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Line 327 - 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.
327 Must I remember, why she {should} <would> hang on him1.2.143
1929 trav
trav: Brock
327 Must] Travers (ed. 1929): “The remembrance forces itself upon Hamlet, fight against it as he may (cp. [330]). In technical phrase, always subconsciously present, it invades consciousness more and more, whatever efforts he may make to check and drive it back. Cp. Clutton Brock’s very attentively suggestive chapter entitled ‘Why Hamlet delayed.’ (Sh.’s Hamlet; 1922).”

trav
327 would hang] Travers (ed. 1929): “was fond of hanging and used to do so.”
1930 Granville-Barker
Granville-Barker
327-9 why she . . . fed on] Granville-Barker (1930, rpt. 1946, 1: 228): “It was the obvious way of deceiving” her husband about her adultery. “And husbands, whose love is of too complacent and Hyperion-like a ’dignity’ [735], are temptingly easy to deceive.” Ed. note: Not everyone agrees about the adultery. See Bertram Joseph, for example.
1934 Wilson
Wilson MSH
327 should] Wilson (1934, p. 240) ascribes the Q2 error to “a misprint, perhaps induced by the ‘sh’ in the previous word; there seems no authority for ‘should’ in the sense of ‘was wont’ in Shakespeare.”
1950 Tilley
Tilley
327-9 why . . . on] Tilley (1950, A 286): “Appetite comes with eating c1594 Bacon, no. 1597: En mangeant l’appetit vient.”
1999 Mallin
Mallin
327-30 Mallin (1999, p. 136): “His weird mourning for his father, [figures] in the play as jealousy; his grief is inseparable from and exacerbated by the memory of his mother’s sexual desire . . . .”
See also TLN 333
2006 ard3q2
ard3q2
327 should] Thompson & Taylor (ed. 2006): “Q2’s reading implies admonition, where F’s implies habitual action.”
2008 SEL
Levin
327-9 hang on him . . . fed on] Levin (2008, p. 306) glosses Gertrude’s appetite for her first husband as sexual. Referring to Ant. 2.2.235-7 (“Other women cloy The appetites they feed, but she makes hungry Where she most satisfies”), he notes that “Enobarbus is saying that the appetites of Cleopatra’s lovers are insatiable, whereas Hamlet says this about Gertrude’s appetite.”
Ed. note: In point of fact, however, Hamlet does not say or imply that her desire for her husband was insatiable, only that it grew.
327 328 329 330 333