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141 to 150 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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141) Commentary Note for line 3051+1:
3051+1 {Of him that brought them.} 3051+1

    ... Briefe von den ersten Ueberbringern empfing, kein anderer als Horatio ist, und Hamlet in seinem Briefe diesem ausdr&#252;cklich den Auftrag giebt: <i>give thes ...

    ... who receives the letter from the first bearer, is none other than Horatio, and Hamlet in his letter gives this commission strictly: <i>give these fellows some ...

    ... ust be altered to <i>servant</i>. Horatio meanwhile hurries with the pirates to Hamlet, when he had come himself upon the bearer of the letters hurrying. Sc. 6. ...
142) Commentary Note for line 3067:
3067 Thus {didst} <didest> thou.

    ... diest <i>here. The implications are much the same; in charging and challenging Hamlet, Horatio would in effect be telling him that he must die at the hands of ...
143) Commentary Note for line 3153:
3153 Our purpose may hold there; {but stay, what noyse?} <how sweet Queene.>

    ... &#8216;but soft awhile' to &#8216;but soft, aside' in order to get Horatio and Hamlet moving off as the funeral procession enters. And the fact that Q1 reads & ...
144) Commentary Note for line 3189:
3189 Enter two Clownes.

    ... ting most clearly that the events of this act take place on the same day. After Hamlet has left the churchyard with Horatio, the King says to Laertes:&#8212; &# ...

    ... trayed a new Hamlet: controlled, speculative, philosophical, wise; a melancholy Hamlet, but he wears his melancholy with a difference. He enters with Horatio &# ...

    ... (line 44) that Hamlet will arrive at the court <i>Tomorrow</i>. V.2 opens with Hamlet's narration to Horatio of what had happened to bring him back to Elsinore ...

    ... ney, enters a graveyard with Horatio where a gravedigger is singing as he digs. Hamlet tries to find out who the grave is for and meditates on the skulls that a ...
145) Commentary Note for line 3245:
3245 <Enter Hamlet and Horatio a farre off.> 3245

    ... src="HW-3245cn.xml"><ehline> <para><ehtln>3245</ehtln><tab> </tab><F1><i>Enter Hamlet and Horatio a farre off</i>.</F1><tab> </tab>3245</para> </ehline> <cn> < ...

    ... tab>Goethe</sigla><hanging>Goethe</hanging><para>3245<tab> </tab><i><b><i>Enter Hamlet and Horatio a farre off</i></b></i>] <sc>Goethe</sc> (1796; rpt. 1989, 5: ...

    ... /b></i>] <sc>Goethe</sc> (1796; rpt. 1989, 5:5:179): &lt;p. 179&gt;&#x201C;When Hamlet tells Horatio about his stepfather's crime, Horatio advises him to go wit ...

    ... o one should be left alive. And, since the people now have to elect a new king, Hamlet, as he dies, gives his vote to Horatio [3845].&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> < ...

    ... </sc></hanging><para>3245<tab> </tab><sc>Elze</sc> (ed. 1857): "Nach StR treten Hamlet und Horatio erst nach dem Gesunge des clown auf." ["According to StR [Ste ...

    ... t nach dem Gesunge des clown auf." ["According to StR [Steevens' 1766 edition], Hamlet and Horatio first enter after the clown's song."]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla ...

    ... 3245<tab> </tab><sc>Marshall</sc> (1875, pp. 93-95): &lt;p. 93&gt; &#x201C;When Hamlet enters with Horatio we find him more than ever disposed to avail himself ...

    ... in such unhappy men, wraps the heart round, like a leaden shroud: it is to this Hamlet afterwards alludes when he says to Horatio&#8212; [cites 3661] All the ti ...
146) Commentary Note for lines 3249-50:
3249-50 Goe get thee | {in, and} <to Yaughan,> fetch mee a soope of liquer.

    ... lson</sc> (1934, 2:184): &lt;p. 184&gt;&#x201C;This explanation [that Q2 delays Hamlet's and Horatio's entrance for four lines because 3255 is the last line on ...

    ... lines because 3255 is the last line on the leaf] is borne out by the entry for Hamlet and Horatio in 5.1., where Q2 postpones the S.D. for four lines for exact ...
147) Commentary Note for lines 3256-57:
{M2v/3255+1} {Enter Hamlet and Horatio.}
3256-7 Ham. Has this fellowe no feeling of his busines? <that>| {a} <he> sings {in} <at> graue-
3257 making.

    ... e> <para><ehtln><Q2>M2v/3255+1</Q2></ehtln><tab> </tab><tab> </tab><Q2><i>Enter Hamlet and Horatio.</i></Q2></para> <para><ehtln>3256-7</ehtln><tab> </tab> <i>H ...

    ... 119-20): &lt;p. 119&gt; &#x201C;The contrast between the imaginative spirit of Hamlet and the practical &lt;/p. 119&gt; &lt;p. 120&gt; understanding of Horatio ...

    ... rn,'[3390] Horatio think &#8216;were to consider too curiously.' [3393] Some of Hamlet's sublime speculations he reduces to &#8216;Custom hath made it in him a ...

    ... </i><sc>Cam3 </sc>(see n. 3250) </hanging><para>3255<tab> </tab><i><b><i>Enter Hamlet and Horatio</i></b></i>] <sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982): &#x201C;<sc>Dover W ...
148) Commentary Note for lines 3267-68:
3267-8 Ham. That skull had a tongue in it, and could sing | once, how the

    ... (1855, p. 20) : &lt;p. 20&gt; &#x201C;After this accidentally sudden return of Hamlet to Denmark, we first see him, with Horatio, on his way to the palace, we ...
149) Commentary Note for lines 3268-69:
3268-9 knaue iowles it to the ground, as if {twere} <it | were> Caines iawbone, that did the

    ... (1855, p. 20) : &lt;p. 20&gt; &#x201C;After this accidentally sudden return of Hamlet to Denmark, we first see him, with Horatio, on his way to the palace, we ...
150) Commentary Note for lines 3269-70:
3269-70 first {murder, this} <murther: It> | might be the pate of a pollitician, which this asse {now}

    ... (1855, p. 20) : &lt;p. 20&gt; &#x201C;After this accidentally sudden return of Hamlet to Denmark, we first see him, with Horatio, on his way to the palace, we ...

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