was the time of use that made them good and bad. Keynes' theory was used during that aftermath of the Great Depression, a catastrophe America will never forget and will never be able to repay Keynes for the economic assistance in recovering from it. The Supply Side theory was used after a long period of prosperity, and ...
- 869: Candide 2
- ... her and she cannot make him happy. This may prove Martin s theory that man was born to suffer. In conclusion, what looks or sounds like true love and happiness, is only a front for depression and anguish. Voltaire also debunks the absolutes of brotherhood and humanity in many episodes of the story. For example the Portuguese Jews hanged simply because they chose not to eat the bacon with their meal ...
- 870: The Awakening
- ... He, like Chopin, wrote many short stories, for which he is remembered the most (Encarta). Like Chopin, Maupassant’s ideas were looked at as "immoral" and "mature," dealing with ideas such as "sex," loneliness, and "depression" (Jones 385). He questioned the standards of the day, and was therefore rejected by many people as an immoral person (Jones 385). Kate Chopin’s interest in Maupassant began after her mother died (Toth 181 ...
Search results 861 - 870 of 1751 matching essays
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