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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 1) Commentary Note for line 78:78 So frownd he once, when in an angry parle... fought on the ice between Poland and Denmark. Polonius then gives his advice to Ophelia, [quotes 589] <i>i.e. </i>Hamlet, the besieger, must do more than simply ...
... enmark,</i> <sc>gertrude</sc><i> the Queen,</i> <sc> hamlet, polonius, laertes, ophelia, [[voltemand, cornelius]] lords</sc> <i>attendant</i>] <sc>Edwards</sc> ...
... ebauches [308], the “hugger mugger” burial of Polonius [2821] and Ophelia, the cutting short of the play-within [2130] and the fencing match [3779 ...
4) Commentary Note for line 190:190 With mirth in funerall, and with dirdge in marriage,5) Commentary Note for line 250:250 Doe not for euer with thy vailed lids... ing—and hence his desire—is also dysfunctional . . . . The death of Ophelia, as well as the murder of Polonius, are, according to Lacan, ritual sacr ...
... ts the Reynaldo scene, places the scene in a hall in the castle, preparing for Ophelia's encounter with Hamlet. At the end of the scene, right after Polonius s ...
... the strong family feeling in Polonius's family. Laertes's love for his sister Ophelia, whom we see for the first time, and their regard for their father, in s ...
... aertes's impulses for revenge later. There is nothing to show that Laertes and Ophelia are contemptuous of Polonius's long-windedness.”</para></cn> < ...
... >gent</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>gent</sc></hanging><para>461<tab> </tab><i><b><i>Ophelia</i></b></i> <sc>Gentleman </sc>(ed. 1773), continuing a sentence that be ...
... ;. . . delicacy of appearance, and harmonious utterance, will do justice to <i>Ophelia</i>.” </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1774<tab> </tab><sc>gent</sc></sig ...
... ot: at best it's bittersweet. It is of course an important step in the tragedy; Ophelia's refusal of Hamlet (as urged by both brother and father) and his of her ...
9) Commentary Note for line 465:465 But let me heere from you.... . . . you] <sc> Thompson & Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): “Laertes and Ophelia consistently use the more formal pronouns to each other in this scene; P ...
... <para>467<tab></tab><i>Hamlet</i>] <sc>Trench</sc> (1913, p. 66): Polonius and Ophelia, in contrast to Laertes, “will never fail to give 'Lord Hamlet' h ...
... no more be guilty of such impropriety, when addressing his daughter, than would Ophelia herself at any time: he and she will never fail to give 'Lord Hamlet' hi ...
... he area of sexuality as well as in others. </p. 69> Polonius' language to Ophelia when he advises her how </p. 69><p. 70> to act in the ‘ ...
... > (ed. 1980): “This remark introduces the love affair between Hamlet and Ophelia. Both Polonius and Laertes suppose that Hamlet has only a passing inter ...
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