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It was meant as a reference to the dangers of Agnes letting the Borg Queen into her mind, but it seems to me that the threat was always a two way street: the Borg Queen couldn't enter Agnes' mind without leaving herself open to the same scrutiny.
The players perform a scene in which a king and queen embrace lovingly before the queen leaves the king alone to his nap. While the king is sleeping, another man steals the king’s crown, pours poison in the king’s ear, and then runs away. The queen returns to find the king dead.
The Queen returns; finds the King dead, and makes passionate action. The Poisoner, with some two or three Mutes, comes in again, seeming to lament with her. The dead body is carried away. The Poisoner wooes the Queen with gifts: she seems loath and unwilling awhile, but in the end accepts his love.
Apr 22, 2023 · Picard's Julius Caesar quotation in the Star Trek: Picard season 3 finale is a fitting one, as the speech is Brutus' ruminations on both fate and free will. These have been key themes of Picard 's final two episodes, as Jack Crusher rejected his Borg fate to restore free will to Starfleet and the Federation.
- Senior Staff Writer
The queen says his action was a “rash and bloody” deed, and Hamlet replies that it was almost as rash and bloody as murdering a king and marrying his brother (III.iv.26–28). Disbelieving, the queen exclaims, “As kill a king!” and Hamlet replies that she heard him correctly (III.iv.29).
Hamlet says he has a plan to “hoist [Claudius] with his own petard”—in other words, Hamlet plans to outsmart the king. The death of Polonius , Hamlet says, means he will have to leave even sooner.
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The Queen tells Hamlet, "Why, how now, Hamlet! (Hamlet, behave yourself!), but Hamlet asks his mother again what's wrong (Line 13). Queen Gertrude asks Hamlet if he has forgotten who she is.