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111 to 120 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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111) Commentary Note for line 2136:
2136 Oph. The King rises.

    ... Shakespeare thus impresses upon us that the others, including Polonius, except Hamlet and Horatio, are too deep in the play to notice the king's reaction. Jose ...
112) Commentary Note for lines 2141-42:
2141-2 {Pol.} <All.> Lights, lights, lights. Exeunt | {all but Ham. & Horatio.}
2142 <Manet Hamlet & Horatio.>

    ... amp; Horatio.</i></Q2></para> <para><ehtln>2142</ehtln><tab> </tab><F1><i>Manet Hamlet &amp; Horatio.</i></F1></para> </ehline> <cn> <sigla>1881<tab> </tab>Oxon ...

    ... ><i>Horatio</i></b></i>] <sc>Oxon</sc> (1881, p. 14): &#x201C;In the play-scene Hamlet apparently affects insanity, or at least eccentricity; but his affectatio ...
113) Commentary Note for lines 2146-50:
2146-7 {Thus} <So> runnes the world away. | Would not this sir & a forrest of fea-
2147-8 thers, if the rest of | my fortunes turne Turk with me, with <two> prouinciall
2149-50 Roses on my {raz'd} <rac'd> shooes, get me a fellowship in a cry | of players? <sir.>

    ... fellowship:&#8212;&#8216;half a share,' says Horatio; &#8216;a whole one,' says Hamlet. In Mr. Collier's History of the Stage, vol. iii. p. 427, we find many cu ...

    ... Mitglied einer Schauspielunternehmung an dem Gewinn der ganzen Einnahme hatte. Hamlet macht Anspruch auf einen vollen Antheil, w&#228;hrend Horatio ihm nur ein ...

    ... e</i> refers to the part of the earnings a member of a dramatic production had. Hamlet claims a full share, while Horatio grants him only a half.]</para></cn> < ...
114) Commentary Note for line 2151:
2151 Hora. Halfe a share. 2151

    ... bought one for his nephew Francis. Horatio perhaps implies that the achievement Hamlet boasts of is only half his (since he has needed the collaboration of the ...
115) Commentary Note for line 2152:
2152 Ham. A whole one I.

    ... etation &#8216;Ay', where as the pronoun carries great emphasis as insisting on Hamlet's own opinion against Horatio's.&#x201D;</para> </cn><tlnrange>2152</tlnr ...
116) Commentary Note for line 2153:
2153 For thou doost know oh Damon deere

    ... c of the balanced and self-correcting brain. . . . &lt;/p.101&gt;&lt;p.102&gt; [Hamlet] recites in a popular vein a verse, wanting the final rhyme, which Horati ...

    ... e far more likely than the usual run of conjectural emendation. Horatio says to Hamlet, &#8216;You might have rhymed.' And &#8216;Claudius' is certainly as good ...

    ... it not, perdy.' Besides the text shows that a &#8216;Claudius' is exactly what Hamlet is telling Horatio, that &#8216;dismantled Denmark' now possesses in the ...

    ... </tab><i><b><i>Damon</i></b></i>] <sc>Spencer</sc> (ed. 1980): &#x201C;Perhaps Hamlet is thinking of Horatio and himself as like Damon and Pythias, the legenda ...
117) Commentary Note for line 2156:
2156 A very very paiock. 2156

    ... &#8216;A very, very Ass.' Now Horatio's reply would have lost its poinancy, had Hamlet call his uncle, a paddock. <note>&lt;1748, p.179&gt; The word is still us ...

    ... t folios, <i>pajocke</i>. The lines in which it occurs, are jocularly spoken by Hamlet, and seem like a fragment of an old ballad: [<i>Hamlet</i> line cited]. H ...

    ... are jocularly spoken by Hamlet, and seem like a fragment of an old ballad: [<i>Hamlet</i> line cited]. Horatio answers, &#8216;You might have rhymed; ' meaning ...

    ... rson who struts about with an unmerited display of ornamental dress or dignity, Hamlet using a mild term, whereas Horatio suggests that the obvious rhyme of ass ...

    ... parent nest to try its feeble wing on adventurous themes and high enterprises. Hamlet and Horatio having been fellow students at Wittenberg, the &lt;/p.228&gt; ...

    ... ins he might have rhymed, but Hamlet takes no notice of it. Lastly, however mad Hamlet might appear to others, Horatio knows well that he was perfectly sane, he ...

    ... 6)].</para> <para>&#x201C;Struck by the incongrouous word, Horatio remarks that Hamlet at all events might have <i>rhymed</i>! The commentators have nearly all ...

    ... e is found to <i>ioc</i>, rent, payment, tribute. As the short dialogue between Hamlet and Horatio turns upon the fancy of the former that he might earn his bre ...

    ... ): &#x201C;The word Horatio expects to hear is, of course, <i>ass</i>. The word Hamlet speaks <i>paiock</i> (Q2)/<i>Paiocke</i> (FI) &#8211; introduces an altog ...
118) Commentary Note for line 2163:
2163 <Enter Rosincrance and Guildensterne.>

    ... ore Guildenstern's first speech. This explanation is borne out by the entry for Hamlet and Horatio in [5.1.56 (3245)], where Q2 postpones the SD for four lines ...
119) Commentary Note for line 2165:
2165 For if the King like not the Comedie, 2165

    ... nd stanza...after which Horatio says &#x201C;You might have rhymed.&#x201D; So Hamlet reverses the process of misquotation and rhymes where Kyd had not rhymed' ...
120) Commentary Note for line 2167+1:
2167+1 {Enter Rosencraus and Guyldensterne.}

    ... ore Guildenstern's first speech. This explanation is borne out by the entry for Hamlet and Horatio in [5.1.56 (3245)], where Q2 postpones the SD for four lines ...

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