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181 to 190 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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181) Commentary Note for line 3519:
3519 {A} <Oh> royall knauery, an exact command

    ... ce, he adhered more than to any other, fell into the same pit which was dug for Hamlet, but not by them. They &#8216;go to't?' asks his Horatio in reproachful s ...

    ... irates take posession of the ship, instead of philosophizing in the background, Hamlet is in the very front of the action, and so is taken prisoner. When Horati ...
182) Commentary Note for line 3520_352:
3520 Larded with many seuerall sorts of {reasons,} <reason;> 3520
3521 Importing Denmarkes health, and Englands to,

    ... ce, he adhered more than to any other, fell into the same pit which was dug for Hamlet, but not by them. They &#8216;go to't?' asks his Horatio in reproachful s ...

    ... irates take posession of the ship, instead of philosophizing in the background, Hamlet is in the very front of the action, and so is taken prisoner. When Horati ...
183) Commentary Note for line 3544:
3544 And stand a Comma tweene their amities,

    ... 8): &lt;p. 268&gt;&#x201C;It seems to me that a passage in the dialogue between Hamlet and Horatio, at the commencement of this scene, which has baffled the com ...

    ... eve that the same word in a participial form appears as <i>encumber'd</i>, when Hamlet warns Horatio against betraying confidence in the matter of his future co ...
184) Commentary Note for line 3548_354:
3548 He should {those} <the> bearers put to suddaine death,
3549 Not shriuing time alow'd.

    ... ll, in his Study of Hamlet, devotes pp. 63-69 to this question. The language of Hamlet, he says, in his narrative to Horatio, &#8216;indicates great excitement, ...
185) Commentary Note for line 3553:
3553 Which was the modill of that Danish seale,

    ... 980): &#x201C;((pointing to the seal on the commission now in Horatio's hand)). Hamlet seems to be saying that, by good luck, he had his father's seal, and, equ ...
186) Commentary Note for line 3559:
3559 Hora. So Guyldensterne and Rosencraus goe too't.

    ... Guildenstern to their fate.: Contrary to Sargeaunt (TLS 1919: 83) who says that Hamlet had no justification for killing them [they are included in Horatio's gen ...

    ... included in Horatio's general description of events (3876-80)], Greenwood says Hamlet saw them as co-conspirators with the king, who knew that they were on an ...

    ... 577+1-2577+8). <b>Ed. note:</b> Greenwood goes beyond the evidence when he says Hamlet arranges for the pirate ship. If so, why doesn't he say so in telling Hor ...

    ... ssion <i>contra</i> Sargeaunt (<i>TLS</i>, 1919, 126): If Horatio thought that Hamlet had Rosencrantz and Guildenstern killed &#x201C;for no cause,&#x201D; as ...

    ... &#x201C;for no cause,&#x201D; as Mr. Sargeaunt says, he would have had to think Hamlet a murderer. Hamlet's letter promises to tell Horatio more. He adds on p. ...

    ... e,&#x201D; as Mr. Sargeaunt says, he would have had to think Hamlet a murderer. Hamlet's letter promises to tell Horatio more. He adds on p. 201 that his main g ...

    ... eenwood might have added that Horatio could not say that flights of angels sing Hamlet to his rest if he thought him a murderer. </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1939 ...
187) Commentary Note for line 3560:
3560 <Ham. Why man, they did make loue to this imployment> 3560

    ... rs' heads.&#x201D;[3880] It is noticeable that Horatio, in the talk he has with Hamlet on that subject, v.2. seems to regret or deplore the fate of the King's t ...

    ... ly to Horatio's pensive words, &#8216;So Guildenstern and Rosencrantz go to't', Hamlet ((in the second quarto)) impatiently replies &#8216;They are not near by ...

    ... o, &#8216;They are not near my conscience.' In view of other important lines in Hamlet's communication to Horatio which are also found only in the Folio . . . i ...

    ... the new line, &#8216;Why man, they did make love to this employment', etches in Hamlet's awareness of the unspoken accusation in Horatio's remark, and his wish ...
188) Commentary Note for line 3561:
3561 Ham. They are not neere my conscience, their {defeat} <debate>

    ... is friendship for Horatio, and his religious faith. I have asserted that it was Hamlet's religion, his resorting to prayer, that saved him from utter loss of re ...

    ... meant that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were not guilty as far as Horatio knew; Hamlet's justification to Horatio of his treatment of them exonerates them. All ...
189) Commentary Note for line 3562_356:
3562 {Dooes} <Doth> by their owne insinnuation growe,
3563 Tis dangerous when the baser nature comes

    ... 201C;With the concern of Horatio for the fate of Rosincrance and Guildensterne, Hamlet shows no sympathy. It has been objected to his character that there is no ...
190) Commentary Note for line 3564_356:
3564 Betweene the passe and fell incenced points
3565 Of mighty opposits.

    ... meant that Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were not guilty as far as Horatio knew; Hamlet's justification to Horatio of his treatment of them exonerates them. All ...

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