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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 51) Commentary Note for lines 2228-31:2229-30 {gers, & the vmber} <finger and thumbe>, giue it breath with your | mouth, & it wil discourse2230-1 most {eloquent} <excellent> musique, | looke you, these are the stops. 2230... d. 1939): “A proverbial phrase, conveying no personal suggestion, though Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are at liberty to put the coat on if it fits them. ...
52) Commentary Note for lines 2240-43:2241-2 strument you wil, | though you <can> fret me {not}, you cannot play vpon me.2242-3 God | blesse you sir.... schliesslich lautet: <i>these cannot I command, I have not the skill.</i> Nahm Rosencrantz theil, so hätte ein: <i>nor I neither</i> oder Aehnliches folge ...
... the answer is finally, <i>these cannot I command, I have not the skill</i>. If Rosencrantz took part, the phrase <i>nor I neither</i> or something similar woul ...
... however, to feel themselves put in the same position as the glozing aristocrats Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, sent against the prince to pluck out the heart of ...
... ed. In the cryptic ‘method' of his ‘madness' the man who has warned Rosencrantz and Guildenstern that he knows a hawk from a handsaw ([2.2.379 (1426 ...
... ay so.' It seems logical in both texts that not only Polonius but also Horatio, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern should obey Hamlet's instruction, <i>Leave me, frie ...
... speech. Q1's [stage directions] are the fullest here with an '<i>Exit</i>' for Rosencrantz and Gilderstone before the entry of Corambis, an 'exit' for Corambis ...
55) Commentary Note for line 2272:2272 King. I like him not, nor stands it safe with vs... r, which Claudius has throughout adopted (until he is alone). Nothing points to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern either here or later knowing anything of Claudius's ...
56) Commentary Note for line 2274:2274 I your commission will forth-with dispatch,... ission which you are to take to England. It does not seem to follow at all that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are privy to the traitorous scheme for <i>killing</ ...
... 2.17, 18, 32 (3517, 3518, 3533)]. The line has been taken by some as proof that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern “are privy to the traitorous scheme” ...
... d the <i>mandate</i> (3.4.202-4 [2577+1-2577+3]). It is nowhere made clear that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are aware of the murderous instructions given in th ...
... cribes intercepting at 5.2.18 [3518]; it is never made absolutely clear whether Rosencrantz and Guildenstern know they are conducting Hamlet not just to exile b ...
57) Commentary Note for line 2279:2279 Guyl. We will our selues prouide,... 7<tab> </tab>Werder</sigla><hanging>Werder</hanging><para>2279-82<tab> </tab><b>Rosencrantz </b>. . .<b> England</b>] <sc>Werder</sc> (1907; rpt. 1977, p.141): ...
... of kingship, although put into the mouths of the ingratiating Guildenstern and Rosencrantz, was the orthodox Elizabethan one. Its expression here shows the dan ...
59) Commentary Note for line 2281:2281 To keepe those many many bodies safe... evil, yet how characteristically is this just sentiment placed in the mouth of Rosencrantz.” </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1860<tab> </tab><sc>stau</sc></sig ...
... evil, yet how characteristically is this just sentiment placed in the mouth of Rosencrantz.”</p. 854></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1857<tab> </tab><sc> ...
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