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  1. So tell him what has happened here. The rest is silence. Oh, oh, oh, oh. [He dies]

  2. The rest of his life is to be silence. His life ended, too soon, leaving a wide gap of silence where years of living should be.

  3. [Enter Hamlet and Horatio in conversation.] Hamlet. So much for this, sir. Now, let me see — the other. You do remember all the circumstance? Horatio. Remember it, my lord! Hamlet. Sir, in my heart there was a kind of fighting. That would not let me sleep. Methought I lay. Worse than the mutines in the bilboes. Rashly —

  4. The rest is silence. (V.ii.342) These are Hamlet’s last words. Unlike many of Shakespeare’s tragic heroes, Hamlet never resigns himself to death or embraces it. He spends his final moments imagining the world after his death and begging Horatio to ‘report me and my cause aright’ (V.ii.323).

  5. 2 de jun. de 2020 · Act 5, scene 2. In the hall of the castle, Hamlet tells Horatio how he discovered the king’s plot against him and how he turned the tables on Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. Osric enters to ask, on Claudius’s behalf, that Hamlet fence with Laertes. Hamlet agrees to the contest, despite his misgivings.

  6. That, on the supervise (no leisure bated, 25 No, not to stay the grinding of the ax) My head should be struck off. HAMLET. Up from my cabin, My sea-gown scarfed about me, in the dark. Groped I to find out them, had my desire, Fingered their packet, and in fine withdrew. To mine own room again, making so bold.