<< Prev     1 2 3 4 [5] 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 ..25     Next >>

41 to 50 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context
41) Commentary Note for line 376:
376 Ham. {A} <He> was a man take him for all in all

    ... inted. I take it to be a though twice broken or interrupted. Horatio had called Hamlet's father &#8216;a goodly king.'&#8212;&#8216;O!' exclaims the prince, &#8 ...
42) Commentary Note for line 378:
378 Hora. My Lord I thinke I saw him yesternight.

    ... d perhaps in all Shakespeare. A four-voiced exchange: Horatio's exact and calm, Hamlet's ever tenser and keener, Marcellus' and Bernardo's ballast to the mounti ...

    ... ra> 378<tab> </tab><sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939): "Horatio had been startled by Hamlet's 'Methinks I see my father' [372]. Hamlet is equally surprised by Horati ...

    ... 1939): "Horatio had been startled by Hamlet's 'Methinks I see my father' [372]. Hamlet is equally surprised by Horatio's words." </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>2006<t ...
43) Commentary Note for line 379:
379 Ham. saw, who?

    ... hough the meter requires polysyllables. Wright cites famous instances in . . . Hamlet [when he utters] 'Saw Who?' continued in Horatio's, 'My Lord, the King yo ...

    ... re we say Hopkinsian metric displacement? </para> <para>&#x201C;Earlier in <i>Hamlet,</i> Horatio tries monosyllables in his ghostspeak, 'Stay, speak, speak, ...
44) Commentary Note for line 402:
402 The Apparision comes: I knewe your father,

    ... ilson himself notes, Horatio is careful to not to say that the Ghost <i>was</i> Hamlet's father, only that it was like him.&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn> <sigla> ...

    ... his lines are written. For when Horatio offers to vouch for the Ghost, he tells Hamlet, 'I knew your father. / These hands are not more like.' The identity of ...

    ... us, within the power of language, can produce the effect of the questions which Hamlet puts to Horatio . . . .&#x201D;</para> </cn><tlnrange>404</tlnrange></boo ...
45) Commentary Note for line 406:
406 Ham. Did you not speake to it?

    ... an</sigla><hanging>Kliman</hanging><para>406<tab> </tab><sc>Kliman </sc>(1995): Hamlet might question Marcellus though Horatio answers, in which case no word wo ...

    ... since Horatio has already said that Marcellus and Bernardo did not speak [397], Hamlet very likely means Horatio.</para> </cn><tlnrange>406</tlnrange></book> <b ...
46) Commentary Note for line 416:
416 And we did thinke it writ downe in our dutie

    ... of existence in the play. Thus Horatio finds it 'writ down in our duty' to tell Hamlet of the Ghost's appearance; Polonius instructs Reynaldo to put 'forgeries' ...
47) Commentary Note for line 418:
418 Ham. {Indeede} <Indeed, indeed> Sirs but this troubles me,

    ... /sc> (ed. 1939): "<b>Indeed, indeed, sirs</b>: Quite right, gentlemen. 'This is Hamlet's courteous acknowledgment of Horatio's last remark [415-18], and indicat ...
48) Commentary Note for line 420:
420 {All} <Both>. We doe my Lord.

    ... s </sc>(ed. 1773): &#x201C;The qu's direct <i>All</i> to speak, i.e. all but <i>Hamlet</i>, viz. <i>Horatio Bernardo </i>and<i> Marcellus. </i>The other edition ...
49) Commentary Note for line 421:
421 Ham. Arm'd say you?

    ... escribed by Horatio as &#8216;Arm'd at all points exactly, cap-&#224;-p&#233;.' Hamlet, with his mind full of this description, anticipates the re-appearance of ...
50) Commentary Note for line 425:
425 Ham. Then sawe you not his face{.} <?>

    ... This Q2 reading, without the question mark found in F, makes the better sense. Hamlet, sharp-witted as always, detects a seeming inconsistency in Horatio's acc ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


All Files Commentary Notes
Material Textual Notes Immaterial Textual Notes
Surrounding Context
Range of Proximity searches