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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... (1855, p. 20) : <p. 20> “After this accidentally sudden return of Hamlet to Denmark, we first see him, with Horatio, on his way to the palace, we ...
... pprobation; on the contrary, it clearly appears that he held them in derision. Hamlet says, in the scene with the Gravedigger, ‘By the Lord, Horatio, th ...
153) Commentary Note for lines 3338-39:3339 England.... that Yorick's skull had lain in the earth three-and-twenty years [3361-62]. As Hamlet tells Horatio that he knew Yorick, who had borne him ‘on his back a ...
... igger's acount of the combat between their fathers, young Fortinbras as well as Hamlet must be thirty, Horatio, who had memory of the combat ((76-7])), consider ...
... opening scene. It is this which, if we consider it oo curiously, makes Horatio, Hamlet's ‘fellow-student', much older than hamlet, which can hardly have b ...
154) Commentary Note for lines 3371-73:3371 Clow. Een that.3372-3 Ham. <Let me see.> Alas poore Yoricke, I knew him Ho|ratio, a fellow of infinite... n preparation for stage-performance. The phrase ranks with the earlier entry of Hamlet and Horatio at [3245] as a necessary tidying of the stage-action, and is ...
155) Commentary Note for lines 3391-92:3392 a bunghole?... zing if <i>he</i> knew it. Horatio may reasonably have hitherto delayed telling Hamlet of Ophelia's madness; and he is himself ignorant of her death, having bee ...
156) Commentary Note for line 3393:3393 Hor. Twere to consider too curiously to consider so.... the original Periergia': but </p.162><p.163> when Horatio refers to Hamlet's ‘travaile to describe the matter which he had taken in hand,' and ...
157) Commentary Note for lines 3405-06:3406 <with Lords attendant.>... inted out before, Horatio could not have known of Ophelia's death any more than Hamlet; but he ahd seen her in her pitiable, distracted state, and it would cert ...
... lly loses an opportunity for the display of facial acting of the highest order. Hamlet and Horatio have retired out of sight of those who are taking part in the ...
158) Commentary Note for lines 3407-08:3408 And with such maimed rites? this doth betoken, {the corse.}... C;‘<i>that]] </i>‘that' is, <i>per se</i>, better than <i>this</i>, Hamlet and Horatio being supposed to be at some distance from the procession; an ...
... bier, mourning<i> </i>figures, and appropriate accouterments and music<i>." </i>Hamlet's father had such a funeral, which Horatio came to see (364), but Poloniu ...
160) Commentary Note for line 3434:3434 Ham. What, the faire Ophelia.... n the interval between this ‘towering passion' and the final catastrophe, Hamlet is thoroughly himself--meditative to excess with Horatio--most acute, pla ...
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