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

51 to 60 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context
51) Commentary Note for line 426:
426 Hora. O yes my Lord, he wore his beauer vp.

    ... arked that Shakespeare confounded the <i>beaver </i>and <i>visor</i>; for in <i>Hamlet </i>Horatio says that he saw the old king's face, because he wore his <i> ...
52) Commentary Note for line 434:
434 Hora. It would haue much a maz'd you.

    ... dge</sc> (ed. 1939): "confused your thoughts. Horatio does not mean merely that Hamlet would have been astonished, but that he would have been unable to think a ...

    ... cularly clear: &#8216;like a labyrinth to amaze his foes'. Horatio means that Hamlet himself would not, to use a modern idiom, have known what to make of it." ...
53) Commentary Note for line 439:
439 Ham. His beard was {grissl'd,} <grisly?> no.

    ... ]: 403): &#x201C;<i>No</i>, appears to me to have been given very improperly to Hamlet. The question is designed to try how far Horatio has observed the ghost. ...

    ... Hamlet. The question is designed to try how far Horatio has observed the ghost. Hamlet therefore proposes the question of a beard of a different colour to that ...
54) Commentary Note for line 440:
440 Hora. It was as I haue seene it in his life

    ... </b>] <sc>Thirlby </sc>(1723-) notes that three times Horatio says he knew King Hamlet: 375, 402, and 440. </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>-1761<tab> </tab>Rochester?< ...
55) Commentary Note for line 448:
448 Let it be {tenable} <treble> in your silence still,

    ... rival phrase reinstated in the text.</para> <para>&#x201C;The passage occurs in Hamlet's injunction to Horatio and his comrades, after they had divulged to him ...

    ... <i>treble</i> is the right word, and peculiarly appropriate in its application. Hamlet is conversing with <i>three </i>companions, Horatio, Bernardo, and Marcel ...
56) Commentary Note for line 455:
455 Ham. Your {loues} <loue>, as mine to you, farwell.

    ... b> </tab>Your . . . you] <sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939): "<small>Another mark of Hamlet's courtesy.</small> He will not allow Horatio and the rest to call themse ...
57) Commentary Note for line 457:
457 I doubt some foule play, would the night were come,

    ... g those speculated on by Horatio and his companions (85, 129-36). It is left to Hamlet to divine the nature of the Ghost's errand (though not as yet, of course, ...
58) Commentary Note for line 589:
589 Then a commaund to {parle;} <parley.> for Lord Hamlet,

    ... e's many parleys serve a variety of purposes. [ . . .] </para> <para>&#x201C;<i>Hamlet </i>provides two very interesting uses of the term. Horatio's curious lin ...

    ... vides two very interesting uses of the term. Horatio's curious lines about King Hamlet, [quotes 78-9] have occasioned much critical comment, with Jenkins offeri ...
59) Commentary Note for line 603:
603 Enter Hamlet, Horatio {and} Marcellus.
60) Commentary Note for line 603:
603 Enter Hamlet, Horatio {and} Marcellus.

    ... ould be awkward to leave him on stage when Horatio and Marcellus rush off after Hamlet.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1982 <tab></tab> <sc>ard2</sc> </sigla> ...

    ... f Barnardo receives no explanation, and needs none beyond dramatic convenience. Hamlet, like Horatio before him, is provided with two companions; the third is r ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


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