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31 to 40 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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31) Commentary Note for line 345:
345 Hora. Haile to your Lordship.

    ... . . . <b>you</b>] <sc>Stubbs</sc> (1736, p. 17) &#x201C;The Greeting between <i>Hamlet, Horatio, </i>and <i>Marcellus</i>, is very easy, and expresses the benig ...

    ... 85): &#x201C;They do not seem to have been intimate before, though we know from Hamlet's speech [1904] that he had had the greatest respect for Horatio. The sma ...

    ... that he had had the greatest respect for Horatio. The small degree of doubt in Hamlet's recognition of his friend is due to the darkness, and the unexpectednes ...
32) Commentary Note for line 346:
346-7 Ham. I am glad to see you well; | Horatio, or I do forget my selfe.

    ... 7): &#x201C;In the greatest part of the next scene, where Horatio informs him [Hamlet played by Kemble] of the appearance of his father's spirit, his action an ...

    ... d of this sentence. It spoils the line, and is not mere surplusage, for how was Hamlet thus early to know whether Horatio were &#8216;well,' or not?&#x201D;</pa ...

    ... ging> <para>346<tab> </tab> <sc>Spencer</sc> (ed. 1980): &#x201C;At first, Hamlet merely gives a polite reply; then he recognizes Horatio.&#x201D;</para></ ...
33) Commentary Note for line 347:
346-7 Ham. I am glad to see you well; | Horatio, or I do forget my selfe.

    ... nging><para> 347<tab> </tab>my selfe] <sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939): "Emphatic. Hamlet will not forget Horatio so long as he remains conscious of his own identi ...
34) Commentary Note for line 350:
350-1 Ham. Sir my good friend, | Ile change that name with you,

    ... eymour</sc> (1805, 2:147): "Dr. Johnson's explanation may be right; but perhaps Hamlet means to say, that between Horatio and himself the name of friend shall b ...

    ... thout attribution </hanging><para>350-1<tab> </tab><sc>Delius </sc>(ed. 1854): "Hamlet will sich als Horatio's armen Diener, ihn aber als seinen guten Freund an ...

    ... ls Horatio's armen Diener, ihn aber als seinen guten Freund angesehen wissen." [Hamlet wants to be known as Horatio's poor servant, Horatio as his good friend.] ...

    ... a> <para><b>Ed. note:</b> Horatio says &#8216;my lord&#x201D; in 357, and calls Hamlet &#x201C;lord&#x201D; throughout the play. In 3.2 he calls him &#8216;swee ...
35) Commentary Note for line 352:
352 And what make you from Wittenberg Horatio?

    ... <sc> Thompson &amp; Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;are you doing away from. Hamlet turns aside to greet Marcellus before receiving Horatio's response at [35 ...
36) Commentary Note for line 353:
353 Marcellus.

    ... Horatio is accompanied by Marcellus and Bernardo, of whom Bernardo is known to Hamlet but slightly; he answers the greeting of Marcellus less warmly than that ...
37) Commentary Note for line 355:
355 Ham. I am very glad to see you, (good euen sir)

    ... nt instance of our Author's licence in this respect. &amp;c. The scene opens in Hamlet about <i>twelve o'clock at night</i>. Horatio, having seen the Ghost, pro ...

    ... Horatio's guarded mode of expression, and which results from his observing how Hamlet has just played on the word <i>good: </i>he avoids saying &#8216;<i>my go ...

    ... ns no further notice.</para> <para>&#x201C;Mr. Irving's intuitive perception of Hamlet, in all his moods, presents, I doubt not, his different consideration of ...

    ... , but to Bernardo, who, it must be borne in mind, is also present on the scene. Hamlet is conversing with Horatio, and interrupts himself to severally greet the ...
38) Commentary Note for line 357:
357 Hora. A truant disposition good my Lord.

    ... ike to run away from school. Horatio, in his mildly humorous way, replies as if Hamlet had said <i>makes,</i> and gives himself a character quite at variance wi ...
39) Commentary Note for line 364:
364 Hora. My Lord, I came to see your fathers funerall.

    ... cam4</sc></hanging> <para>364<tab> </tab><sc>Edwards</sc> (ed. 1985): "How have Hamlet and Horatio contrived to avoid meeting each other in a small court during ...
40) Commentary Note for line 375:
375 Hora. I saw him once, {a} <he> was a goodly King.

    ... ): Simpson (<i>MLR </i>13 [1918]: 321) would punctuate with dashes showing that Hamlet interrupts Horatio.</para> </cn> <cn><sigla>1939<tab> </tab><sc>kit2</sc ...

    ... ty vacation. His words in [76-9] need not imply that Horatio was with the elder Hamlet in the Norwegian and Polish combats." </para> <para> <b>Ed. note:</b> Kit ...

    ... nt with 1.1.59-63 (which implies that Horatio was thoroughly familiar with King Hamlet's appearance) and with lines below.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>198 ...

    ... cy by supposing that Horatio is about to refer to some particular occasion when Hamlet interrupts. But cf.617 CN&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1988<tab></t ...

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