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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 1) Commentary Note for lines 16-17:16 Bar. Well, good night:16-17 If you doe meete Horatio and | Marcellus,17 The riualls of my watch, bid them make hast.... described here as a <i>rival</i> or <i>partner, </i> and elsewhere as <i>fellow student.</i> <b>Ed. note:</b> See “Horatio, There When Needed” in ...
2) Commentary Note for line 32:32 Mar. Horatio saies tis but our fantasie,... > <para>32<tab> </tab><sc>Wilson </sc>(ed. 1934): “Hor., philosopher and student, may be classed as one of the school of Reginald Scot. When he sees the ...
... </hanging><para>32<tab> </tab><sc>Rylands</sc> (ed. 1947): “Horatio is a student and a scholar. His attitude to ghosts is that of Reginald Scot's ‘ ...
3) Commentary Note for line 54:54 Mar. Thou art a scholler, speake to it Horatio.... as made a slight Mistake in calling <i>Horatio</i> a Soldier, who was in Fact a Student at <i>Wittenberg</i>, where an University at that Time flourished, along ...
4) Commentary Note for line 86:86 Mar. Good now sit downe, and tell me he that knowes,... incredible that Marcellus, a soldier on watch, would require information from a student recently returned from Wittenberg, especially since the king refers to t ...
5) Commentary Note for line 97:97 At least the whisper goes so; our last King,... ight suggest he is a local, but in the next scene Hamlet greets him as a fellow student on a visit from Wittenberg (see List of Roles, 10n.). One recent product ...
... ittle difficulty to any one, be he a mere ordinary reader, or the most exacting student.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1864<tab> </tab><i>N&Q</i></sigla> ...
... rfect sense of the passage by this version, and I have to submit to Shakespeare students and editors, that our poet would not have introduced ‘<i>disaster ...
7) Commentary Note for line 144:144 For it is as the ayre, invulnerable,... he Return from Parnassus : or, The Scourge of Simony </i> publicly acted by the students of Saint John's College in Cambridge. <In January 1602. Printed> ...
8) Commentary Note for line 232:232 Your leaue and fauour to returne to Fraunce,... es about Laertes's studies; therefore there is no reason to assume Laertes is a student. Moreover, Laertes asks the Doctor/Priest if more can be done at Ophelia ...
9) Commentary Note for line 245:245 Ham. A little more then kin, and lesse then kind.... old dramatists were much give to these jingling contrasts is well known to all students of the literature of that age . . . .”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>19 ...
10) Commentary Note for line 295:295 In going back to schoole in Wittenberg,... the same year [1594?] is said to be ‘written by an English gentleman, <i>student</i> in <i>Wittenberg</i>,, an <i>University</i> of Germany in Saxony.' < ...
... publication of a host of popular books, such as the tale of Faustus. From this student's life he cannot conceive<small> </small>Horatio's playing truant” ...
... iece of ‘local colour,' since it was the favourite university with Danish students.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1929<tab> </tab><sc>trav</sc></sigla><h ...
... sity of Danes studying abroad. (Cf. I.ii.12n.) In the decade 1586-95 it had two students named Rosenkrantz and one Gyldenstjerne (Dollerup, p. 128). Its name wa ...
... at [3334-52] that Hamlet is 30 —which would make him an unusually mature student by Elizabethan standards. It is Shakespeare's addition to the story to d ...
... ds. It is Shakespeare's addition to the story to designate all the young men as students —most obviously Hamlet, Horatio, Laertes, Rosencrantz and Guilden ...
... cellus and Barnardo.”</para> <para><b>Ed. note:</b> Laertes' status as a student is uncertain. The only study mentioned, and perhaps not literally, is <i ...
... ps not literally, is <i>music</i> (966). Only Hamlet and Horatio are certainly students.</para> <br/> <hanging><sc>ard3q2</sc>: standard </hanging> <para>295 ...
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