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611) Commentary Note for line 2151:
2151 Hora. Halfe a share. 2151
    ... nck</sc> (ed. 1847): &#x201C;Actors, in Shakespeare's time, had not salaries, as ...
    ... the company, on twenty shares; of which Shakespeare owned four, while some other ...
    ...  &#x201C;<sc>Malone</sc>: The actors in Shakespeare's time had not annual salari ...
    ... aluable <i>Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare</i>, <sc>1874, </sc>pp. 86-< ...
    ... ce, and although in date they are after Shakespeare's day, they nevertheless thr ...
    ... ' &amp;c.  Shankes, who had been one of Shakespeare's fellow-actors, makes an ap ...
    ...  as they term it, and their answer is a Shakespearian discovery so recent and so ...
    ... ng not only in its familiar allusion to Shakespeare as a &#8216;deserveing man,' ...
    ... cal property a joint-stock affair. Thus Shakespeare himself was a stockholder in ...
    ... shall, ed. 1890): &#x201C;The actors in Shakespeare's time had <i>shares</i> in  ...
    ... -Phillips' Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare, 1874, pp. 86-91, the substa ...
    ... ed. 1891): &#x201C;&#8216;the actors in Shakespeare's time had not annual salari ...
    ...  his customary mild humour (see 28). In Shakespeare's time each regular member o ...
612) Commentary Note for line 2152:
2152 Ham. A whole one I.
    ... d to a whole share.&#8212;The actors in Shakespeare's time had not annual salari ...
613) Commentary Note for line 2156:
2156 A very very paiock. 2156
    ...  with Submission, in this Passage of <i>SHAKESPEARE</i>, there is not the least  ...
    ... h Submission, in this Passage of our <i>Shakespeare</i>, there is not the least  ...
    ... h Submission, in this Passage of our <i>Shakespeare</i>, there is not the least  ...
    ... conjectures <i>peacock</i>, and that <i>Shakespeare</i> alludes to a fable of th ...
    ... nnot help thinking, with Mr. Pope, that Shakespeare alluded to the well-known fa ...
    ... k</i>; the folio, 1623, <i>paiocke</i>. Shakespeare, I suppose, means, that the  ...
    ... e in another place, seemed to figure in Shakespear's imagination as something ab ...
    ... , Peacock, &amp;c. &amp;c.' Assume that Shakespear made Hamlet talk like a Dane  ...
    ... erm of abuse or dislike. It was rife in Shakespear's time: and I believe it may  ...
    ... a> <para>&#x201C;Of course, if I were a Shakespearean commentator I should sugge ...
    ... eading&#8212;not because I thought that Shakespear wrote it (for the preliminary ...
    ... e following is a well-know extract from Shakespear&#8212;[quotes 3.2.281-4 (2153 ...
    ...  passages.</para> <para>&#x201C;Whether Shakespear had means of knowing that it  ...
    ... abeth's time, which seemed to figure in Shakespeare's imagination as something a ...
    ... nth century. <sc>Anonymous</sc> (<i>New Shakespearian Interpretations</i>, Edin. ...
    ... st popular manual of natural history in Shakespeare's day gives the following ac ...
    ... 72, shows that in the popular belief of Shakespeare's time the peacock had a ver ...
    ...  apud Furness. Prof. Baynes, in his New Shakespearian Interpretations in The Edi ...
    ... <i>pa-jock</i> (<i>paiock</i>), and how Shakespeare could have become acquainted ...
    ... a misprint, and be drawn, as so many of Shakespeare's misunderstood words were,  ...
    ... #x201C;&#8216;In the natural history of Shakespeare's time,' says the writer of  ...
    ... ys the writer of the article &#8216;New Shakespeare Interpretations' (<i>Ed, Rev ...
    ... ntribution, though one may wonder where Shakespeare got his knowledge of these n ...
    ... 872 says that in the natural history of Shakespeare's time the bird was the accr ...
    ... . All that happened, I believe, is that Shakespeare spelt &#8216;peacock' withou ...
    ... elty and lust in the natural history of Shakespeare's day, and perhaps the poet  ...
    ... ea-jock</i> cited by Dyce does not make Shakespeare's use of it very likely. Mor ...
    ... ubitable instances of its occurrence in Shakespeare texts. Among many other sugg ...
    ... &#x201C;There seems to be no doubt that Shakespeare wrote &#8216;paiock' and it  ...
614) Commentary Note for lines 2158-59:
2158-9 Ham. O good Horatio, Ile take the Ghosts word for | a thousand
2159 pound. Did'st perceiue?
    ...  for the concrete sum, as frequently in Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
615) Commentary Note for line 2164:
2164 Ham. {Ah ha,} <Oh, ha?> come some musique, come the Recorders, {H3v}
    ... (Natural History, cent. ii &#167; 161). Shakespeare uses the word again in <i>MN ...
    ... es Hamlet call for the recorders? True, Shakespeare knew that recorders would be ...
616) Commentary Note for line 2165:
2165 For if the King like not the Comedie, 2165
    ... d had not rhymed' (A. Clutton-Brock, <i>Shakespeare's Hamlet</i>, 1922, p. 17).& ...
617) Commentary Note for line 2172:
2172 Guyl. Is in his retirement meruilous distempred.
    ... isordered in body; both senses occur in Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
618) Commentary Note for line 2174:
2174 Guyl. No my Lord, <rather> with choller,
    ... insult to the King is confirmed, see <i>Shakespearean Tragedy</i> (London; 1904, ...
619) Commentary Note for lines 2175-78:
2175-6 Ham. Your wisedome should shewe it selfe more {richer} <ri-|cher> to signifie
2176-7 this to {the} <his> Doctor, for, for mee to put him | to his purgation, would
2177-8 perhaps plunge him into <farre> | more choller.
    ...  &#x201C;much more rich or resourceful. Shakespeare and his contemporaries often ...
620) Commentary Note for lines 2185-89:
2185-6 Guyl. Nay good my Lord, this curtesie is not of | the right breede, if 2185
2186-7 it shall please you to make me a {wholsome} <whol-| some> aunswere, I will doe your
2187-8 mothers commaundement, | if not, your pardon and my returne, shall
2188-9 be the end of | <my> busines.
    ... &#x201C;Courtesy. But here as elsewhere Shakespeare plays on <i>cur</i> (see <i> ...

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