Some Remarks on the Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Written by Mr. William Shakespeare (1736) by Anonymous
page 22 of 70 (31%)
page 22 of 70 (31%)
|
The other is Page 130. ---- _Stay Illusion! If thou hast any Sound, or Use of Voice, Speak to me! If there be any good Thing to be done, That may to thee do Ease, and Grace to me, Speak to me. If thou art privy to thy Country's Fate, Which, happily, Fore-knowing may avoid, Oh Speak! Or if thou hast uphoarded in thy Life Extorted Treasure in the Womb of Earth, For which, they say, you Spirits oft' walk in Death, Speak of it,--Stay and speak!--Stop it_ Marcellus. His desiring _Marcellus_ to stop it, is also much in Nature, because it shews a Perturbation of Mind, very much to be expected at such an Incident. For he must know, being a Scholar, (as they term him) that Spirits could not be stopp'd as Corporeal Substances can. But to return to Page 228. Bernardo, _How now_ Horatio! _you tremble and look pale_, &c. This is entirely in Nature, for it cannot be supposed, that any Man, |
|