Meaning of “A Countenance More in Sorrow than in Anger” Origin of Phrase with examples.

Meaning of – A Countenance More in Sorrow than in Anger

 

Meaning

– a person or thing that is viewed Literal meaning more with sadness than with anger.

Origin

From Shakespeare’s Hamlet, 1603. Horatio describes to Hamlet the appearance of his father’s ghost:

Hamlet: What, look’d he frowningly?

Horatio: A countenance more in sorrow than in anger.

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