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61 to 70 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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61) Commentary Note for line 604:
604 Ham. The ayre bites {shroudly, it is very colde.} <shrewdly: is it very cold?>

    ... air bites shrewdly, although it is not very cold. <i>Horatio's</i> reply to <i>Hamlet</i> is not that it is cold, but that the air has this quality. However, t ...
62) Commentary Note for line 610:
610 Wherein the spirit held his wont to walke {A florish of trumpets }

    ... 610<tab> </tab>spirit] <sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939), writing as if the word is Hamlet's, says: "Hamlet [perhaps he means 'Horatio"?]does not commit himself on ...

    ... irit] <sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939), writing as if the word is Hamlet's, says: "Hamlet [perhaps he means 'Horatio"?]does not commit himself on the question whet ...
63) Commentary Note for line 612:
612 Ham. The King doth wake to night and takes his rowse.

    ... e] . . . symbols of power that would authorize his reign . . . . Significantly, Hamlet must explain to a startled Horatio that the sudden noise of trumpet and c ...
64) Commentary Note for line 617:
617 Hora. Is it a custome?

    ... ending with a period in m<sc>col</sc>1, suggests that Horatio seeks to mollify Hamlet's anger. Hamlet agrees it <i>is</i> a custom [618] but deplores it nevert ...

    ... (ed. 1904): &#x201C;It seems odd that a Dane should ask the question, and from Hamlet's reply it would certainly be inferred that Horatio is <i>not &#8216;</i> ...

    ... 307-311]. Horatio's question seems rather odd, if he is a Dane [3826]. Possibly Hamlet's father had given up the custome. At all events, one cannot agree with W ...

    ... play to justify the inference that what was customary must have been made so by Hamlet's father. It is strange that Horatio, a Dane (124+18, 3826), should not k ...

    ... seemed at home in Denmark and well informed on Danish affairs. But in scene two Hamlet is surprised to see him in Elsinore and now speaks as though Horatio were ...
65) Commentary Note for line 620:
620 And to the manner borne, it is a custome

    ... &amp; Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;accustomed to this tradition from birth. Hamlet clearly disapproves of the custom and expects Horatio to agree with him. ...
66) Commentary Note for line 621+1:
621+1 {This heauy headed reueale east and west}

    ... <i>first</i> Publication. But to the Lines; &#8212;</para> <para>&#x201C;<i><sc>Hamlet</sc></i>, holding the Watch with <i>Horatio</i>, in Order to see his Fath ...

    ... e Musick is heard: Which <i>Horatio</i> desirous to know the Meaning of, <i><sc>Hamlet</sc></i> tells him, that the King sat up to drink, and whenever he took h ...

    ... e Triumph of his Pledge. <i>Horatio </i>asking, whether it was a Custom; <i><sc>Hamlet</sc></i> replies, Yes; but one that, in his Opinion, it were better to br ...

    ... his condition, rather than of the so-called tragic flaw, that I want to examine Hamlet's meditation on the tragic flaw. He is on the parapet with Horatio and Ma ...
67) Commentary Note for line 622:
622 Enter Ghost.

    ... d in a sublimer Manner than the Former. Accordingly we may take Notice, that <i>Hamlet's</i> speech to his Father's Shade is as much superior to that of <i>Hora ...
68) Commentary Note for line 624:
624 Ham. Angels and Ministers of grace defend vs:

    ... mself? The way he says the words &#8216;speak-speak' [these words not spoken by Hamlet but by Horatio, 65] to the motionless thing, finally tears himself away f ...

    ... den, Horatio says, &#8216;Look, Mylord it comes . . . .</para> <para>&#x201C;In Hamlet's starting back there is no affected stumbling; there is nothing clumsy o ...

    ... about Garrick, says &#x201C;The State of Preparation which this Critic supposes Hamlet to be in, is the same with that of Horatio, when he first saw the Ghost, ...

    ... c>(ed. 1934) includes among the scenes that matter significantly, those between Hamlet and the ghost, and Horatio and Marcellus in the cellarage scene. He also ...
69) Commentary Note for line 628:
628 Thou com'st in such a questionable shape,

    ... positive sense. Rather than &#8216;try the spirit' as Horatio has done in [62], Hamlet simply assumes that it is his Father's ghost and proceeds to query it on ...
70) Commentary Note for line 629:
629 That I will speake to thee, Ile call thee Hamlet,

    ... edulity has passed away, seems to Horatio only a &#8216;thing majestical' is to Hamlet, &#8216;king, father, royal Dane.' From the first word of Horatio's narra ...

    ... d of Horatio's narrative to this moment of the real presence of the apparition, Hamlet has no doubts. The excited state of his mind had prepared him to welcome ...

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