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200 to 209 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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200) Commentary Note for line 3610_16_:
3610+16 {Cour. Sir.}
3610+17 {Hora. Ist not possible to vnderstand in another tongue, you will}
3610+18 {doo't sir really.}
    ...  think Horatio's speech is addressed to Hamlet.  <i> Another tongue</i> does not ...
    ... ords Horatio, I think, means to  praise Hamlet for imitating this kind of babble ...
    ... s speech certainly  belongs to Osrick.  Hamlet puts a question in which, by the  ...
    ... ntly addressed to Osric, who, foiled by hamlet in affectyed phraseology, is reco ...
    ... C;<small>Seeing the facility with which Hamlet caught and knack and gibberish of ...
    ... torted in a caricatured extravagance by Hamlet, until Horatio impatiently asks i ...
    ... t with Osrick's euphuism, and what with Hamlet's catching of Osrick's style, the ...
    ... ree with the minority who address it to Hamlet; for while it is true that Horati ...
    ... rue that Horatio always otherwise calls Hamlet <i>my lord</i>, not <i>sir</i>, i ...
    ... o to comment, when Osric fails to grasp Hamlet's meaning, &#8216;Can the man not ...
201) Commentary Note for line 3630_363:
3630-1 {Cour.} <Osr.> The King sir, hath layd {sir,} that in a dozen passes be|tweene
    ... e and against another)) liegt somit auf Hamlets Seite, der es auch gegen Horatio ...
    ... and against another)) therefore lies on Hamlet's side, who expresses it even aga ...
202) Commentary Note for line 3656:
3656 the most {prophane and trennowed} <fond and winnowed> opinions, and doe but blowe 3656
    ... nnowed opinions as those of Horatio and Hamlet. Or if, contrary to all analogy o ...
203) Commentary Note for line 3657_1_3:
3657+1 {Enter a Lord.} 3657+1
3657+2 {Lord. My Lord, his Maiestie commended him to you by young}
3657+3 {Ostricke, who brings backe to him that you attend him in the hall,}
    ... 4to. of 1603 preserves fragments of <i> Hamlet's </i> and <i>Horatio's </i>conve ...
204) Commentary Note for line 3657_4_3:
3657+4 {he sends to know if your pleasure hold to play with Laertes, or that}
3657+5 {you will take longer time?} 3657+5
    ... 4to. of 1603 preserves fragments of <i> Hamlet's </i> and <i>Horatio's </i>conve ...
205) Commentary Note for line 3657_6_3:
3657+6 {Ham. I am constant to my purposes, they followe the Kings plea-}
3657+7 {sure, if his fitnes speakes, mine is ready: now or whensoeuer, pro-}
3657+8 {uided I be so able as now.}
    ... g the utter unpreparedness indicated by Hamlet's speech and deportment&#8212; [c ...
    ... 4to. of 1603 preserves fragments of <i> Hamlet's </i> and <i>Horatio's </i>conve ...
206) Commentary Note for line 3666_366:
3666-7 Hora. If your minde dislike any thing, obay {it}. I will for|stal their
3667 repaire hether, and say you are not fit.
    ... reaties that &lt;/p. 98&gt;&lt;p.99&gt; Hamlet will not despise his presentiment ...
    ... tredge</sc> (ed. 1939): &#x201C;Neither Hamlet nor Horatio suspects a plot; for, ...
    ... ty. Yet Horatio, the philosopher, urges Hamlet to obey his instinctive reluctanc ...
    ... 989): &#x201C;<i>Horatio's words recall hamlet's observations about &#8216;God-l ...
207) Commentary Note for line 3668_366:
3668-9 Ham. Not a whit, we defie augury, {there is} <there's a> speciall | prouidence in
    ... the final catastrophe has at last come, Hamlet &#8216;defies augury.' Thrusting  ...
    ... ave the match postponed; to which offer Hamlet replies, in the two versions, as  ...
    ... shall disdain forebodings. For a moment Hamlet becomes almost like his admired H ...
208) Commentary Note for line 3669_367:
3669-70 the fall of a Sparrowe, if it be <now>, tis not | to come, if it be not to come,
3670-1 it will be now, if it | be not now, yet it {well} <will> come, the readines is all,
    ... ave the match postponed; to which offer Hamlet replies, in the two versions, as  ...
209) Commentary Note for line 3671_367:
3671-3 since no | man {of} <ha's> ought <of what> he leaues, {knowes} what ist to leaue be|times, 3671-3
3673+1 {let be.}
    ... ave the match postponed; to which offer Hamlet replies, in the two versions, as  ...

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