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Line 53 - 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.
53 Bar. In the same figure like the King thats dead.1.1.41
1891 dtn1
dtn1
53 In the same figure] Deighton (ed. 1891): “in the same shape and dress.”
1974 evns1
evns1
53 like] Kermode (ed. 1974): “in the likeness of.”
1980 pen2
pen2
53 like] Spencer (ed. 1980) believes that the frequent iteration of likeness makes the audience believe that the ghost “is really King Hamlet’s spirit, not a demon.”
1982 ard2
ard2
53 like the King] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “Note the refraining fom accepting that it is in fact the King. Cf. below [55, 59-62, 98, 124+3, 390, 444]. Doubt as to the Ghost’s identity is present from the first.”
Ed. note: Like seems as likely to mean not like as the same as. See Goldberg.
1987 Mercer
Mercer
53 like the King] Mercer (1987, p. 124), continuing his analysis of the differences between the usual revenge tragedy and Hamlet: “In place of the revenge ghost, the stylised theatrical horror of Marston, what we have here is, as it were, a real ghost.”
1988 SQ
Goldberg contra Jenkins
53 In the same figure] Goldberg (1988, 313): “ . . . [F]rom the start the Ghost exists within a scriptive order, and not merely that of the Senecan tragedy in which his lines are written. For when Horatio offers to vouch for the Ghost, he tells Hamlet, ’I knew your father. These hands are not more like’ (402). The identity of the Ghost is confirmed by the identity of the hand. This is not surprising; the Ghost exists only within similitude, appearing ’in the same figure like the king that’s dead,’ [56] ’Most like,’ [55] ’Mark it, Horatio.’ And Horatio marks it by likening the likeness to the hand that marks.” Goldberg also discusses scriptive moments in TLN 780, 1872, 3061, and see also "Play as a Whole."
2001 Greenblatt
Greenblatt
53 like] Greenblatt (2001, pp. 210, 212) <p. 210> points out that the iteration of like (53, 55, 56, 74) “hammers away at the unnerving resemblance of the thing they are all witnessing to the king whose body they have seen interred.” </p. 210> <p. 212> But also the ghost is not like the buried or inurned king as he looks now, after more than a month of decay. </p. 212>
Greenblatt
53 like] Greenblatt (2001, p.216): “What buckles under the pressure of the apparition is the notion of likeness (and hence of difference) that underwrites Hamlet’s recollection of his father, or, rather, the ratio of likeness and difference threatens to collapse: ‘I knew your father,’ Horatio tells Hamlet, ‘These hands are not more like” [402-3].
2006 ard3q2
ard3q2: standard + in magenta underlined
53 same figure] Thompson & Taylor (ed. 2006): “identical shape, appearance. Same could refer to the likeness to the King or to the previous appearances of the Ghost.”
53 55 56 402 403