 | Carol Guess - 1996 - 170 páginas
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 | Meg Harris Williams - 1997 - 169 páginas
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 | Michael Neill - 1997 - 404 páginas
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 | Howard Marchitello - 1997 - 229 páginas
...father (the Ghost commands Hamlet, "Remember me," even as Hamlet requires Horatio to retell his story: "If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart,/ Absent...harsh world draw thy breath in pain/ To tell my story" [5.2.351-54]), but also because, as Derrida has argued of Poe's story, "The Facts in the Case of M.... | |
 | Marjorie B. Garber - 1997 - 248 páginas
...spectators is a temporary rather than a permanent state. In his next words Hamlet enjoins Horatio, If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart, Absent thee...harsh world draw thy breath in pain, To tell my story. (v. ii. 348-51) Horatio's task - and by extension that of Hamlet's other 'audience' - is to make history... | |
 | Michael Pennington - 1996 - 216 páginas
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 | Clara Calvo, Jean Jacques Weber - 1998 - 148 páginas
...clear Hamlet's name. The third thing he does before dying is to spare a few seconds for the lyrical: 'If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart,/ Absent...world draw thy breath in pain/ To tell my story.' Hamlet manipulates Horatio's feelings and asks him, if he ever loved him, to face pain and suffering... | |
 | 1984
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