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31 to 40 of 89 Entries from All Files for "Ophelia near Polonius" in All Fields

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31) Commentary Note for line 973:
973 Ophe. My Lord, as I was sowing in my {closset} <Chamber>,

    ... h many have joined themselves with Polonius in explaining Hamlet's behaviour to Ophelia by her rejection of his letters (1006), nothing in the text suggests tha ...
32) Commentary Note for line 981:
981 Pol. Mad for thy loue?

    ... . 1987): "Polonius's deduction is a reasonable one, for Hamlet's appearance, as Ophelia describes it, is very close to that of the typical lover in Rosalind's m ...
33) Commentary Note for line 984:
984 Oph. He tooke me by the wrist, and held me hard,

    ... let thought meet to put on. It was not the &#8216;ecstacy of love,' produced by Ophelia's coldness, according to Polonius. But it was the utterance, as far as i ...

    ... of his intrusion, he walks into the house of Polonius, and into the chamber of Ophelia.</para> <para>&#x201C;Ever since the night of the apparition, the court, ...
34) Commentary Note for line 994:
994 And with his head ouer his {shoulder} <shoulders> turn'd

    ... e of Polonius's contrition about his misreading of Hamlet's motives in engaging Ophelia's love and because the king's suspicions about Hamlet are already arouse ...
35) Commentary Note for line 1009:
1009 I am sorry, that with better {heede} <speed> and iudgement

    ... nging><para>1009-11<tab> </tab><sc>Marshall</sc> (1875, p. 136): &#x201C;Though Ophelia says nothing [to Polonius], it may be fairly supposed that her face show ...
36) Commentary Note for line 1010:
1010 I had not {coted} <quoted> him, I {fear'd} <feare> he did but trifle

    ... mbered 2.1], where Polonius, having discovered his want of sagacity in advising Ophelia, to discountenance Hamlet's addresses, because he thought the Prince onl ...

    ... </tab><sc>Mull</sc> (ed. 1885): &#x201C;The first clause is surely directed to Ophelia as a rebuke; and the subsequent serious reflection of Polonius, that &#8 ...

    ... t passim</i>). </para> <para>&#x201C;Further, the whole of the colloquy between Ophelia and Polonius in [554-601] lends powerful support to the change I suggest ...

    ... 554-601] lends powerful support to the change I suggest. Polonius there says to Ophelia, [quotes 557-63].</para> <para>&#x201C;Polonius it is, undoubtedly, who ...

    ... uotes 557-63].</para> <para>&#x201C;Polonius it is, undoubtedly, who reproaches Ophelia, and not Polonius himself. In the perturbation he displays it would be h ...
37) Commentary Note for line 1015:
1015 To lack discretion; come, goe we to the King,

    ... anging>Kliman</hanging><para>1015<tab> </tab><sc>Kliman </sc>(2000): By placing Ophelia's exit here, in the midst of Polonius's speech, <sc>Tschischwitz</sc> (e ...

    ... here, in the midst of Polonius's speech, <sc>Tschischwitz</sc> (ed. 1869) gives Ophelia an opportunity to show her resistance or to allow Polonius to have a fin ...
38) Commentary Note for line 1016:
1016 This must be knowne, which beeing kept close, might moue

    ... t. . . . By &#8216;This' Polonius means the fact that Hamlet is mad for love of Ophelia. He has found the great secret, and is ready enough to make use of it to ...
39) Commentary Note for lines 1137-39:
1137 To the Celestiall and my soules Idoll, the most beau-
1137-9 tified O|phelia,| that's an ill phrase, a {vile} <vilde> phrase,

    ... </sc></hanging> <para><sc>Stubbs</sc> (1736, p. 35): &#x201C;Hamlet's Letter to Ophelia, which Polonius reads, is none of the best Parts of this Play, and is, I ...

    ... > means simply <i>beautified</i>; but Polonius considers it as implying that <i>Ophelia's</i> beauty was the effect of it.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>17 ...

    ... writing a love-letter 'to the celestial and my soul's idol, the most beautified Ophelia' [1137]. Polonius interjects 'That's an ill phrase, a vile phrase: "bea ...
40) Commentary Note for line 1211:
1211 Ham. Excellent <excellent> well, you are a Fishmonger.

    ... interviews of Hamlet with Polonius, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, the Players, Ophelia, etc., and no wonder, with their imperfect and incorrect comprehension o ...

    ... dness does not of course imply that Hamlet must be aware of Polonius's plan for Ophelia ; to suppose so would be to misunderstand the 'method'. What Hamlet <i ...

    ... t Hamlet <i>is</i> all the time (even obsessively) aware of is that Polonius is Ophelia's father. Cf. below ll. 399ff., where, with the fishmonger and his daug ...

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