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Line 2452 - 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.
2452 You cannot call it loue, for at your age3.4.68
1888 Savage
mPudsey
2452-4 for . . . iudgement] Pudsey (apud Savage, 1888, p. 75): “At yor age the heydaye in ye blood ys tame, & humble, waites vpo ye iudgmt.”
Savage’s transcription is said to be from a notebook attributed to Edward Pudsey, which was supposedly compiled by 1616 (the dates on the last two page are 1615 and 1616, respectively).
1891 dtn
dtn
2452 You . . . loue] Deighton (ed. 1891): “you cannot say that you were led astray by ardent love.”
1903 p&c
p&c: Hystorie of Hamblet S&A
2452 You . . . loue] Porter & clarke (ed. 1903): “‘It is licentiousnes only that hath made you deface out of your minde the memory of the valor & virtues of the good king . . . although he so well favoured and love you’ (‘Hystorie’).”
1939 kit2
kit2
2452 at your age] Kittredge (ed. 1939): “To Hamlet, a very young man, his mother seems too old to feel passionate love. We should not be misled into exaggerating the Queen’s age. She is in what we should call the prime of life.”
1979 SQ
Charney
2452-54 Charney (1979, p. 399): “The lustful woman as character type, who so much appealed to Beaumont and Fletcher as a way of countering too much courtly elegance, is entirely absent in Shakespeare. Despite a long theatrical tradition of representing Gertrude in Hamlet as menopausal sexpot -- ’at your age/The heyday in the blood is tame, it’s humble,/And waits upon the judgment’ (3.4.69-71 [TLN 2452-54, III.iv.68-70]) -- we must remember that this is only the way Hamlet sees her in his inflamed imagination.”
1979 ShQ
2452 Charney (1979, p. 399): “Despite a long theatrical tradition of representing Gertrude in Hamlet as menopausal sexpot--"at your age/The heyday in the blood is tame, it’s humble,/And waits upon the judgment" (3.4.69-71)--we must remember that this is only the way Hamlet sees her in his inflamed imagination.”
2006 ard3q2
ard3q2: 2040-4 xref
2452 at your age] Thompson & Taylor (ed. 2006): “Hamlet’s assumption, in all three texts, that his mother is too old to experience sexual desire has been regularly endorsed by (male) editors, who also feel that she must be too old to excite it. Within the play, she is the same age as ’Gonzago’s wife’, whose remarriage is viewed with equanimity by her failing husband at 3.2.167-71 [2040-44].”
2452