Act 2 Scene 2 Continued Flashcards Preview

English 12H > Act 2 Scene 2 Continued > Flashcards

Flashcards in Act 2 Scene 2 Continued Deck (61)
Loading flashcards...
1
Q

… and …. return from Norway: Old Norway thought Prince F. was actually going to attack the …., but discovered that this was a lie

A

Voltemand; Cornelius; Polish

2
Q

Old Norway … Prince F., makes him legally swear never to …. and is overcome with joy when …., so he gives Prince F. … and access to … to use them against …

A

arrests; never take arms against Denmark again; Fortinbras promises; 3 times his annual allowance; soldiers; Polish

3
Q

Old Norway also wants Claudius to give Prince Fortinbras …. through .. to …
Prince F. obviously would use this opportunity to …., but Cl. simply says he’ll ….

A

safe passage; Denmark; Poland; attack Poland; think about it later

4
Q

Polonius: “brevity is the soul of wit”→ being concise is the .., but Polonius isn’t …

A

soul of charm & intellect; brief

5
Q

Gertrude tells Polonius to stop …. and ….

A

decorating his speech; get to the point

6
Q

Polonius has letter Hamlet gave to Ophelia and is reading this to uncle & mom:
Hamlet calls Ophelia …. and his soul’s …., but also calls her “beautified” which basically means …. and Polonius….

A

heavenly; idol; hot; freaks out

7
Q

Hamlet also writes “in her excellent white bosom” and …. freaks out

A

gertrude

8
Q

Hamlet tells Ophelia someone’s lying if they say they’re …. and if they say they’re lying, they’re trying to ….
Hamlet is trying to tell her he’s not actually …., he’s telling a …, even though at face value he sounds crazy

A

telling the truth; tell the truth; crazy; small truth

9
Q

Polonius attaches his reputation to how Ophelia .

A

receives love

10
Q

Polonius remains convinced that Hamlet’s problem must be unrequited love and he is ….. He will test his theory by “….” Ophelia to Hamlet while he and King Cl. will …. and ….

A

betting his life on this; loosing; hide behind the curtain; listen in

11
Q

Polonius asks Hamlet if he knows he he is. Hamlet says Polonius sells … by the …., calls him a …

A

fish; docks; fishmonger

12
Q

This notion of selling fish is already insulting, but fishmonger is also Elizabethan slang for

A

pimp

13
Q

Hamlet says: “To be honest […] is to be one man picked out of ten thousand,” and then says “For if the sun breed maggots in a dead dog[…]”
there is 1 dead dog in Hamlet’s sentence, and many maggots –> Hamlet is indirectly calling Polonius a …, where Hamlet is the … (the …) getting picked on by …(the….)

A

maggot; honest man; dog; Polonius; maggot

14
Q

Hamlet asks if Polonius has a daughter and says if he does, she shouldn’t go out in the sun → reference to his statement that “….”, Ophelia will be picked on by ….

A

sun breeds maggots; picked on by maggots

15
Q

Polonius asks Hamlet what he’s reading and Hamlet replies “….” and then insults …

A

words, words, words; Polonius’s age

16
Q

Polonius asks, “Will you walk out of the air”, in elizabethan times this meant …., but Hamlet replies “into my grave?”

A

are you going outside

17
Q

Polonius says everything Hamlet says is full of … and therefore questions H.’s …. he is floored by Hamlet’s …

A

meaning; insanity; intellect

18
Q

Polonius says “I will take my leave of you” but Hamlet twists words to say you can’t take anything from me except that which …, says he will willingly … → Polonius has taken Hamlet’s …. from him, as Hamlet must now put on …. and can’t have ….

A

I give; give his life; life; persona; Ophelia

19
Q

Hamlet doesn’t ask Ros and Guild why they’re here as he did with Horatio because he ….

A

already knows

20
Q

Hamlet asks Ros and Guild how they are and they say they’re …, and in expressing this Guild personifies … (allusion)

A

indifferent; fortune

21
Q

Guild’s personification of fortune (allusion): fortune frequently personified as …., Ros and Guild are not the button on her cap, which is good

A

blind woman

22
Q

Hamlet says “nor the soles of her shoe?” which means

A

bad luck

23
Q

Guild and Ros. remark that they are in fortunes …, and Hamlet jokes that if that is the case fortune must be a …

A

privates; prostitute

24
Q

Hamlet calls Denmark a

A

prison

25
Q

Hamlet refers to …., stating that there is “nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so”

A

moral relativity

26
Q

if Hamlet truly believes in moral relativity, he is a … → person who is biologically incapable of …

A

sociopath; experiencing empathy

27
Q

Ros. tells Hamlet that it is Hamlet’s …. that makes Denmark feel like a prison

A

lack of ambition

28
Q

Hamlet says that Denmark is a prison because he has ….

A

bad dreams

29
Q

bad dreams make Hamlet incapable of …., they have … over him. if you have bad dreams, your life is …

A

enjoying his life; power; bad

30
Q

Guild says dreams are … (he’s referring to dreams as …), but Hamlet is thinking of all versions of dreams when he describes a dream as a ….

A

ambition; shadow

31
Q

Hamlet asked 3 times why Ros and Guild are there, and they admit that they were …., this admission is ….
They now work for …., but have no legit use anymore

A

sent for; high treason; Hamlet

32
Q

Hamlet says that he will tell Ros and Guild why they’re here → I have not ….

A

been myself lately

33
Q

pretext hamlet is a ….

A

renaissance man

34
Q

Hamlet says that the world is …., the sky is full of …, but he knows that it can be and should be …

A

sterile; rot; different

35
Q

Hamlet says people are not the …., but rather they are collections of … (…, …)

A

beauty of the world; dust; useless; base

36
Q

“players”:

A

actors

37
Q

Ros and Guild have apparently seen …. coming from …. Hamlet has seen these actors, he’s been to … before

A

actors; London; London

38
Q

as an actor in the elizabethan era, they typically belonged to …., and that acting company typically belonged to …

A

one director; one theater

39
Q

the actors are travelling even though they are good because their … wasn’t what it once was

A

reputation

40
Q

was illegal for women to play women on stage, so … acted as “female” actors

A

little boys

41
Q

there were …. with older men, and for boys who needed to keep their high-pitched voices to continue acting, they underwent ….

A

romantic scenes; castration

42
Q

Elizabethans aren’t going to playhouses because of the

A

romantic scenes between little boys and older men

43
Q

Hamlet says it’s not so strange that boys are playing women because

A

Claudius is king

44
Q

a way to honor king was to wear a …. around their …, people used to make fun of Claudius but are now … →as strange as the boy-girl actors

A

picture of him; necks; paying for his picture

45
Q

Hamlet: “I know a hawk from a handsaw” → even though I’m crazy, I can tell the difference between 2 unlike things, between a … and a… (I ….)

A

friend; spy; see right through you

46
Q

Hamlet calls Polonius ….

A

Jephthah

47
Q

Jephthah was Biblical figure who makes a deal with God that if he survives the war, he can ….. 1st person Jephthah saw was his daughter who ….

A

die once he comes home; accidentally kills him

48
Q

Hamlet says Polonius doesn’t …

A

love his daughter

49
Q

Actors arrive, H. sees a young boy he saw before who is now older and …. for the boy’s ….

A

fears; fate

50
Q

Hamlet asks for a speech from the actors from a play that wasn’t ….
this play was like …, many don’t like it

A

popular; caviar

51
Q

this play was unpopular because it was …., a historical play about the ….

A

inaccessible; trojan war (not intended to be for general public)

52
Q

the speech hamlet asks actor to recite is a moment from war right after soldiers drop from horse and kill everyone, particularly when the soldier …

A

Pyrrhus kills Priam

53
Q

Pyrrhus begins killing people, is splashed with …. and is walking through streets looking for …. → this scene seems like Hamlet’s …

A

blood; King of Troy; revenge fantasy

54
Q

1st player continues from where Hamlet stops:
Priam lying beneath the sword of Pyrrhus, at this moment Phyrrhus hears the city …. behind him and momentarily …, this is the eerie ….

A

crumble; stops; calm before the storm

55
Q

in this play with pyrrhus, fortune is referred to as …. (…), which echoes Hamlet’s language, indicating that this play was already ….

A

strumpet; prostitute; on his mind

56
Q

perhaps Hamlet already knew the actors were coming, perhaps he

A

planned this scene recounting

57
Q

Hamlet now wants actor to continue to part with

A

Hecuba

58
Q

Hecuba: … wife, …. of …

A

Priam’s; queen; Troy

59
Q

“mobled queen”: mobled is a word Shakespeare …, refers to moment right before …

A

invented; crying begins

60
Q

Hecuba runs out of the house with a …. only and watches as Pyrrhus …. Priam, and it takes her a while to ….

A

blanket; minces; start crying

61
Q

this scene with Hecuba watching Pyrrhus mince Priam indicates that Hamlet wants Gertrude to …. Perhaps he wants her to watch him …

A

suffer kill Claudius