Word: hamletized
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...Copeland, who spoke in Sever Hall the other evening on "Reading Aloud," is going to talk this evening at the Christian Union Building 48 Boylston St. Boston. The subject of the lecture will be "Shakespeare - Fin de Siecle;" and after speaking, Mr. Copeland will read from Hamlet and other plays. No admission will be charged and anyone reaching the hall at about quarter to eight will be sure of a seat. This talk will be the first in a course of twenty lessons...
...Ophelia's Dying Scene" from "Hamlet" Miss White had a better chance than in the "Aria" for showing what the human voice can do. Great technical skill is here demanded and she did the work justice...
...programme concert to be given in Sanders Theatre tonight at 7.45 is as follows: Suite, Dvorak; Aria from "Der Tod Jesu," Graun; Symphony No. E. Beethoven; Aria from "Hamlet," Thomas; Overture, Euryanthe, Heber. Soloist, Miss Priscilla White...
...should prefer to divide it into five, as follows: 1586-97 - the period which we will designate as marking the Romeo-Proteus-Biron mood. It is Shakespeare's lightest period, when the moral tendency is not really settled. The second period is from 1597-1603, marking the Jacques-Hamlet mood. The melancholy Jacques is a preparation for Hamlet. During this period, most of the sonnets were composed. Dur-the years 1603-1609, Shakespeare has returned to Stratford. This is his tragic period, and is distinguished by the composition of Julius Caesar, Measure For Measure, Macbeth, Othello, Troilus and Cressida...
...closely connected with his celebrated contemporaries and he was in favor at court. His unobtrusiveness is a noticeable trait. He had an unusual shyness of all publicity and was a quiet stately actor. His favorite parts were those of the Ghost, in Hamlet, and Old Adam, in As You Like It. He was, in fine, "a fantastical fellow of dark corners." He was devoted to his sacred art but the author disappeared in the work. Ruskin has said: "An artist has done nothing until he has concealed himself." If the converse be true, Shakspere is truly a master...