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101 to 110 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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101) Commentary Note for line 1710:
1710 Ham. To be, or not to be, that is the question,

    ... > him to a <i>murder</i>, and actually makes Horatio, <i>prophet-like</i>, warn Hamlet not to follow the ghost, lest he should&#8212; &#8216;(TLN 661-663, assum ...
102) Commentary Note for lines 1904-05:
1904 Ham. Horatio, thou art een as iust a man
1905 As ere my conuersation copt withall.

    ... 1904-25<tab></tab><i>Horatio</i> . . . do thee] <sc>Gildon</sc> (1710, p. 403): Hamlet's &#x201C;Speech to <i>Horatio</i> p. 2414. has many good Lines.&#x201D;< ...

    ... The qualities that distinguish Horatio, and render him worthy of the esteem of Hamlet, are not affluence, nor pageantry, nor gay accomplishments, nor vivacity, ...

    ... eset by circumstances the most adverse conceivable. </para> <para>&#x201C;That Hamlet had not misapprehended Horatio becomes evident in the last scene of all. ...
103) Commentary Note for line 1930:
1930 Euen with the very comment of {thy} <my> soule

    ... f the quartos) is &#8216;Even with the very comment of <i>thy</i> sloul.' but Hamlet, having told Horatio the &#8216;circumstances' of his father's death, and ...

    ... friend to observe his uncle &#8216;with the very comment of <i>my </i>soul'--- Hamlet's soul. To ask Horatio to observe him with the comment of his own soul ( ...

    ... (ed. 1843): &#x201C;So the folio, for <i>&#8216;thy</i> soul' of the quartos. Hamlet is putting Horatio in his place, for the purpose of watching the king, fo ...

    ... tion of the passage is self-contradictory. It would have been all very well for Hamlet to have &#8216;put Horatio <i>in his place</i> for the purpose of watchin ...

    ... tt well interprets it) &#8216;the most intense direction of every faculty;' and Hamlet concludes the speech by informing Horatio <i>why</i> he wished him to wat ...

    ... <i>my</i> soul,' which Knight and Collier strangely prefer, on the ground that 'Hamlet is putting Horatio in his place, for the purpose of watching the king.' ...

    ... s is on soul; with the most inward and sagacious criticism. The F my would make Hamlet's judgment the text, and Horatio's the comment.&#x201D;</para> </cn><tlnr ...
104) Commentary Note for lines 1983-85:
1983-4 Ham. So long, nay then let the deule weare blacke, | for Ile haue a
1984-5 sute of sables; ô heauens, die two mo|nths agoe, and not forgotten yet,

    ... ans black, and so it is used as a substantive in this play, where Horatio tells Hamlet the beard of his father was a <i>sable silvered</i>. In the passage quot ...
105) Commentary Note for line 2024:
2024 King. Full thirtie times hath Phebus cart gone round

    ... g &amp; Queen&#8212;who were seated on one side with ye Courtiers, Opposite to Hamlet Horatio &amp; Ophelia&#8212;the scenes were exhibited in ye mediale space ...
106) Commentary Note for line 2054:
2054 King. I doe belieue {you thinke} <you. Think> what now you speake,

    ... .4.32-66 (2743+26-2743+60)], by Claudius at [4.7.110-23 (3109-3112+10)], and by Hamlet to Horatio at [5.2.10-11 (3509-10)].&#x201D;</para><hanging><sc>pen2</sc> ...
107) Commentary Note for line 2056:
2056 Purpose is but the slaue to memorie,

    ... hat the Poisoner's speech (perhaps interrupted before its close) is meant; that Hamlet clearly indicates this to Horatio, and that he warns the player against m ...

    ... audius to sudden and involuntary self-betrayal: hence it coincides neither with Hamlet's warning to the Players, nor with his forecast to Horatio (78,79). On th ...
108) Commentary Note for lines 2100-01:
2100-1 King. Haue you heard the argument? is there no {offence} <Of-| fence> in't?

    ... not of the affable and gracious king that Claudius still is to everyone except Hamlet and Horatio. . . . But it isn't every murdering villain who would take t ...

    ... ffence] <sc>Thompson &amp; Taylor</sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;The word echoes from hamlet and Horatio's conversations about the Ghost at 1.5.136-9 [830-3]. In 1600 ...
109) Commentary Note for lines 2102-03:
2102-3 Ham. No, no, they do but iest, poyson in iest, no {offence} <Of-| fence> i'th world.

    ... fence] <sc>Thompson &amp; Taylor</sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C; The word echoes from hamlet and Horatio's conversations about the Ghost at 1.5.136-9 [830-3]. In 1600 ...
110) Commentary Note for lines 2132-35:
2132-3 Ham. {A} <He> poysons him i'th Garden {for his} <for's> estate, his | names Gonza-
2133-4 go, the story is extant, and {written in very} <writ in> choice | Italian, you shall see
2134-5 anon how the murtherer gets the | loue of Gonzagoes wife.

    ... m). The text seems to say otherwise (see esp. lines [3.2.287-90 (2158-62)]. For Hamlet and Horatio (and surely most people in the auditorium) the King's reactio ...

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