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11 to 20 of 246 Entries from All Files for "hamlet near horatio" in All Fields

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11) Commentary Note for line 103:
103 Did slay this Fortinbrasse, who by a seald compact

    ... Denmark discussed in the play's opening scenes. Horatio tells us that the elder hamlet and the elder Fortinbras fought in single combat to resolve their territo ...
12) Commentary Note for line 113:
113 Of vnimprooued mettle, hot and full,

    ... text. &#x201C;The commentators on Shakspeare do not understand this word. In <i>Hamlet,</i> Horatio says of young Fortinbras, that he was &#8216;Of <i>unimprove ...
13) Commentary Note for line 124+16:
124+16 {And prologue to the Omen comming on}

    ... hem according to their original idiom and latitude.</i></para> <para>&#x201C;In Hamlet, Act I. Horatio is speaking of the prodigies, which happened before Caesa ...
14) Commentary Note for lines 127-8:
127 Ile crosse it though it blast mee: stay illusion, {It spreads}
128 If thou hast any sound or vse of voyce, {his armes.}

    ... ): &lt;p. 411&gt; "The adjuration and interrogation of the ghost by Horatio and Hamlet, are conducted in conformity to the ceremonies of papal superstition; for ...
15) Commentary Note for line 138:
138 Hor. Doe if it will not stand.

    ... fear operated on Marcellus and Bernardo, in Horatio's account of the phantom in Hamlet: [and he quotes 393b-397a] </para> <para>&#x201C;In my opinion, Nature co ...
16) Commentary Note for line 147:
147 Hor. And then it started like a guilty thing,

    ... haps be urged, that when Horatio subsequently describes the apparition [412] to Hamlet, he says, 'it shrunk in haste away . . . .&#x201D; </para></cn> <tlnrange ...
17) Commentary Note for line 156:
156 Mar. It faded on the crowing of the Cock.

    ... ay perhaps be urged, that when Horatio subsequently describes the apparition to Hamlet, he says, 'it shrunk in haste away . . . ';&#x201D; See TLN 412. </para>< ...
18) Commentary Note for line 157:
157 Some {say} <sayes,> that euer gainst that season comes

    ... "they say" (160)] and Horatio's half-hearted response (164), are buttressed by Hamlet's dampening remark about Claudius's festivities [621+1 - 621+6]. Wilson ...
19) Commentary Note for line 164:
164 Hora. So haue I heard and doe in part belieue it,

    ... hief among the figures in the scene is Horatio, who, as a scholar and friend to Hamlet, has been brought by the soldiers to speak to the Ghost. . . . Horatio's ...

    ... skeptic to at least a partial believer. . . .What happens to Horatio prefigures Hamlet's transformation from skeptic to believer, not specifically about the Gho ...
20) Commentary Note for line 165:
165 But looke the morne in russet mantle clad

    ... sy, most often overcast and grey at dawning. See<i> </i>&#x201C;The Dawn in <i>Hamlet</i>: Rosy or Grey? Theobald and Horatio,&#x201D; <i>The Shakespeare Newsl ...

    ... ey' (25-7). These two lines were transferred to Horatio's closing speech, after Hamlet's death, in Peter Brook's 2000 production.&#x201D;</para></cn> </book> ...

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