| William Shakespeare - 2004 - 176 oldal
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| Stuart Gillespie - 2004 - 548 oldal
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| Stephen Greenblatt - 2004 - 460 oldal
...way to uncertainty: The spirit that I have seen May be the devil, and the devil hath power T'assume a pleasing shape; yea, and perhaps, Out of my weakness...potent with such spirits — Abuses me to damn me. (2.2.575-80) Such thoughts lead to a cycle of delay, self-reproach, continued failure to act, and renewed... | |
| Gail Kern Paster - 2010 - 291 oldal
...emotional inconstancy: The spirit that I have seen May be a [dev'l], and the [dev'l] hath power T'assume a pleasing shape, yea, and perhaps Out of my weakness...very potent with such spirits, Abuses me to damn me. (2.2.598-603) Hamlet sees himself here as too open and vulnerable to influences brought in and through... | |
| Ralf Haekel - 2004 - 360 oldal
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| Douglas Trevor - 2004 - 288 oldal
...possession, one that renders him acutely vulnerable to demonic forces: "the devil hath power / T'assume a pleasing shape, yea, and perhaps, / Out of my weakness...very potent with such spirits, / Abuses me to damn me."1 19 Hamlet marks, if not the first, then the most enduring representation of a depressed intellectual... | |
| Thomas M. Disch - 2005 - 282 oldal
...was only a product of my own overheated imagination. Or then again, it may be, as Hamlet surmised: The spirit that I have seen May be a devil: and the...very potent with such spirits Abuses me to damn me. I had just laid aside the volume of Browne's Pseudodoxia Epidemica with which I had been beguiling the... | |
| Stephan Wackwitz - 2005 - 282 oldal
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