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31 to 40 of 111 Entries from All Files for "Ophelia near Polonius" in All Fields

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31) Commentary Note for line 581:
581 Pol. I, {springs} <Springes> to catch wood-cockes, I doe knowe

    ... calls <i>springes to catch wood-cocks</i>, are the <i>holy vows</i> with which Ophelia tells him; Hamlet had given countenance to his speech.&#x201D;</para></c ...
32) Commentary Note for line 589:
589 Then a commaund to {parle;} <parley.> for Lord Hamlet,

    ... love conversation with him. Polonius sees the relationship between Hamlet and Ophelia as a siege of her chastity.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1988<tab>< ...

    ... 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 ...
33) Commentary Note for line 593:
593 Doe not belieue his vowes, for they are brokers

    ... <b>bonds</b>] <sc>Theobald </sc>(1726, pp. 26-27): &lt;p. 26&gt;&#x201C;<i><sc>Ophelia</sc> </i>having received the Addresses of <i><sc>Hamlet</sc></i>, <i>Pol ...
34) Commentary Note for line 594:
594 Not of {that die} <the eye> which their inuestments showe

    ... g><sc>kit2</sc></hanging><para> 594<tab> </tab> <sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939): "Ophelia has described Hamlet's vows as 'holy.' Polonius retorts that their holin ...
35) Commentary Note for line 599:
599 Haue you so slaunder any moment leasure {D1}

    ... s speculated upon, but which is at least equally plausible. Polonius says to <i>Ophelia</i>,&#8212;&#8216;I would not, in plain terms, from this time forth, Hav ...

    ... e of &#8216;slander' to <i>squander</i>, in the passage of Polonius's advice to Ophelia, is quite uncalled for, and most assuredly erroneous:&#8212; [quotes]. I ...
36) Commentary Note for line 762:
762 2352 Vnhuzled, disappointed, {vnanueld} <vnnaneld>,

    ... of King Hamlet without final unction, Polonius' 'hugger-mugger' burial [2821], Ophelia's abbreviated service [3414]) all gesture toward the present abandonment ...
37) Commentary Note for line 888:
888 <Actus Secundus.>

    ... 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 ...
38) Commentary Note for line 967:
967 Rey. Well my Lord. Exit {Rey}.

    ... fterthoughts and is still talking as the latter leaves the stage, by which time Ophelia has entered from the other side, to confront her father as he turns.&#x2 ...
39) Commentary Note for lines 969-70:
969-70 Pol. Farewell. | How now Ophelia, whats the matter?

    ... to find out what his son is doing in Paris gives way to the intense distress of Ophelia, already a victim, at least in part, of her father's interference in her ...
40) Commentary Note for line 971:
971 Oph. {O my Lord, my Lord} <Alas my Lord>, I haue beene so affrighted,

    ... 6, <i>apud </i> Furness, ed. 1877): &#x201C;The supposition that Hamlet went to Ophelia directly after the interview with the Ghost is incorrect, and for the fo ...

    ... as elapsed since the departure of Laertes for Paris; secondly, during this time Ophelia has returned Hamlet's letters, and denied him access; her father asks he ...

    ... ing must, therefore, have belonged to a period before the opening of the drama. Ophelia had strictly obeyed her father's commands, and returned all Hamlet's let ...

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