Yes, lots. It starts at about line 10 of the first scene when Barnardo asks, "Have you had aquiet guard" and Francisco replies "Not a mouse stirring". It ends around line 400 of the last scene when Fortinbras says, "and for his passage the soldiers' music and the rite of war speak loudly for him."
Yes. here are some examples:
Act I, Scene 3: "Primrose path"
Act I, Scene 5: "With witchcraft of his wit, with traitorous gifts"
Yes there is.
yes
allegory of Where the sidewalk ends
I think you must mean ALLEGORY, not 'allusions'
Not really. It is too much influenced by Shakespeare's Hamlet and the Biblical story about Moses. Those can't be called fairytales as they are just great stories targetted at people of all ages, mostly at adults.
Hamlet stabbed him with the poisoned sword which Laertes had poisoned to kill Hamlet. He was, in Hamlet's phrase, "hoist with his own petard."
Hamlet's uncle Claudius killed Hamlet's father (called Hamlet Sr.). The ghost of Hamlet Sr. comes back from the dead and tells Hamlet Jr. so. Hamlet Jr. confirms this by re-enacting the murder as a play, which upsets Uncle Claudius.
Time flew by...The Faerie Queen is an allegory for the Bible
Time flew by...The Faerie Queen is an allegory for the Bible
Anallegoryis a picture, story or poem that can beinterpretedto reveal a hidden meaning.Aesop'sfables are examples of allegory.
allegory of Where the sidewalk ends
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Hamlet?
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I think you must mean ALLEGORY, not 'allusions'
Israel Gollancz has written: 'Spenseriana' 'Allegory and mysticism in Shakespeare' -- subject(s): Allegory, Comedy, History, Jews in literature, Medievalism, Middle Ages in literature, Mysticism in literature, Shylock (Fictitious character) 'The sources of Hamlet' -- subject(s): Hamlet (Legendary character), Sources, Tragedy 'The middle ages in the lineage of English poetry' 'The Exeter book'
Lord of the Flies, Of Mice and Men, 1984....
hamlet and juluis caeser
Hamlet, Macbeth, and Much Ado About Nothing are three examples of plays that William Shakespeare wrote.