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71 to 80 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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71) Commentary Note for line 642:
642-3 Say why is this, wherefore, what should we doe? {Beckins.}

    ... f</hanging><para> 642<tab> </tab>doe] <sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939): "Emphatic. Hamlet (like Horatio in [129]) thinks that the Ghost has come back to impose som ...
72) Commentary Note for line 661:
661 And there {assume} <assumes> some other horrable forme

    ... rible</i>. Horatio fears that the apparition may take a fiend's shape and drive Hamlet to suicide. [See <i>Lr.</i> 4.6.67-72 (2511-17)]." </para></cn> <cn> <si ...
73) Commentary Note for line 662:
662 Which might depriue your soueraigntie of reason,

    ... on. And this happens to be the very case here pointed at. Horatio represents to Hamlet, that the place itself, to which the Ghost might draw him, was sufficient ...

    ... ve the true interpretation of a passage in [<i>Ham</i>. 662]? Horatio, advising Hamlet not to follow the Ghost, says &#8216;It may assume some other horrible wh ...

    ... <sc>Gifford</sc> (1816, ed. Jonson, 5:352): &#x201C;In Horatio's adjuration to Hamlet not to follow the ghost, he urges, among other dissuasives, [quotes 658- ...

    ... <sc>Trench</sc> (1913, p. 86) thinks that Horatio may have planted the seed for Hamlet's decision to put on an antic disposition, a tendency that Hamlet had alr ...
74) Commentary Note for line 675:
675 Hora. He waxes desperate with {imagion} <imagination>.

    ... i>2H4</i> 1.3.31-2, 'Imagination Proper to madmen'. Horatio, still fearing for Hamlet's 'sovereignty of reason' (662), sees him succumbing to the influence of ...

    ... become totally reckless because of what is in his mind. Horatio believes that Hamlet's dangerous behaviour arises from his <i>idea</i> of the Ghost, which has ...
75) Commentary Note for line 681:
681 Enter Ghost, and Hamlet.

    ... #8216;a more removed ground,' Horatio and Marcellus say a few words and reture: Hamlet and the Ghost then return to the scene, and it seems to have been left to ...

    ... ng that it's unbelievable that Horatio and Marcellus would take so long to find Hamlet, that Sh. is not specific about locality. <bwk>I am not sure about the la ...

    ... xt suggests its remoteness: the time it takes for Marcellus and Horatio to find Hamlet, the allusion to &#x201C;a more removed ground&#x201D; [648], and &#x201 ...

    ... ng. Then, as Horatio and Marcellus go out though the first door, the Ghost and Hamlet return through the other. The main purpose of these manoeuvres is, of co ...

    ... of Horatio and Marcellus, rather than to signal any change of location, though Hamlet's first words do suggest that there has been some shift."</para></cn> <c ...
76) Commentary Note for line 710:
710 Ghost. Reuenge his foule, and most vnnaturall murther.

    ... of evolution. Secondly, we have discovered that this tendency may be blocked. Hamlet and Horatio follow human nature and do right simply because it is right. ...
77) Commentary Note for line 723:
723 A Serpent stung me, so the whole eare of Denmarke

    ... tab> </tab>Serpent] <sc>Ayers</sc> (1993, p. 429): &#x201C;The idealization of Hamlet's father, suggested variously by both Hamlet and Horatio, points to a mor ...

    ... 429): &#x201C;The idealization of Hamlet's father, suggested variously by both Hamlet and Horatio, points to a more general idealization of the past; the Denma ...

    ... Horatio, points to a more general idealization of the past; the Denmark of Old Hamlet becomes by association a prelapsarian second Eden, one which has come to ...
78) Commentary Note for line 729:
729 Ghost. I that incestuous, that adulterate beast, {D3}

    ... death. But nothing else in the rest of the play supports this, except perhaps Hamlet's <i>whored my mother</i> (5.2.64) and, conceivably, Horatio's words <i>c ...
79) Commentary Note for line 762:
762 2352 Vnhuzled, disappointed, {vnanueld} <vnnaneld>,

    ... s but in the father's crimes.&#x201D; Though we have heard from Horatio how Old Hamlet won the lands of Old Fortinbras, the victory, says Abraham, was through d ...
80) Commentary Note for line 792:
792 My tables, <my Tables;> meet it is I set it downe

    ... the fact, that though he might impart to Horatio the Ghost's revelation [1928], Hamlet is loth to confide in Marcellus, and therefore bound to act a part lest h ...

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