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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... ts. 'My lord, you once did love me,' Guildenstern says with simple dignity. For Hamlet to describe them so contemptuously to Horatio as the shabbiest kind of sp ...
122) Commentary Note for lines 2228-31:2229-30 {gers, & the vmber} <finger and thumbe>, giue it breath with your | mouth, & it wil discourse2230-1 most {eloquent} <excellent> musique, | looke you, these are the stops. 2230... s</sc> (ed. 1993): “Vents, stops. Compare [3.2.248-51 (2219-22)]], where Hamlet commends Horatio for his ability to avoid being Fortune's plaything.  ...
... d Guyldensterne, have already left the stage, and it is next to impossible that Hamlet should say ‘friends' to Polonius and Horatio who, over and above, n ...
... at not only Polonius but also Horatio, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern should obey Hamlet's instruction, <i>Leave me, friends</i>, and that he should be alone onst ...
... rambis after 'Very like a whale', and an '<i>exit</i>' for Horatio after he and Hamlet have bidden each other goodnight; Q1 is the only text to pay any attentio ...
... That such meaningful signs occurred with the moon before the murder of the old Hamlet is recounted by Horatio in [1.1.112 (124+5) ff.]. Hamlet's words here ref ...
... the murder of the old Hamlet is recounted by Horatio in [1.1.112 (124+5) ff.]. Hamlet's words here refer to this event, See m. Shaksp.-Forsch. I. p. 23 f. u. I ...
... motion, have it not in my tongue” [2.3.14 (979)] which he sees as // to Hamlet's “in my mind's eye, Horatio,” and in Ham: “Give it ...
127) Commentary Note for line 2469:2469 In the ranck sweat of an inseemed bed... ompare [1.5.42 (729)]. The Quarto spelling recalls [1.2.75-86 (256-267)], where Hamlet says, ‘I know not Seems', and [3.2.87 (1938)], where he recruits Ho ...
128) Commentary Note for line 2478:2478 A cut-purse of the Empire and the rule,... sneaking thief.' Claudius is not a usurper. He has been legally elected King in Hamlet's absence; and thus, as Hamlet says to Horatio in calmer and more literal ...
... t a usurper. He has been legally elected King in Hamlet's absence; and thus, as Hamlet says to Horatio in calmer and more literal language, he has ‘popp'd ...
129) Commentary Note for line 2482:2482 Enter Ghost.... sence of Marcellus, Horatio, and Bernardo, and to its second in the presence of Hamlet, Horatio, and Marcellus. On both these occasions the apparition was visib ...
130) Commentary Note for line 2502:2502 Your bedded haire like life in excrements... inks proper to consult that historian; from whom Sh. has taken the whole of <i>Hamlet's</i> disguis'd madess; the scene before us; his friendship with <i>Horat ...
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