I'm going to take advantage of your special offer, especially to go for a mediation walk and run up on the mountain while listening to audiobooks. I don't have service on my phone, so I just record the stories instead.
I don't care whether they are male or female playing the parts...having different voices separates the characters, and reading along with this has totally helped me understand the play. Thanks for the audio book..and thank you also for the unedited version.
It completely ruins it Hamlet says "Vanity thy name is woman" in a woman's voice, so shes technically insulting herself and every other woman makes zero sense.
@@PhillyBoy264 Absolutely. How VERY strange to have KING Claudius read by a WOMAN?! Claudius is a KEY Alpha male character, dominating the Queen and stealing the throne from Hamlet. What a ridiculous and confusing choice for listeners to put the King's words - especially referring to his wife - in a female voice, with absolutely NO pomp or circumstance. And HAMLET too, also read by a woman?? What bizarre sexist choice and pathetic political correctness is this? Of course it's volunteers, but c'mon - deliberately being awful is not OK. The whole dynamic of the play is damaged by these stupid, unnecessary choices.
Hamlet: Act 1, Scene 1: 01:57 - Elsinore. A platform before the castle. Act 1, Scene 2: 11:14 - A room of state in the castle. Act 1, Scene 3: 25:23 - A room in Polonius' house. Act 1, Scene 4: 33:11 - The platform. Act 1, Scene 5: 38:02 - Another part of the platform. Act 2, Scene 1: 49:48 - A room in POLONIUS' house. Act 2, Scene 2: 57:14 - A room in the castle. Act 3, Scene 1: 1:31:43 - A room in the castle. Act 3, Scene 2: 1:42:25 - A hall in the castle. Act 3, Scene 3: 2:04:04 - A room in the castle. Act 3, Scene 4: 2:10:25 - The Queen's closet. Act 4, Scene 1: 2:23:21 - A room in the castle. Act 4, Scene 2: 2:25:57 - Another room in the castle. Act 4, Scene 3: 2:27:26 - Another room in the castle. Act 4, Scene 4: 2:31:20 - A plain in Denmark. Act 4, Scene 5: 2:35:10 - Elsinore. A room in the castle. Act 4, Scene 6: 2:48:47 - Another room in the castle. Act 4, Scene 7: 2:50:36 - Another room in the castle. Act 5, Scene 1: 3:01:53 - A churchyard. Act 5, Scene 2: 3:18:35 - A hall in the castle. I tried to be as accurate as possible :)
i hate the “i had to read this” comments. this story is too good for teachers to assign making people hate it smh. this is a story that should be discovered by people who actually want to read/watch it.
That’s why I’m here. We didn’t read Hamlet, we read A Mid Summer Night’s Dream and while I didn’t hate it as a kid I definitely appreciated a lot more as adult when I watched a performance of it last year
I'm forced to read it, for a class right now, and it's extremely hard with my dyslexia and autism, cause no matter how hard I try... It makes no sense to me, so I'll probably end up failing or googling answers.
Procrastinated this book for 5 months then finished in total of 3 days. Shakespeares wit, philosophy and range is beyond me. To even make your characters have such philosophy means you have to have it yourself. His intellect is beyond comprehension. I didn't obviously comprehend all of the book lol but Hamlet is the best of characters with his insane wit, sarcasm, dry and dark humor, agony, rage and darkness. In love with this play. This is the first time I gave myself the push I needed to finally read Shakespeare. I have been wanting to, all my life. But God it's soo good. I am definitely listening to others soon. Though I don't think I will read them soon enough. My adhd wouldn't allow the boredom into my life. 😅
Soliloquies and stuff 18:41 S1 “sullied flesh” 44:10 S2 “while memory holds a seat in this distracted globe” 1:14:23 S3 “quintessence of dust” 1:27:51 [] “Hecuba” 1:34:57 S4 “to be or not to be” 2:03:25 S5 “tis now the very witching time” 2:08:52 S6 “Now might I do it pat now he is praying” 2:33:13 S7 “How all occasions do inform against me and spur my dull revenge”
This audio book helped me get through this book WHILE I followed along with the text and answered the questions. Honestly a godsend and MASSIVE time saver.
This was seriously helpful to have playing while I read the script, I struggle so much when reading Shakespeare and this was exactly what I needed to get through it.
So glad I found this. These audiobooks have been helpful for my Shakespeare class in college. Because of the language, it takes me longer to read an entire play. Thank you.
THANK YOU for this, please don't mind these ungrateful comments of clearly professional critiques, and to the girl who read Hamlet - you did great, and keep up the good job.
I had to read this play for an assignment, was originally going to get the audiobook through audible, but did a UA-cam check before hand. This is word for word an exsact reading. Thank you, I had to get this complex read done in a time crunch! Thank you, saved time, money, and a grade!!
I appreciated this audio recording. Spared some sanity in reading the play along with it. Polonius' voice was certainly memorable. It also took me some time to actually decide to look up why some lines were different from the lines in my book. Apparently there are at least three original versions of Hamlet. It rounded out the reading experience a bit. Great job to the voice actors.
Hamlet and Claudius are two of the greatest roles in the history of theatre! These two women wanted the chance to play these roles, and that is why they did. Arielle and Amy: Kudos to you!
Really helpful!! It made my reading much easier. The woman playing Hamlet is awsome! People who complain should volunteer to recite Hamlet, or any other book. Volunteers always come in handy. ;)
So many mean comments about the reciting. These people are not actors, they're volunteers. If u want a better version, fucking pay for it and stop complaining.
In case anyone is bored! here is my essay of Hamlet! Any sort of replies would be great. The Trinity of Vengeance The great play of Hamlet is one that dwells in dualities and the complexities of life, as such Shakespeare is known for: the interchangeability of characters that represent sameness and yet two sides of a coin, such as Rosencrantz and Guildenstern or the ambassadors, but also characters that are analogous and represent similarities in rank but of different dogmas of such as The Ghost and Claudius. Both are in fact kings and yet one is a valiant noble who quelled the Norwegians and the other is a colorless and empty kin-slaying satyr. This is only one elaboration of interchangeable characters and their relationships. A more prominent one is not of a duality but in fact a trinity of characters, or as one may call, The Trinity of Vengeance. Laertes, Hamlet, and Fortinbras each have quintessential roles as bearers of vengeance with different methodologies, but all share important aspects of their pursuits in life, the cruel deaths of their fathers and women. Firstly, is Laertes and his contemplations of the suicide of Ophelia, the death of Polonius, and his jurisdiction over his inheritance. As one can see in 4.5 Claudius already “defuses the situation [of inheritance] by responding to Laertes first with a gentle acknowledgement of his concern and then with a reassurance that he has nothing to fear” (Burton 37-38) securing the inheritance titles that must pass on to him. Though that is not the only purpose for Laertes arriving to Elsinore, the main objective and intent is to avenge his father. Though there is one thing that prevents him from engaging his father’s killer directly and that is Ophelia. To quickly digress we must understand the role women play within Hamlet. They are what keep and calm the characters and prevent them from acting upon their motives, the quote “Frailty thy name is women” reflects upon the fact that women shy men away from acting upon their motives. As we observe Laertes the one thing he does not truly carry out is his intent on avenging his father because Ophelia prevents him from doing such as we see her gesture with presenting him flowers also in 4.5 expressing herself of the strength of a womanhood’s opinion against the madness of men. Although this sanity is soon shattered by the suicide of Ophelia, and Laertes is befallen to madness, as it is portrayed by him leaping in to the grave of Ophelia: ”O, treble woe Fall ten times (treble) on that cursed head Whose wicked deed thy most ingenious sense Deprive of thee of!-Hold off the earth awhile, Till I have caught her once more in mine arms.” (5.1.258-262) This scene displays Laertes striving for his need of Ophelia to keep him at bay, away from the terrors of madness and yet the more he strives to hold onto his lost sister the more he envelops dissent to madness of which he redirects to Hamlet, the man he believes led to Ophelia’s suicide. This spurs him to regain his intent of vengeance of his father as he remembers the mad Hamlet was the one who killed him mixed with his belief that Hamlet’s madness had poisoned Ophelia into madness as well. This is represented with Laertes coming out of the grave, the innocent Ophelia’s grave, transforming into a mad man bent on killing Hamlet and screaming “The devil take thy soul” (5.1.272-273). This leads Laertes conspiring with Claudius to kill Hamlet. In due time the duel between the two ensue and we end up with a match that will be further elaborated upon in a later discussion. What ends up happening is Laertes and his begging for forgiveness from Hamlet as seen in 5.2. What can be described as to what happened in the fencing duel is Laertes releasing his rage and confusion of the world, everything he pondered the purpose of his existence and the corruption of the Danish Court, let alone the world, is being released. This can be mirrored as he strikes Hamlet with a poison tipped blade like a snake injecting poison on its prey, but instead of the literal poison it’s the rage and cruel hate upon the world being injected to Hamlet. Due to this act of inflicting Hamlet with his rage Laertes and does indeed forgives him as he has released his inner most tensions and understood he had conspired with a king-slayer. However, why does Hamlet also forgive him? Hamlet, the melancholy protagonist of this so called play of justice, is a very interesting and ambiguous character that can be seen in all sorts of lights and lenses, largely due to the fact that we can see every characters perspective on his actions and the thoughts of Hamlet in his own soliloquies which normally show Hamlet feigning and tugging himself between the art of dying and the concepts between life and death (Planinc 397-399). This should make him the most fleshed out characters, although it’s quite the opposite. Hamlet is mind boggling. Every sense of direction when thinking about him is simply turning one’s self into an abstract being in the fourth and a half dimension. Through the entire play, we cannot determine his sanity, just as Shakespeare wanted. This all takes place in the beginning when Hamlet tells Horatio that he will act mad, of course we never truly know whether or not he is mad (this however can be called an excuse to his actions of procrastination, slowing down his strive for vengeance). Although there is one thing we know, and that is his purpose for vengeance, one that is again similar to Fortinbras and Laertes, he must avenge his father who died a cruel death. To begin with Ophelia must be discussed about, as she is the link that connects Hamlet and Fortinbras and their struggle for madness. Before the events that destroy and dissent Hamlet from boring melancholy young lad to the erratic enlightened mad man that he becomes he is in love with Ophelia, this love represents the need that man has for women, women are protectors for men, they protect sanity, which is a reason why Hamlet almost completely losses his mind when Ophelia tries to give the letters back to him in 3.1, this is a representation of women rejecting man’s sanity, thus leading into madness. Though, Hamlet does not become fully mad, he still has one other women in his life, now this isn’t going to become some utterly far-out Freudian theory but in fact something more relatable than an Oedipus complex that scholars like to use. The bond between child and mother is something that only Hamlet has throughout the play as Laertes fails to have it and Fortinbras has no mention either, thus making Hamlet a more unique character. Aside from that, this also has an impact on the communications between both Laertes and Hamlet. As observed before, the death of Ophelia was the breaking point of Laertes causing him to dissent to madness whilst Hamlet is feigning between both madness and rationality, as commented by Polonius “Though this be madness, yet there is method in ’t” (2.2.223-224). Yet of course this disparity between both madness and rationality is even heightened during the scene of Ophelia’s funeral and the confrontation between Hamlet and Laertes in which was already discussed, however I did not dwell into the mind of Hamlet during that scene. Hamlet was already pondering death and discussing it with a gravedigger in 5.1, and then he comes across the death of the one he loved, and comes face to face with Laertes, and there he claims to have loved her more, wedging deeper madness and resentment to each other. This leads to the duel, of which Hamlet and Laertes fight, two mad men who have lost their fathers in cruel deaths, lost a beautiful women in their lives, lost their sanity to the Danish Court, it is through this fight of vengeance, the clash of each other’s blades, the infliction of a single poison sword do they understand each other, the one serpent they both understand, the madness and insanity of the world. It is through this they appreciate each other and forgive each other. That is why Hamlet forgives Laertes, he realizes both of them had entered and insipid and terrible feud of the Danish Court, the emptiness and cruelty of their fathers who seek colorless desire, and lost the women that kept them sane. Though what about Fortinbras? Where does he fit in this madness, this Trinity of Vengeance? Fortinbras is a character that is almost never scene until the end of the play, but he looms over the rotting Danes, a character of ambiguity but embodies the stories act of vengeance. Frotinbras seeks revenge not in a single person, but an entire entity, the man he wished to kill was killed by a kin-slayer so he seeks revenge on the Danes itself. But what is his motive to conquer the Danes? It goes back to 2.2 when he asks for arms against Denmark from Old Norway, and he is granted this and is allowed passage into Denmark to fight the Poles (Planinc 60-71). As one can observe he does this in the name of vengeance for his father, the last king of Norway who died at the hands of Old Hamlet, who was again killed by Claudius, thus leaving Fortinbras to direct his vengeance upon the Danes as a whole. This is what makes Fortinbras different from Laertes and Hamlet in respect to their quests for vengeance, the fact that throughout he acts rationally and decisive keeping a cool mind, this is perhaps due to the fact that no women he loved has been ended thus retains his sanity. From what the play presents of Fortinbras, he has a motive a clear one, he has a plan and he carries it out, and without even interacting with Hamlet he sympathizes with him and orders for his story to be told just as he says “Speak loudly for him” (5.2.446) but for what? Easy question, they shared the same fight for vengeance. Hamlet, Laertes, and Fortinbras, three individuals who had been marked with a lust for vengeance and yet each acted upon it differently. From Laertes who fought swiftly but irrationally to Hamlet who fought rationally but slowly and to Fortinbras who fought both swiftly and rationally. This can also be displayed as another characteristic of women as they seemed to have either slowed down each character, showing the procrastination and prevention of carrying out the horrific cycle of revenge, for example, Hamlet having two women and being the slowest to carry out his revenge, Laertes being twice as fast as Hamlet in carrying out his vengeance, being as he only lost Ophelia, and then Fortinbras who had apparently no women to hold him back from carrying out his vengeance. Of course though perhaps women also provided them with morality, as Hamlet sought the least bloody path, Laertes wanted nothing but to kill Hamlet, and Fortinbras who led an army to kill a king. In the end, they were three interchangeable characters in a play of life, with colorful curtains but a dull, insipid, stage full of nothing but colorless greed and ambiguity, with only the quickest to come out as superior. Yet in the end, it was all for nothing, each one of the characters died chasing after pointless desires for revenge for fathers who were never there for them, even Fortinbras will die one day, and conquering the Danes will have been for nothing but empty revenge. For that is the story of Hamlet, the story of vengeance, the story of death, and the story of nothing.
@@leniroach7918 probably pissed off because I said the story was basically a bunch of dumbasses doing jack shit while my nigga Fortinbras killed everyone like a Chad
this is EXACTLY what I need. I was using the BBC Shakespearian plays from the 70s and 80s to read with at first, but they cut parts out and you have to stop to find where they jumped to.
I’m in love with William Shakespeare’s playa, he was the all time popular writer of them all, I read Julius Caesar, then I’m going to be reading this now and I’m reading
Interesting fact: my intro to Shakespeare teacher told me the way that Hamlet wants to see Ophelia without realizing she's dead by sayin he can't wait to see her with "makeup inches thick" Was a reference to how drowned victims were prepared for funeral services back in that era due to the discoloration in their skin
This helped a ton Had to read the entirety of hamlet for college and like an idiot I put it off until yesterday Had to rush through it but this just saved my grade Thanks
@@narutardadcome on I bet it's not that bored look at me 22 was tricked by the prof after reading hamlet he tricked us on about 2 hours to watch the movies adaptation 1948 where the actors had real talent that made my eyes almost pop out 😂
I wаtсhеd I, Clааааudius full mооооviе hеrе twitter.com/3bef3e03894389dcc/status/822761953072271360 HАММMМLЕТ bу Williаm Shаkesреаrе FULL АudiоBооk Grеatеst Аudiоo Bооks
2:59:26 - SPOILER it's my favourite part of the whole play, i don't know... something about the muddy death of Ophelia is just so uncanny and thrilling but also so poethic in a sense that my words cannot bare.
The greatest monologue of all time: To be, or not to be: that is the question: Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, And by opposing end them? To die: to sleep; No more; and by a sleep to say we end The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks That flesh is heir to, 'tis a consummation Devoutly to be wish'd. To die, to sleep; To sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub; For in that sleep of death what dreams may come . When we have shuffled off this mortal coil, Must give us pause: there's the respect That makes calamity of so long life; For who would bear the whips and scorns of time, The oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely, The pangs of despised love, the law's delay, The insolence of office and the spurns That patient merit of the unworthy takes, When he himself might his quietus make With a bare bodkin? who would fardels bear, To grunt and sweat under a weary life, But that the dread of something after death, The undiscover'd country from whose bourn No traveller returns, puzzles the will And makes us rather bear those ills we have Than fly to others that we know not of? Thus conscience does make cowards of us all; And thus the native hue of resolution Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought, And enterprises of great pith and moment With this regard their currents turn awry, And lose the name of action.--Soft you now! The fair Ophelia! Nymph, in thy orisons Be all my sins remember'd.
i feel like i don‘t understand english anymore. i‘m a foreign speaker having to read this in my next school year. it sounds like gibberish in my ears and i‘m honestly panicking right now. What are all of these new words?
As a Brit, I'm not sure that some of the more squeaky American female voices, à la Lina Lamont of Singin' In The Rain, are quite right for reading Shakespeare.
Thanks for you work. some of actors seem to be just reading from papers without any good simulation, especially the one who acted the role of Hamlet. wish you the best.
Marry well said, very well said. Look you sir, Inquire me first what Danskers are in Paris, And how, and who, what means, and where they keep, What company, at what expense; and finding By this encompassment and drift of question That they do know my son, come you more nearer Than your particular demands will touch it. Take you as 'twere some distant knowledge of him, As thus, ' I know his father and his friends, And in part him' (2.1.6-15) (min 50.17)
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why would we get audiobooks when we can listen it with you?
Here's a special offer for anyone uploading for profit public domain audiobooks anyone can access for free elsewhere: Go fuck yourself!!!!!!!
I'm going to take advantage of your special offer, especially to go for a mediation walk and run up on the mountain while listening to audiobooks. I don't have service on my phone, so I just record the stories instead.
I don't care whether they are male or female playing the parts...having different voices separates the characters, and reading along with this has totally helped me understand the play. Thanks for the audio book..and thank you also for the unedited version.
ua-cam.com/video/6tGUVrc0Vys/v-deo.html&ab_channel=EnglishLessonsforStudents
A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
It completely ruins it Hamlet says "Vanity thy name is woman" in a woman's voice, so shes technically insulting herself and every other woman makes zero sense.
@@PhillyBoy264 Absolutely. How VERY strange to have KING Claudius read by a WOMAN?! Claudius is a KEY Alpha male character, dominating the Queen and stealing the throne from Hamlet. What a ridiculous and confusing choice for listeners to put the King's words - especially referring to his wife - in a female voice, with absolutely NO pomp or circumstance. And HAMLET too, also read by a woman?? What bizarre sexist choice and pathetic political correctness is this?
Of course it's volunteers, but c'mon - deliberately being awful is not OK. The whole dynamic of the play is damaged by these stupid, unnecessary choices.
@@PhillyBoy264 the lady delivering Claudius's lines is tremendously good.
Though of out dear brother the memory be green...
@@ishmaelforester9825 her voice is painful
Hamlet:
Act 1, Scene 1: 01:57 - Elsinore. A platform before the castle.
Act 1, Scene 2: 11:14 - A room of state in the castle.
Act 1, Scene 3: 25:23 - A room in Polonius' house.
Act 1, Scene 4: 33:11 - The platform.
Act 1, Scene 5: 38:02 - Another part of the platform.
Act 2, Scene 1: 49:48 - A room in POLONIUS' house.
Act 2, Scene 2: 57:14 - A room in the castle.
Act 3, Scene 1: 1:31:43 - A room in the castle.
Act 3, Scene 2: 1:42:25 - A hall in the castle.
Act 3, Scene 3: 2:04:04 - A room in the castle.
Act 3, Scene 4: 2:10:25 - The Queen's closet.
Act 4, Scene 1: 2:23:21 - A room in the castle.
Act 4, Scene 2: 2:25:57 - Another room in the castle.
Act 4, Scene 3: 2:27:26 - Another room in the castle.
Act 4, Scene 4: 2:31:20 - A plain in Denmark.
Act 4, Scene 5: 2:35:10 - Elsinore. A room in the castle.
Act 4, Scene 6: 2:48:47 - Another room in the castle.
Act 4, Scene 7: 2:50:36 - Another room in the castle.
Act 5, Scene 1: 3:01:53 - A churchyard.
Act 5, Scene 2: 3:18:35 - A hall in the castle.
I tried to be as accurate as possible :)
thanks ;)
Schanza Bukhari good
You just saved my life, man
bless u
THANKS!
i hate the “i had to read this” comments. this story is too good for teachers to assign making people hate it smh. this is a story that should be discovered by people who actually want to read/watch it.
I know right! I'm here on vacation, searching for something to enjoy.
But i have that within which passeth show, these but the trappings and suits of woe - Hamlet
Plays are written to be performed, not read in a book.
That’s why I’m here. We didn’t read Hamlet, we read A Mid Summer Night’s Dream and while I didn’t hate it as a kid I definitely appreciated a lot more as adult when I watched a performance of it last year
I'm forced to read it, for a class right now, and it's extremely hard with my dyslexia and autism, cause no matter how hard I try... It makes no sense to me, so I'll probably end up failing or googling answers.
Procrastinated this book for 5 months then finished in total of 3 days. Shakespeares wit, philosophy and range is beyond me. To even make your characters have such philosophy means you have to have it yourself. His intellect is beyond comprehension. I didn't obviously comprehend all of the book lol but Hamlet is the best of characters with his insane wit, sarcasm, dry and dark humor, agony, rage and darkness. In love with this play. This is the first time I gave myself the push I needed to finally read Shakespeare. I have been wanting to, all my life. But God it's soo good. I am definitely listening to others soon. Though I don't think I will read them soon enough. My adhd wouldn't allow the boredom into my life. 😅
Soliloquies and stuff
18:41 S1 “sullied flesh”
44:10 S2 “while memory holds a seat in this distracted globe”
1:14:23 S3 “quintessence of dust”
1:27:51 [] “Hecuba”
1:34:57 S4 “to be or not to be”
2:03:25 S5 “tis now the very witching time”
2:08:52 S6 “Now might I do it pat now he is praying”
2:33:13 S7 “How all occasions do inform against me and spur my dull revenge”
This audio book helped me get through this book WHILE I followed along with the text and answered the questions. Honestly a godsend and MASSIVE time saver.
This was seriously helpful to have playing while I read the script, I struggle so much when reading Shakespeare and this was exactly what I needed to get through it.
ua-cam.com/video/6tGUVrc0Vys/v-deo.html&ab_channel=EnglishLessonsforStudents
A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
as a non-native english speaker understanding the book was a real challenge, so thanks for the audiobook it helped a little
As a native English speaker, I too find this hard to understand
So glad I found this. These audiobooks have been helpful for my Shakespeare class in college. Because of the language, it takes me longer to read an entire play. Thank you.
Outstanding cast of readers. Mahalo for all of your continued efforts to keep literature alive.
I had to read this for homework. This audio helped me “read” the play and do my chores
ua-cam.com/video/6tGUVrc0Vys/v-deo.html&ab_channel=EnglishLessonsforStudents
A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
The painting is called the "Gravedigger Scene", and the artist is Eugene Delacroix.
ua-cam.com/video/6tGUVrc0Vys/v-deo.html&ab_channel=EnglishLessonsforStudents
A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
THANK YOU for this,
please don't mind these ungrateful comments of clearly professional critiques,
and to the girl who read Hamlet - you did great, and keep up the good job.
Rhys S. What a simp.
Comments read by me 😂😁
😂😂😂😂
Lmaooo
😂😂😂
🤣
😂comant Lough by me.
I had to read this play for an assignment, was originally going to get the audiobook through audible, but did a UA-cam check before hand. This is word for word an exsact reading. Thank you, I had to get this complex read done in a time crunch! Thank you, saved time, money, and a grade!!
I appreciated this audio recording. Spared some sanity in reading the play along with it. Polonius' voice was certainly memorable. It also took me some time to actually decide to look up why some lines were different from the lines in my book. Apparently there are at least three original versions of Hamlet. It rounded out the reading experience a bit. Great job to the voice actors.
ua-cam.com/video/6tGUVrc0Vys/v-deo.html&ab_channel=EnglishLessonsforStudents
A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
Thanks, trying to read this was not working out for me. Listening to this and reading along worked great. Thanks.
Bookmarks:
Act 1 scene 2: 11:15
Act 1 scene 3: 25:29
Act 1 scene 4: 33:10
Act 2 scene 1: 49:50
Act 3 scene 1: 1:31:25
Act 4 scene 1: 2:23:20
ua-cam.com/video/6tGUVrc0Vys/v-deo.html&ab_channel=EnglishLessonsforStudents
A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
Thank you kindly sir
Hamlet and Claudius are two of the greatest roles in the history of theatre! These two women wanted the chance to play these roles, and that is why they did. Arielle and Amy: Kudos to you!
So you"re with spme guy reading Nora in A Dolls House?
i dont care about your comment, i just wanted to remind you that you had a hamlet phase 9 years ago.
Really helpful!! It made my reading much easier. The woman playing Hamlet is awsome! People who complain should volunteer to recite Hamlet, or any other book. Volunteers always come in handy. ;)
ua-cam.com/video/6tGUVrc0Vys/v-deo.html&ab_channel=EnglishLessonsforStudents
A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
Her voice is honestly my favorite. It gives off an immediate charisma that draws me into her lines
So many mean comments about the reciting. These people are not actors, they're volunteers. If u want a better version, fucking pay for it and stop complaining.
+Eli Groeggen Exactly!
+Sophie Groeggen nice comment
AMEN!
No Sophie, they genuinely had to try to make it this bad; complete monotone would have been better than Horatio and Polonius.
agreed
In case anyone is bored! here is my essay of Hamlet! Any sort of replies would be great.
The Trinity of Vengeance
The great play of Hamlet is one that dwells in dualities and the complexities of life, as such Shakespeare is known for: the interchangeability of characters that represent sameness and yet two sides of a coin, such as Rosencrantz and Guildenstern or the ambassadors, but also characters that are analogous and represent similarities in rank but of different dogmas of such as The Ghost and Claudius. Both are in fact kings and yet one is a valiant noble who quelled the Norwegians and the other is a colorless and empty kin-slaying satyr. This is only one elaboration of interchangeable characters and their relationships. A more prominent one is not of a duality but in fact a trinity of characters, or as one may call, The Trinity of Vengeance. Laertes, Hamlet, and Fortinbras each have quintessential roles as bearers of vengeance with different methodologies, but all share important aspects of their pursuits in life, the cruel deaths of their fathers and women.
Firstly, is Laertes and his contemplations of the suicide of Ophelia, the death of Polonius, and his jurisdiction over his inheritance. As one can see in 4.5 Claudius already “defuses the situation [of inheritance] by responding to Laertes first with a gentle acknowledgement of his concern and then with a reassurance that he has nothing to fear” (Burton 37-38) securing the inheritance titles that must pass on to him. Though that is not the only purpose for Laertes arriving to Elsinore, the main objective and intent is to avenge his father. Though there is one thing that prevents him from engaging his father’s killer directly and that is Ophelia. To quickly digress we must understand the role women play within Hamlet. They are what keep and calm the characters and prevent them from acting upon their motives, the quote “Frailty thy name is women” reflects upon the fact that women shy men away from acting upon their motives. As we observe Laertes the one thing he does not truly carry out is his intent on avenging his father because Ophelia prevents him from doing such as we see her gesture with presenting him flowers also in 4.5 expressing herself of the strength of a womanhood’s opinion against the madness of men. Although this sanity is soon shattered by the suicide of Ophelia, and Laertes is befallen to madness, as it is portrayed by him leaping in to the grave of Ophelia:
”O, treble woe
Fall ten times (treble) on that cursed head
Whose wicked deed thy most ingenious sense
Deprive of thee of!-Hold off the earth awhile,
Till I have caught her once more in mine arms.” (5.1.258-262)
This scene displays Laertes striving for his need of Ophelia to keep him at bay, away from the terrors of madness and yet the more he strives to hold onto his lost sister the more he envelops dissent to madness of which he redirects to Hamlet, the man he believes led to Ophelia’s suicide. This spurs him to regain his intent of vengeance of his father as he remembers the mad Hamlet was the one who killed him mixed with his belief that Hamlet’s madness had poisoned Ophelia into madness as well. This is represented with Laertes coming out of the grave, the innocent Ophelia’s grave, transforming into a mad man bent on killing Hamlet and screaming “The devil take thy soul” (5.1.272-273). This leads Laertes conspiring with Claudius to kill Hamlet. In due time the duel between the two ensue and we end up with a match that will be further elaborated upon in a later discussion. What ends up happening is Laertes and his begging for forgiveness from Hamlet as seen in 5.2. What can be described as to what happened in the fencing duel is Laertes releasing his rage and confusion of the world, everything he pondered the purpose of his existence and the corruption of the Danish Court, let alone the world, is being released. This can be mirrored as he strikes Hamlet with a poison tipped blade like a snake injecting poison on its prey, but instead of the literal poison it’s the rage and cruel hate upon the world being injected to Hamlet. Due to this act of inflicting Hamlet with his rage Laertes and does indeed forgives him as he has released his inner most tensions and understood he had conspired with a king-slayer. However, why does Hamlet also forgive him?
Hamlet, the melancholy protagonist of this so called play of justice, is a very interesting and ambiguous character that can be seen in all sorts of lights and lenses, largely due to the fact that we can see every characters perspective on his actions and the thoughts of Hamlet in his own soliloquies which normally show Hamlet feigning and tugging himself between the art of dying and the concepts between life and death (Planinc 397-399). This should make him the most fleshed out characters, although it’s quite the opposite. Hamlet is mind boggling. Every sense of direction when thinking about him is simply turning one’s self into an abstract being in the fourth and a half dimension. Through the entire play, we cannot determine his sanity, just as Shakespeare wanted. This all takes place in the beginning when Hamlet tells Horatio that he will act mad, of course we never truly know whether or not he is mad (this however can be called an excuse to his actions of procrastination, slowing down his strive for vengeance). Although there is one thing we know, and that is his purpose for vengeance, one that is again similar to Fortinbras and Laertes, he must avenge his father who died a cruel death. To begin with Ophelia must be discussed about, as she is the link that connects Hamlet and Fortinbras and their struggle for madness. Before the events that destroy and dissent Hamlet from boring melancholy young lad to the erratic enlightened mad man that he becomes he is in love with Ophelia, this love represents the need that man has for women, women are protectors for men, they protect sanity, which is a reason why Hamlet almost completely losses his mind when Ophelia tries to give the letters back to him in 3.1, this is a representation of women rejecting man’s sanity, thus leading into madness. Though, Hamlet does not become fully mad, he still has one other women in his life, now this isn’t going to become some utterly far-out Freudian theory but in fact something more relatable than an Oedipus complex that scholars like to use. The bond between child and mother is something that only Hamlet has throughout the play as Laertes fails to have it and Fortinbras has no mention either, thus making Hamlet a more unique character. Aside from that, this also has an impact on the communications between both Laertes and Hamlet. As observed before, the death of Ophelia was the breaking point of Laertes causing him to dissent to madness whilst Hamlet is feigning between both madness and rationality, as commented by Polonius “Though this be madness, yet there is method in ’t” (2.2.223-224). Yet of course this disparity between both madness and rationality is even heightened during the scene of Ophelia’s funeral and the confrontation between Hamlet and Laertes in which was already discussed, however I did not dwell into the mind of Hamlet during that scene. Hamlet was already pondering death and discussing it with a gravedigger in 5.1, and then he comes across the death of the one he loved, and comes face to face with Laertes, and there he claims to have loved her more, wedging deeper madness and resentment to each other. This leads to the duel, of which Hamlet and Laertes fight, two mad men who have lost their fathers in cruel deaths, lost a beautiful women in their lives, lost their sanity to the Danish Court, it is through this fight of vengeance, the clash of each other’s blades, the infliction of a single poison sword do they understand each other, the one serpent they both understand, the madness and insanity of the world. It is through this they appreciate each other and forgive each other. That is why Hamlet forgives Laertes, he realizes both of them had entered and insipid and terrible feud of the Danish Court, the emptiness and cruelty of their fathers who seek colorless desire, and lost the women that kept them sane. Though what about Fortinbras? Where does he fit in this madness, this Trinity of Vengeance?
Fortinbras is a character that is almost never scene until the end of the play, but he looms over the rotting Danes, a character of ambiguity but embodies the stories act of vengeance. Frotinbras seeks revenge not in a single person, but an entire entity, the man he wished to kill was killed by a kin-slayer so he seeks revenge on the Danes itself. But what is his motive to conquer the Danes? It goes back to 2.2 when he asks for arms against Denmark from Old Norway, and he is granted this and is allowed passage into Denmark to fight the Poles (Planinc 60-71). As one can observe he does this in the name of vengeance for his father, the last king of Norway who died at the hands of Old Hamlet, who was again killed by Claudius, thus leaving Fortinbras to direct his vengeance upon the Danes as a whole. This is what makes Fortinbras different from Laertes and Hamlet in respect to their quests for vengeance, the fact that throughout he acts rationally and decisive keeping a cool mind, this is perhaps due to the fact that no women he loved has been ended thus retains his sanity. From what the play presents of Fortinbras, he has a motive a clear one, he has a plan and he carries it out, and without even interacting with Hamlet he sympathizes with him and orders for his story to be told just as he says “Speak loudly for him” (5.2.446) but for what? Easy question, they shared the same fight for vengeance.
Hamlet, Laertes, and Fortinbras, three individuals who had been marked with a lust for vengeance and yet each acted upon it differently. From Laertes who fought swiftly but irrationally to Hamlet who fought rationally but slowly and to Fortinbras who fought both swiftly and rationally. This can also be displayed as another characteristic of women as they seemed to have either slowed down each character, showing the procrastination and prevention of carrying out the horrific cycle of revenge, for example, Hamlet having two women and being the slowest to carry out his revenge, Laertes being twice as fast as Hamlet in carrying out his vengeance, being as he only lost Ophelia, and then Fortinbras who had apparently no women to hold him back from carrying out his vengeance. Of course though perhaps women also provided them with morality, as Hamlet sought the least bloody path, Laertes wanted nothing but to kill Hamlet, and Fortinbras who led an army to kill a king. In the end, they were three interchangeable characters in a play of life, with colorful curtains but a dull, insipid, stage full of nothing but colorless greed and ambiguity, with only the quickest to come out as superior. Yet in the end, it was all for nothing, each one of the characters died chasing after pointless desires for revenge for fathers who were never there for them, even Fortinbras will die one day, and conquering the Danes will have been for nothing but empty revenge. For that is the story of Hamlet, the story of vengeance, the story of death, and the story of nothing.
Impressive
mrthatguyam fuck off.
My English professor failed me for this essay btw.
mrthatguyam why lol
@@leniroach7918 probably pissed off because I said the story was basically a bunch of dumbasses doing jack shit while my nigga Fortinbras killed everyone like a Chad
Listened to it for 9 minutes but couldn't able to understand what is happening 😳😳
read by cute vegan. fuck lol
fr
I really enjoy listening to shakespeare, and hamlet is just such a great play!
Glad you enjoyed it! 😄
2:38:00 she is reaallllyyyyy a good singer. I love her voice.
this is EXACTLY what I need. I was using the BBC Shakespearian plays from the 70s and 80s to read with at first, but they cut parts out and you have to stop to find where they jumped to.
Even after Polonius's death, we have to hear that voice because the actor takes on as Fortinbras
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A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
Just from the “Gentleman~ Another Gentleman~” I’m already sold
I’m in love with William Shakespeare’s playa, he was the all time popular writer of them all, I read Julius Caesar, then I’m going to be reading this now and I’m reading
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A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
just wanted to remind you that you had a hamlet phase 4 years ago
not gonna lie, I had to read this in a pinch and using 1.25 and 1.5 speed came in clutch! Thanks again for the audio!
Hamlet sounds like Azula from Avatar: The Last Airbender.
Samantha Izaguirre: you’re showing your magnificent breeding!
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A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
lol i definitely heard it but with claudius haha, i knew it sounded familiar
Listening to this wonderful play to finish my higher education is a good thing ever thank you
First of all, this is a big help in reading along with the audio. Second of all Hamlet's voice is really pretty. It's so clear and bright.
I want to sleep really bad
Sleep well
Dam 5 years after did you sleep well
The voice acting is really good but the recording quality is poor and inconsistent between characters.
God bless
His soul
Where ever
He is at.
This audio has truly saved my life.
this was very help full for my 9th grade lit. class thanks for sharing
Interesting fact: my intro to Shakespeare teacher told me the way that Hamlet wants to see Ophelia without realizing she's dead by sayin he can't wait to see her with "makeup inches thick" Was a reference to how drowned victims were prepared for funeral services back in that era due to the discoloration in their skin
Thank you so much for this. It made it so much easier!
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A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
This is honestly really great, I don't get why everyone's complaining
This helped a ton
Had to read the entirety of hamlet for college and like an idiot I put it off until yesterday
Had to rush through it but this just saved my grade
Thanks
And here I am.. Doing the exact same thing
no im hear before college
Thanks William Shakespeare
Thanks
16:27 “His father was a mudder, his mother was a mudder”
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A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
[1:34:56] HAMLET: To be, or NOT to be, that is a question.
Love r.g. pagg's voice it's always so soothing
NOTHING ELSE STIMULATES THE MIND LIKE THE BRILLIANT WORKS OF SHAKESPEARE
Porn? Lots of It?
just wanted to remind you that you had a hamlet phase 4 years ago 💀
@@nannibananni😂😂😂😂
very glad that there are time stamps
they make things more easier
GREAT voice actor/character introductions 🤩 the tonal diversity of voices will make this easier to follow! Thank you - Will Shakes 4 ever, verily 📖
I lovely read!! Thank you for your performance!!!
My favourite play from Shakespeare.
I literally roll my eyes every time Polonius talks…sir, please clear your throat.
It’s a voice.
Ah! GreatestAudioBooks-Thanks a lot!!!-Mishka Allport-Fortaleza, Brasil
Polonius sounds like grand-maester Pycell from Game of Thrones lol.
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A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
I loved it I just started and I like it already
Something is always wrong with the voices in dubbed animes...
Thank you very much for the audio book
martin geeson's one of my favourite readers always nice to hear him
i am really about to listen to hamlet voluntarily as a thirteen year old.
Just wait until ur 22 and not in school. Reading shit like this is common practice cuz life is boring af
@@narutardad I am 22 and listening to this at work voluntarily because my job is so boring 💀
@@JWhite-qi5zv bro I feel that
@@narutardadcome on I bet it's not that bored look at me 22 was tricked by the prof after reading hamlet he tricked us on about 2 hours to watch the movies adaptation 1948 where the actors had real talent that made my eyes almost pop out 😂
My favorite things
About William Shakespeare
Is that brings me Nostalgia from my
Childhood.
you had a hamlet phase 4 years ago. cringe now
@@nannibananniyou ok? You’ve said the same thing a dozen times now
1:34:55 that's wonderful!
The classwork: one fish two fish, red fish blue fish
The study guide: the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
The test:
The female king and Hamlet are really throwing me off XD
I wаtсhеd I, Clааааudius full mооооviе hеrе twitter.com/3bef3e03894389dcc/status/822761953072271360 HАММMМLЕТ bу Williаm Shаkesреаrе FULL АudiоBооk Grеatеst Аudiоo Bооks
you have a very poor reading palate
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A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
Only BBC narrators can do this justice.
2:59:26 - SPOILER
it's my favourite part of the whole play, i don't know... something about the muddy death of Ophelia is just so uncanny and thrilling but also so poethic in a sense that my words cannot bare.
RUDE!!!!! SPOILER MUCH?!?!
@@dinosaur468 Shakespearean spoiler Lol
Best story ever told...
5 years later and MacBeth is still better
@@nickyglenn8595 1 year later and MacBeth is the best
Ty for uploading this
I like it verry much because i want improve my english.thanks.
Thanks for helping me get through this.
The greatest monologue of all time:
To be, or not to be: that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,
And by opposing end them? To die: to sleep;
No more; and by a sleep to say we end
The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir to, 'tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wish'd. To die, to sleep;
To sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub;
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come
.
When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
Must give us pause: there's the respect
That makes calamity of so long life;
For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,
The oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely,
The pangs of despised love, the law's delay,
The insolence of office and the spurns
That patient merit of the unworthy takes,
When he himself might his quietus make
With a bare bodkin? who would fardels bear,
To grunt and sweat under a weary life,
But that the dread of something after death,
The undiscover'd country from whose bourn
No traveller returns, puzzles the will
And makes us rather bear those ills we have
Than fly to others that we know not of?
Thus conscience does make cowards of us all;
And thus the native hue of resolution
Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought,
And enterprises of great pith and moment
With this regard their currents turn awry,
And lose the name of action.--Soft you now!
The fair Ophelia! Nymph, in thy orisons
Be all my sins remember'd.
Thanks a lot! 👍
i feel like i don‘t understand english anymore. i‘m a foreign speaker having to read this in my next school year. it sounds like gibberish in my ears and i‘m honestly panicking right now. What are all of these new words?
It's challenging for a native speaker. I hope it went well
49:22 Act 2
1:31:17 Act 3
2:23:08 Act 4
3:01:26 Act 5
Thank you
This audiobook is so good
As a Brit, I'm not sure that some of the more squeaky American female voices, à la Lina Lamont of Singin' In The Rain, are quite right for reading Shakespeare.
Exactly.
Thanks for you work. some of actors seem to be just reading from papers without any good simulation, especially the one who acted the role of Hamlet. wish you the best.
FABULOUS
This sounds less complicated than I expected
Hamlet sounds like Azula from the Last Airbender ahhh how nostalgic
Marry well said, very well said. Look you sir,
Inquire me first what Danskers are in Paris,
And how, and who, what means, and where they keep,
What company, at what expense; and finding
By this encompassment and drift of question
That they do know my son, come you more nearer
Than your particular demands will touch it.
Take you as 'twere some distant knowledge of him,
As thus, ' I know his father and his friends,
And in part him' (2.1.6-15) (min 50.17)
Sounds a conference call between Alexa, Siri, Johnny 5 and friends.
this is very helpful because I do not know how to read. Or writre.
bruh i don't care about the genders of who's reading whose part. I just wanna finish reading this for my school assignment.
Thank you
I like it very beautiful
nice work
This ws very helpful thank you
Dreams are a gateway to the mind
Thank You♥
I have a slight hearing problem, I couldn't tell the voices apart at all
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A Tale of Two Cities Novel by Charles Dickens (Audio Book)
Brutal acting y'all
I like The Classic Tales version a lot more! Make a video of that man!
Anoyone here because they're too lazy to read the actual book?
Tis I my lord !
😂
I guess I'm just gonna be a writer since nobody wants to hire me 😂. My mind is made
Audio os awesome
Easer than reading it but still pretty ruff I wonder if there's an audio for the more now a day English copy
Thay are God vids I like all of them, well I mean I have not watched it yet but I've seen the plays
Okay, I was happy with this until I found out Claudius and Hamlet had a female voice. I'm sorry but it's just too strange. Haha.
Cant believe I just heard all of Hamlet.