This page was created by Araceli Ferrara.  The last update was by Anonymous.

Victorian Ghosts, 1852-1907: EN 4573 Collection

Craik_AF_04

This quotation could be in reference to a few different things. First, Craik could’ve used this reference literally to describe the idea of a heaven, the earth/world around us, and for “the things under the earth” (1) it could be describing either the dirt, the insects, or the bodies of the dead buried below. Second, this could a reference to a verse from the Bible, “that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth, and under the earth,” (Phil. 2:10). And finally, this could be a small reference to William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, which is mentioned several times throughout the text, and the line that there are “more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio,” (1.5.167-8). [AF]

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