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Line 2366 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 2023-2950 ed. Frank N. Clary
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
2366 At {game a} <gaming,> swearing, or about some act3.3.91
1747-53 mtby4
mtby4
2366 game a] Thirlby (1747-53): “fsql At game, cum D, Q At game a.”
Transribed by BWK, who notes: “mtby4 says that Q3 has it with the comma. He had collated the two words in mtby3 but w/o suggesting the Q3 reading.”
1857 fieb
fieb = mal (see VN for gaming, swearing)
1890 irv2
irv2: Browning, Marshall
2366-8 about some act . . . heauen] Symons (in Irving & Marshall, ed. 1890): “We may compare this with the more mirthful malevolence of the following stanza from Browning’s Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister: ‘There’s a great text in Galations, Once you trip on it, entails Twenty-nine distinct damnations, One sure, if another fails: If I trip him just a-dying Sure of heaven as sure can be, Spin him round and send him flying Off to hell, a Manichee?’ —Works, vol. iii. p, 94. F.A. Marshall, Study of Hamlet, p. 165, says that the expression in the text ‘recalls very forcibly some of those painfully realistic representations of the torments of the damned, which are to be found in various illustrated books of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.’”
1891 dtn
dtn
2366 At game a] Deighton (ed. 1891): “At gaming] engaged in gaming.”
dtn
2366 about] Deighton (ed. 1891): “occupied with.”
1980 pen2
pen2
2366 game] Spencer (ed. 1980): “gambling.”
pen2
2366-7 some act . . . saluation in’t] Spencer (ed. 1980): “This is what Hamlet ultimately achieves in [5.2.316-21 (3802-16)], stabbing the King when he is engaged in acts of murderous treachery.”
1982 ard2
ard2: White Devil analogue
2366 At game a-swearing] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “Cf. White Devil (v.i.70-2), where among the deaths Lodovico would have enjoyed inflicting on Brachiano is to have poisoned the handle of his racket, ‘That while he had been bandying at tennis, He might have sworn himself to hell, and struck His soul into the hazard’.”
1987 oxf4
oxf4: Chaucer analogue
2366 At game a swearing] Hibbard (ed. 1987): “The gambler’s addiction to swearing was notorious; see Chaucer, ‘The Pardoner’s Tale’ 651-5.”
2006 ard3q2
ard3q2: 2364 xref; Edwards
2366 At game a-swearing] Thompson & Taylor (ed. 2006): “’There can be little doubt about the correctness of Q2 which is supported by Q1 as against F’s paraphrase’ (Edwards). This time it is F that implies two distinct activities, gambling and swearing, rather than ’swearing as he gambles.’”
2366