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191 to 200 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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191) Commentary Note for line 3570_357:
3570 Throwne out his Angle for my proper life,
3571 And with such cusnage, i'st not perfect conscience?
    ... ement. [n. 17] It is probable that when Hamlet, thinking of Claudius, asks Horat ...
192) Commentary Note for line 3572_357:
3572 <To quit him with this arme? And is't not to be damn'd>
3573 <To let this Canker of our nature come>
3574 <In further euill.>
    ... ably (or so it seems to me) comments on Hamlet's self-justification to Horatio a ...
    ... sc>Delius (</sc>ed. 1854) : &#x201C;Wie Hamlet einen Vater zu r&#228;chen hat, s ...
    ... , so auch Horatio.&#x201D; [ &#x201C;As Hamlet has to avenge a father, so also H ...
    ... m beautifully characteristic touches of Hamlet's disposition; and at the same ti ...
    ... .</para> <para>&#x201C;When in reply to Hamlet's unanswerable question Horatio t ...
193) Commentary Note for line 3572_74:
3572 <To quit him with this arme? And is't not to be damn'd>
3573 <To let this Canker of our nature come>
3574 <In further euill.>
    ... ably (or so it seems to me) comments on Hamlet's self-justification to Horatio a ...
    ... .</para> <para>&#x201C;When in reply to Hamlet's unanswerable question Horatio t ...
194) Commentary Note for line 3578_358:
3578 <The interim's mine, and a mans life's no more>
3579 <Then to say one: but I am very sorry good Horatio,>
3580 <That to Laertes I forgot my selfe;> 3580
    ... .</para> <para>&#x201C;When in reply to Hamlet's unanswerable question Horatio t ...
195) Commentary Note for line 3581_358:
3581 <For by the image of my Cause, I see>
3582 <The Portraiture of his; Ile count his fauours:>
3583 <But sure the brauery of his griefe did put me>
3584 <Into a Towring passion.>
3585 <Hor. Peace, who comes heere?> 3585
    ... sc>Delius (</sc>ed. 1854) : &#x201C;Wie Hamlet einen Vater zu r&#228;chen hat, s ...
    ... , so auch Horatio.&#x201D; [ &#x201C;As Hamlet has to avenge a father, so also H ...
    ... m beautifully characteristic touches of Hamlet's disposition; and at the same ti ...
196) Commentary Note for line 3586:
3586 Enter {a Courtier.} <young Osricke.>
    ... g> <para>3499<tab> </tab><i><b><i>Enter Hamlet and Horatio</i></b></i>] <sc>Mars ...
197) Commentary Note for line 3603_360:
3603-4 Ham. {But yet} me thinkes it is very {sully} <soultry> and hot, {or} <for> my | complec-
3604 tion.
    ... rick's first entry in the question that Hamlet puts to Horatio, &#8212;&#x201D;< ...
198) Commentary Note for line 3606_360:
3606-7 not tell how: <but> my Lord his Maiestie bad me sig|nifie to you, that a
    ... , der ethischen Reife eines Horatio und Hamlet anschaulich macht.&#x201D; [R&#25 ...
    ... on, the ethical maturity of Horatio and Hamlet.]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1885<ta ...
199) Commentary Note for line 3610_13_:
3610+13 {Cour. Your Lordship speakes most infallibly of him.}
3610+14 {Ham. The concernancy sir, why doe we wrap the gentleman in}
3610+15 {our more rawer breath?} 3610+15
    ... s direction, <i>To Horatio</i>. But <i> Hamlet</i> seems to direct the whole of  ...
200) Commentary Note for line 3610_16_:
3610+16 {Cour. Sir.}
3610+17 {Hora. Ist not possible to vnderstand in another tongue, you will}
3610+18 {doo't sir really.}
    ...  think Horatio's speech is addressed to Hamlet.  <i> Another tongue</i> does not ...
    ... ords Horatio, I think, means to  praise Hamlet for imitating this kind of babble ...
    ... s speech certainly  belongs to Osrick.  Hamlet puts a question in which, by the  ...
    ... ntly addressed to Osric, who, foiled by hamlet in affectyed phraseology, is reco ...
    ... C;<small>Seeing the facility with which Hamlet caught and knack and gibberish of ...
    ... torted in a caricatured extravagance by Hamlet, until Horatio impatiently asks i ...
    ... t with Osrick's euphuism, and what with Hamlet's catching of Osrick's style, the ...
    ... ree with the minority who address it to Hamlet; for while it is true that Horati ...
    ... rue that Horatio always otherwise calls Hamlet <i>my lord</i>, not <i>sir</i>, i ...
    ... o to comment, when Osric fails to grasp Hamlet's meaning, &#8216;Can the man not ...

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