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781) Commentary Note for line 2633:
2633 Ham. {Safely stowd, but soft,} what noyse, who calls on Hamlet?

    ... applied in F are evidently a play-house addition suggested by l.2, not part of Shakespeare's text. Note that they replace Hamlet's &#8216;But soft', which they ...
782) Commentary Note for line 2636:
2636 Ham. {Compound} <Compounded> it with dust whereto tis kin.

    ... So also he gives no direct answer to Rosencraus when he repeats the enquiry. If Shakespeare did not design Hamlet to speak an untruth here, this must be the rig ...

    ... </i>. Jennens, however, suggests that <i>Compound</i> must be an imperative 'if Shakespeare did not design Hamlet to tell an untruth here. . . he. . . bids them ...
783) Commentary Note for lines 2641-43:
2641-2 Ham. That I can keepe your counsaile & not mine | owne, besides
2642-3 to be demaunded of a spunge, what {replycation} <re-| plication> should be made by
2643 the sonne of a King.

    ... r, &#8216;be demanded,' see &#167;&#167; 356 and 170, respectively, of Abbott's Shakespearian Grammar, rev. enl. ed. pp. 256 and 112.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> < ...

    ... uch a remarkable similarity to the lines in the play, that it is almost certain Shakespeare, or the author of the older play of &#8216;Hamlet,' must have borrow ...

    ... ossibly there is a play on the word counsel meaning councillor, as elsewhere in Shakespeare. See stage direction in Q1, 1.2. (opening) &#8216;Counsaile; as Polo ...

    ... squeezing a sponge and in the background the condemned hanging from a gallows. Shakespeare is thus in the tradition here, while adapting the image from extorti ...
784) Commentary Note for lines 2645-50:
2645-6 Ham. I sir, that sokes vp the Kings countenaunce, his | rewards, his
2646-7 authorities, but such Officers doe the King | best seruice in the end, he
2647-8 keepes them like an {apple} <Ape> in | the corner of his iaw, first mouth'd to be
2648-9 last swallowed, | when hee needs what you haue gleand, it is but squee-
2650 sing you, and spunge you shall be dry againe.

    ... plied to a sponge, which can scarcely have proceeded from a writer so exact as Shakespeare is in fitting his language to the operations he has to describe, par ...

    ... sense of <i>glut</i> is to <i>swallow</i>&#8212;a sense quite appropriate here. Shakespeare so uses the &lt;/2:343&gt;&lt;2:344&gt; word in the &#8216;Tempest,' ...

    ... e as it stands, but the phrase seems to me much more expressive, much more like Shakespeare, as we find it in Q.1. The <i>apple</i> of Qq., though that too make ...
785) Commentary Note for lines 2652-53:
2652-3 Ham. I am glad of it, a knauish speech sleepes in a | foolish eare.

    ... entence, now become proverbial, like so many passages in Hamlet, is probably of Shakespeare's coinage.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1877<tab> </tab>v1877</si ...

    ... re</b>] <sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): &#x201C;<sc>Steevens</sc>: A proverb since Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1881<tab> </tab><sc>hud3</sc ...
786) Commentary Note for lines 2656-57:
2656-7 Ham. The body is with the King, but the King is not | with the {K2}
2657 body. The King is a thing{.} <—>

    ... with the same call number as Dyce's <i>Remarks</i> <i>on Collier &amp; Knight's Shakespeare</i>.&#x201D; </fnc></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1857<tab> </tab><sc>fieb ...

    ... denote nearness or local contiguity. This, I think, may be certainly affirmed. Shakespeare, as it seems to me, affords us a clue to his meaning by making Hamle ...

    ... ms nonsense, is truth, characterizes the hero's feigned madness; and why should Shakespeare, just here, give up playing the game? One eighteenth century comment ...

    ... Medieval Political Theory</i> (Princeton, 1957), J. Johnson explains in the <i>Shakespeare Quarterly</i> 18 (1967), pp. 30-34: &#8216;The body (i.e. the body n ...
787) Commentary Note for lines 2659-60:
2659-60 Ham. Of nothing, bring me to him <, hide Fox, and all | after>. Exeunt.

    ... ise of what was coming.</para> <para>&#x201C;Such persons missed the meaning of Shakespeare. For observe the impertinent language of Rosencrantz:&#8212;&#8216;M ...
788) Commentary Note for line 2670:
2670 Deliberate pause, diseases desperat growne,

    ... /i>, which he takes to be &#x201C;the origin of many of the famous passages in [Shakespeare's] works.&#x201D; The passage from Lyly, which includes matching ele ...

    ... . .<b> relieu'd</b>] <sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): &#x201C;<sc>Rushton</sc> (<i>Shakespeare's Euphuism</i>, p. 11): &#x201C;But I feare me wher so straunge a si ...

    ... e juxtaposition of words is so obvious that it is a little rash to suppose that Shakespeare had this passage in mind, or owed his thought to it.&#x201D;</small> ...

    ... ate disease must have a desperate cure' (Tilley D357), this idea is frequent in Shakespeare and is expressed with particular force in <i>Cor</i>.<i> </i>[3.1.15 ...
789) Commentary Note for lines 2672-2672+1:
2672 Or not at all. <Enter Rosincrane.>
2672+1 {Enter Rosencraus and all the rest.}

    ... encer</sc> (ed. 1980): SD <i>and</i> <i>all the rest</i>] &#x201C;(probably, in Shakespeare's theatre, any extras who could be spared to stand in as courtiers). ...

    ... defended by Granville-Barker (Prefaces, iii.126) and Munro&#8212;cannot be what Shakespeare envisaged. The pair are never otherwise separated on stage and altho ...

    ...
2685-6 Ham. Not where he eates, but where {a} <he> is eaten, a {certaine} <cer-| taine> conua-
2686-7 cation of {politique} wormes are een at him: your worme | is your onely
2687-8 Emperour for dyet, we fat all creatures els | to fat vs, and wee fat our
2688-9 {selues} <selfe> for maggots, your fat King | and your leane begger is but varia-
2689-90 ble {seruice, two} <service t ...

    ... e scribe was familiar, was misheard by him for the unusual word <i>palated</i>. Shakespeare employs to <i>palate</i> as a verb in <i>Cor</i>. [3.1.104 (1798)], ...

    ... s would for an instant have consented to relinquish an expression so peculiarly Shakespearian.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1853<tab> </tab>Singer</sigla><ha ...

    ... e scribe was familiar, was misheard by him for the unusual word <i>palated</i>. Shakespeare employs to <i>palate</i> as a verb in <i>Cor</i>. [3.1.104 (1798)], ...

    ... s would for an instant have consented to relinquish an expression so peculiarly Shakespearian.'</para> <para>&#x201C;An expression so truly Shakespearian!! Had ...

    ... ssion so peculiarly Shakespearian.'</para> <para>&#x201C;An expression so truly Shakespearian!! Had this been applied to the old genuine language of the poet it ...

    ... e, convoked by the Emperor of <i>Worms</i>; but had they lived near the time of Shakespeare, it would have been strange if they had missed the allusion to a mat ...

    ... , as the Old Corrector reads the phrase, could only mean (in the sense in which Shakespeare elsewhere uses the verb <i>to palate</i>) worms which have been tast ...

    ... some long time and still continues, the emphasis being laid on &#8216;now.' In Shakespeare the emphasis is often to be laid on &#8216;even,' and even now' mean ...

    ... ce &#8216;but now.'</para> <para>&#x201C;We<b> </b>use &#8216;just now' for the Shakespearian &#8216;even now,' laying the emphasis on &#8216;just.' Even is use ...

    ... e old gentleman been conspicuous for his ambition, it would have been just like Shakespeare to call the worms bred from him aspiring worms.'</small>&#x201D;</pa ...

    ... <b>politique</b>] <sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939): &#x201C;skilled at statecraft. Shakespeare may have remembered &#8216;the Diets of the Empire convoked at Worms ...

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