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Line 271 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 0-1017 ed. Bernice W. Kliman
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
271 But you must knowe your father lost a father,1.2.89
1982 ard2
ard2: Seneca; xref
271-2 your father . . . lost his] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “Here and in [394-7] cf. Seneca on death: ’Hoc parti tuo accidit . . . hoc omnibus ante te, hoc omnibus post te’ (Epistles, 77). See above, [252 n].”
1987 oxf4
oxf4
271 must knowe] Hibbard (ed. 1987): "should realize."
2003 SQ
Hirschfeld: Stump
271-88 It showes . . . . This must be so] Hirschfeld (2003, pp. 435-6): <p. 435> “It is . . . perfectly appropriate that the audience first sees Hamlet confront his father’s death in the presence of his uncle, his father’s brother. For Claudius both </p. 435> <p. 436> represents as well as articulates the relay of events that concerns Hamlet--a death that thrusts the son back upon a ’first corse’: [quotes 271-6; 280-8]. Claudius’s insistence that death is ’common’ (not just ordinary but transferable as a bequest descending from a father), though part of his effort to minimize the occasion for Hamlet’s grief, ironically reinforces the devastation. In reiterating death’s genealogical tree--from father to father to father--Claudius’s rhetoric pushes Hamlet back to the scene of the Fall, to the first father who lies at the root of this ’common’ theme. But, with its reference to the ’first corse,’ the speech does so obliquely. For the ’first corse,’ as Donald Stump points out, belongs not to Adam but to Abel, the son and brother, not the father. Claudius’s speech thus conforms to a traumatic logic that invokes an originary moment in terms of a succeeding one; he explains the death of one father not only in terms of the deaths of a sequence of previous fathers--a first ’course’--but also in terms of the dead body of a son and brother--the first ’corpse.’ ” </p. 436>
1994 Kliman
Kliman
271 you must knowe] Kliman (1994): Editors who make this phrase parenthetical soften Q2’s command.
271