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I am dead horatio
I am dead horatio












i am dead horatio

V,2,3741 aside to Horatio Thy state is the more gracious for 'tis a vice to know him. If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart in thisharsh. Action has at last spoken louder than words. Aside to Horatio Dost know this waterfly 312. Wretched queen, adieu Horatio, I am dead Thou livest report me and my causearight to the unsatisfied. For Hamlet, entrusting the task to Horatio declares his love better than expressing that love through any of Hamlet's poetry or philosophy. Hamlet trusts his friend enough to leave him the task of finding the words that will divine the truth. Hamlet passionately demonstrates his own deep love and admiration for Horatio in his request that Horatio tell Hamlet's story. Report me and my cause aright To the unsatisfied. Horatio loves Hamlet so much that he would rather impale himself on his own sword than live on after Hamlet's death. Wretched queen, adieu You that look pale, and tremble at this chance, That are but mutes or audience to this act, Had I but time-as this fell sergeant, Death, Is strict in his arrest-O, I could tell you- But let it be. Apparently we catch Hamlet and Horatio in the middle of a conversation about Hamlet's adventures from the time that he left Denmark until he returned. He knows enough to value what ignorance he has that can protect him from political ruin, but neither ambition nor deceit determines his loyalties. see the other: i.e., hear the other news. He can follow Hamlet's elaborate wordplays, but he is not inclined to engage in any. Alfred Prufrock," a poem in which the the title character, paralyzed by words and feelings protests, "I will not be Prince Hamlet.") Marcellus and Bernardo Marcellus and Barnardo admire Horatio's intellect enough to want his opinion about the ghost, but no one accuses Horatio of talking or thinking too much. Eliot calls "the energy to murder and create" in "The Lovesong J.

i am dead horatio

Horatio seems to accept the world as it is handed to him where Hamlet is driven by his impulse question all apparent truths. He is intelligent, but not driven by his intellectual creativity. If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart in this harsh world draw thy breath in pain, To tell my story. Otherwise, Horatio supports every rash decision Hamlet makes. Horatio, I am dead Thou livest report me and my cause aright to the unsatisfied. He only questions Hamlet's judgment once, when Hamlet confides the fates of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern.














I am dead horatio