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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 91) Commentary Note for line 845:845 Ghost. Sweare. <Ghost cries vnder the Stage.>... ll others the solemn revelation which he has received; an anxiety which induces Hamlet to hurry Horatio and Marcellus away from each spot whence * the voice see ...
... 9 and 180 are further evidence that it is not a diabolical tempter. Presumably Hamlet's mockery of the Ghost is intended to conceal from Horatio and Marcellus ...
... e, where the ghost, ‘from below,' exclaims to Horatio and Marcellus, whom Hamlet adjures to secrecy, ‘Swear!' describes <i>True-Penny</i> as a minin ...
93) Commentary Note for line 855:855 And lay your hands againe vpon my sword,... ieves that the comma after <i>sword </i>in 855 allows for a pause “while Hamlet presents the hilt of his weapon, and Horatio and Marcellus step forward t ...
94) Commentary Note for line 863:863 There are more things in heauen and earth Horatio... I can point out two other Lines [that] must be said to be translated from him. Hamlet, p.232. ‘[T]here are more things in Heav'N and Earth,<i> </i>Horati ...
... character I have seen, here laid an emphasis on the word <i>your,</i> as though Hamlet means Horatio's ignorance; but surely nothing of the sort is intended. 'T ...
... Delius </sc>(ed. 1854): “So [<i>our</i>] die Fol. und gewiss richtig, da Hamlet wohl eher als Horatio <i>philosophy</i> für sich in Anspruch nehmen ...
... course it is not <i>Horatio's </i>philosophy, but your <i>philosophy</i>, that Hamlet is speaking of. <sc>H</sc>.”</para></cn> <cn> </cn> <cn><sigla>185 ...
... miliar use, see [1854, 1978, 2688; <i>Ant. </i>2.7.26 (1363)]. <sc>Corson:</sc> Hamlet and Horatio had been fellow-students at the University; this may explain ...
... g><para>864<tab> </tab><b>your</b>] <sc>Verity </sc> (ed. 1904): “<small>Hamlet knows Horatio's cool, sceptical nature</small>. Some think that the empha ...
... bout “the indefinite colloquial ‘you,'” in 1935 thinks that Hamlet is teasing Horatio here about the “shallowness of his ‘philo ...
... e difference between Q2 <i>your</i> and F1 <i>our</i> is significant: Either 1) Hamlet differentiates between his and Horatio's philosophy in Q2 (and the stress ...
... between his and Horatio's philosophy in Q2 (and the stress is on your) or 2) Q2 Hamlet uses a colloquial <i>your</i> as in <i>your spirits</i> in 135 (and if so ...
... s (while Q2 has <i>our</i>). And on the other hand again, the F <i>our</i> puts Hamlet and Horatio together in a brotherly way. See <sc>fieb</sc>'s idiosyncrati ...
... 899): “commonly explained as ‘folded.' Perhaps intertwined, <small>Hamlet taking the arm of Horatio or Marcellus as he speaks. In Fenton's <i>Monop ...
97) Commentary Note for line 879:879 Ham. Rest, rest, perturbed spirit: so Gentlemen,... 85): "Perhaps at this point Horatio and Marcellus silently swear on the hilt of Hamlet's sword. Wilson, Spencer and Jenkins think they swear silently three sep ...
... ;These words suggest that Horatio and Marcellus have sworn the oath demanded by Hamlet and the Ghost; Q2 and F give no stage direction to indicate when they do ...
... says <i>th'other</i> in Q2, he says <i>the other </i>in F1. In both Q2 and F1, Hamlet says <i>the other </i>to his mother at 2542 and to Horatio in 3500; Claud ...
... ): “According to QA Rosencrans and Guyldensterne were fellow-students of Hamlet at Wittenberg, just like Horatio. Guyldensterne says (Mr Griggs' facsimil ...
... to look for—to examine to attend to— And this is explained by what Hamlet says to Horatio in the third Act—‘For I, my eyes will rivet ...
... watch thee narrowly. And perhaps this meaning may be farther confirmed by what Hamlet afterwards says to Horatio, in the next act:"For I my eyes will rivet fas ...
... anging> <para>1637 <sc>MacDonald</sc> (ed. 1885): “In the <i>1st Q. </i>Hamlet, speaking to Horatio, says, And if he doe not bleach, and change at that, ...
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