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41 to 50 of 89 Entries from All Files for "Ophelia near Polonius" in All Fields

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41) Commentary Note for lines 1219-20:
1219-20 good kissing carrion. | Haue you a daughter?

    ... ed the passage &#8216;purposely obscure,' but understood the reference to be to Ophelia and Polonius&#8212;- the former as bred out of the latter, &#8216;a dead ...

    ... ed maggots in a dead dog, which dead dog is a good kissing carrion, why may not Ophelia have been produced by such carrion as Polonius? Such is Coleridge's int ...

    ... notion seems to be, if Hamlet likens Polonius to carrion, he necessarily likens Ophelia to the offspring of carrion. In a case of such difficulty it is at all ...

    ... auen</i>], and to annoy Polonius, might not the sun breed in the equally tender Ophelia, who ought therefore not to expose herself to the sun.')&#x201D;</para>< ...

    ... ar-kissing arguments.' Hamlet ironically justifies the severance by Polonius of Ophelia from himself: all the world is evil, even the sun has the basest propens ...
42) Commentary Note for lines 1451-2:
1451-2 Ham. O Ieptha Iudge of Israell, what a treasure had'st | thou?

    ... the reference to Jephthah "is clearly a condemnation of Polonius's treatment of Ophelia, . . . James Black ['Hamlet's Vows,' <i>Renaissance and Reformation</i> ...
43) Commentary Note for lines 1540-41:
1540-1 for a Iigge, or a tale of bawdry, or he | sleepes, say on, come to Hecuba.

    ... e. From his use of this word again in Polonius's presence (III.2:) in answer to Ophelia, who telling his he is merry, he says, &#8216;O, your only jig maker,' i ...
44) Commentary Note for lines 1646-7:
1646-7 Enter King, Queene, Polonius, Ophelia, Ro | sencraus, Guyl-
1647 densterne, <and> Lords.

    ... ehline> <para><ehtln>1646-7</ehtln><tab> </tab><i>Enter King, Queene, Polonius, Ophelia, Ro</i> <F1BR/> <i>sencraus, Guyl-</i></para> <para>1647<tab> </tab><i>d ...
45) Commentary Note for line 1710:
1710 Ham. To be, or not to be, that is the question,

    ... the play.<tab> </tab>&#8212;The same.</para> <para>The design of Hamlet meeting Ophelia &amp; the King &amp; Polonius behind the arras again mentioned.</para> < ...

    ... let enters while <small>quizing</small> on Suicide.</para> <para>Interview with Ophelia.</para> <para>Discourse of the King &amp; Polonius on what they heard &a ...

    ... ed <i>reading</i>, as he does now, immediately after Polonius had proposed that Ophelia should meet him as if by accident, and that he, the wily politician, sho ...

    ... . The King expresses his opinion that Hamlet is not distracted through love for Ophelia; and Polonius engages to search him deeper. Then follows the interview w ...
46) Commentary Note for line 1758:
1758 Ham. Ha, ha, are you honest.

    ... is famous scene seems to me required by the poet's marked intention to separate Ophelia from Hamlet's confidence, by Polonius compelling her &#8212; &#8216;&#82 ...
47) Commentary Note for lines 1762-3:
1762-3 Ham. That if you be honest & faire, {you} <your Honesty> | should admit

    ... onically baffled Polonius by commending his wisdom in restraining and secluding Ophelia; the same irony will serve again. Your father and brother were right; yo ...
48) Commentary Note for lines 1768-9:
1768-9 late beautie into his likenes, | this was sometime a paradox, but now the

    ... f his mother; of his own honesty represented as a wanton passion for beauty; of Ophelia's virtue, which cannot be trusted by Polonius to act as guardian of her ...
49) Commentary Note for lines 1784-5:
1784-5 goe thy | waies to a {Nunry} <Nunnery>. Where's your father?

    ... King and Polonius as they retire. It is to be considered as a possibility that Ophelia may not have been aware of her father's espionage.&#x201D;</para></cn> < ...

    ... ii. 174-89, 399-409); and now when these come to a climax in his encounter with Ophelia herself, he suddenly thinks of her father. (To Polonius, 'Have you a da ...

    ... f, he suddenly thinks of her father. (To Polonius, 'Have you a daughter?' ; to Ophelia, 'Where's your father?') Perhaps the most surprising thing about the q ...
50) Commentary Note for lines 1787-8:
1787-8 That he may | play the foole no {where} <way,> but in's owne house,

    ... e that Polonius is not too far off to hear it. The speech his for him, not for Ophelia, and will seem to her to come only from his madness.&#x201D;</para> <par ...

    ... <para>1837 <sc>MacDonald</sc> (ed. 1885): &#x201C;This supports the notion of Ophelia's ignorance of the espial. Polonius thinks she is about to disclose wha ...

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