|Allusions |Literal Meaning |How does it develop theme |Sources |
|I would have such a fellow|Shakespeare is trying to teach through his play |It develops the theme because Hamlet wanted to |"Hamlet Text and Translation - Act III, Scene II." eNotes - Literature |
|whipped for o’erdoing |how some actors over act during the play. In |convey his message through the real acting in |Study Guides, Lesson Plans, and More. November 03, 2010. |
|Termagant (III,ii,14) |these lines, Hamlet is forbidding actors from |the play that would force Claudius to tell the |. |
| |overdoing their role throughout the play and he |truth about his father’s murder. |"What does this quote mean from Hamlet? And how does it relate to the |
| |will get them whipped if they do. | |theme? - Yahoo! Answers." Yahoo! Answers - Home. November 3, 2010. |
| | | |. |
|It out herods Herod |Hamlet is talking to the troupe of players and |Hamlet uses many allusions throughout this |"Out-herod: Definition from Answers.com." Answers.com: Wiki Q&A |
|(III,ii,14) |advising them not to overdo their acting, not to|scene, Herod, a famous medieval tyrant. |combined with free online dictionary, thesaurus, and encyclopedias. |
| |be more like Herod than Herod. | |November 3, 2010. . |
|“For O, For O, the |The significance of these lines is that Hamlet |Hobbyhorse is related to a