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Search results 1691 - 1700 of 5332 matching essays
- 1691: Hamlet - Method In The Madness
- ... O, wonderful! Horatio: Good my lord, tell it. Hamlet: No, you will reveal it. (I.v.118-21) This is the first glimpse of Hamlet's ability and inclination to manipulate his behavior to achieve effect. Clearly Hamlet is not feeling cheerful at this moment, but if he lets the guards know the severity of the news, they might suspect its nature. Another instance of Hamlet's behavior manipulation is his ...
- 1692: Hamlet - Hamlet, Laertes And Fortinbras
- ... of this world" seem to him "weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable." Though his faith in the value of life has been destroyed by this double confrontation with death and human infidelity, he feels impotent to effect any change in this new reality: "It is not, nor it cannot come to good. / But break my heart, for I must hold my tongue." All he can do in this frustrated state is to ...
- 1693: Hamlet - Elizabethan Revenge In Hamlet
- ... that Lorenzo killed his son, but he doubts this so he runs to the king for justice. Hieronimo importantly secures his legal rights before taking justice into his own hands. The madness scene comes into effect when Hieronimo’s wife, Usable goes mad, and Hieronimo is so stunned that his mind becomes once again unsettled. Finally Hieronimo decides to go through with the revenge, so he seeks out to murder Balthazar ...
- 1694: Hamlet - Characters: Hamlet Laertes And Fortinbras
- ... of this world" seem to him "weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable." Though his faith in the value of life has been destroyed by this double confrontation with death and human infidelity, he feels impotent to effect any change in this new reality: "It is not, nor it cannot come to good. / But break my heart, for I must hold my tongue." All he can do in this frustrated state is to ...
- 1695: A Midsummer Night’s Dream
- ... life, Demetrius actually felt some true, real emotion. He sees no reason to pursue Hermia any further while she is in such a state, and he decides to fall asleep, hoping this will lighten the effect of the sorrow: So sorrow's heaviness doth heavier grow For debt that bankrout [sleep] doth sorrow owe, Which now in some slight measure it will pay, If for his tender here I make some ...
- 1696: Welcome To The Monkey House
- ... suicide hostess, only a little bit of pleasure for converting her to a "Nothinghead". However the poem is appropriate because the suicide hostess' feeling about sex were very like those of most Victorian ladies. The effect of the ethical birth control pills is also much like the effects that the author of the poem, Elisabeth Browning, felt after falling off of her horse. The theme of this story is not in ...
- 1697: Utopia
- ... exclusion of those on Utopian social an economic policy. Yet to regard the section on religion and philosophy as the key to the interpretation of Utopia and to the intent of its author is in effect to surrender at the outset any hope of determining what that intent was. More nevertheless takes considerable pain by mean of two devices to draw the Utopian commonwealth as near to Christianity as his literary ...
- 1698: The Crucible - Conscience
- ... crazy children" are now "jangling the keys of the kingdom." Here we must introduce the parallel plot of John’s affair with Abigail. John Proctor has had an affair with Abigail Williams. This has an effect on his conscience. "He is a sinner, a sinner not only against the moral fashion but against his own vision of decent conduct." John’s conscience troubles him throughout the play. It manifests itself in ...
- 1699: The Crucible
- ... girl. By this time, I was sure, John Proctor had bedded Abigail, who had to be dismissed most likely to appease Elizabeth. They was bad blood between the two women now. That Abigail started, in effect, to condemn Elizabeth to death with her touch, then stopped her hand, then went through with it, was quite suddenly human center of all this turmoil. All this I understood. I had not proached the ...
- 1700: The Crucible
- ... such great fear of the Devil, many would not have hanged for innocence and all would have seen that there was no witchcraft in Salem. But Proctor’s adultery with Abigail Williams has had an effect on the entire case. It gave Abigail a--in her eyes--good reason to accuse Elizabeth Proctor of witchcraft. Then, if Elizabeth was hanged, she hoped she could take her place in Proctor’s life ...
Search results 1691 - 1700 of 5332 matching essays
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