(LAERTES) And so have I a noble father lost, A sister driven into desperate terms, Whose worth, if praises may go back again, Stood challenger on mount of all the age. ii. Laertes purer love for his sister--not inhibited by sexual desire, nor by a reason to use her to achieve anything--makes Hamlet realize, upon her death, that she has died because of him. PDF Hamlet Act Questions - Answer Sheet By Cock, they are to blame. He also says that he has much to tell of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. Horatio is given a letter from Hamlet telling of the princes boarding of a pirate ship and his subsequent return to Denmark. in lines 49 50 hamlet implies that laertes. in lines 49 50 hamlet implies that laertes. Laertes and Hamlet seem to be so similar, yet so far apart and different at the same time. 2, Lines 4250. iii. He is now King and he gets to throw his weight around. Sonnets 9723 - Hamlet - Passage 12 - Applied Practice trap. blames hamlet for ophelia's death Claudius, out of view of the audience, has told Laertes a version of events that seems to satisfy him completely. Get Annual Plans at a discount when you buy 2 or more! Hamlet - Act 1, scene 3 | Folger Shakespeare Library On the guards platform at Elsinore, Horatio waits with Barnardo and Marcellus to question a ghost that has twice before appeared. ACT II - the word "conceit" in line 4 most likely means, ACT II - lines 1-2 contain examples of all of the following EXCEPT, ACT II - in lines 29-30, hamlet faults himself for lacking, ACT II- in line 56, "spirits" could best be restated as, ACT II - a major shift in the passage occurs in, ACT II - in the course of his soliloquy, hamlet exhibits, ACT III - it is clear that rosencrantz and guildenstern desire to protect the kind primarily because they believe that, ACT III - polonius reveals that the king believes the queen might be lacking in, ACT III - the king's words in lines 48-49 are an example of, ACT III - in the king's soliloquy (lines 47-85) he expresses some hope based upon, ACT III - in line 66, the word "effects" could best be restated as, ACT III - lines 65-85 contain all of the following except, ACT III - in line 111, "this physic" refers to, ACT III - in line 12, "i took thee for thy better" means that hamlet, mistakenly thought that polonius was the king, ACT III - in line 18, the word "custom" could most accurately be restated as, ACT III - in lines 24-34, hamlet claims that his mother's act has dishonored all of the following EXCEPT, ACT III - in lines 56-61 hamlet employs