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Line 2745 - 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.
2745 Quee. I will not speake with her.4.5.1
1805 Seymour
Seymour
2745 Seymour (1805, p. 195): “To this, I suppose, Horatio added: ‘—Beseech you, madam.’”
1882 elze2
elze2: xrefs.
2745 I . . . speake] Elze (ed. 1882): “Horatio is to be added at the end of this line. See notes on § 59 (Reynaldo) and on § 62 (With what, i’th’ name of God?).”
1939 kit2
kit2
2745-65 Kittredge (ed. 1939): “The text follows the Second Quarto except in [4.5.15-16 (2761)] (‘Let her come in’), which the Quarto gives to Horatio. The Folio gives it to the Queen, to whom it also assigns (erroneously) ‘’Twere good . . . minds.’ The Gentleman is expunged in the Folio, which gives his rôle to Horatio.”
1979 SQ
Beckerman
2745 Beckerman (1979, p. 141): “Shakespeare is a master in concretizing backboards for the actor. This can readily be scene in his handling of scene openings. . . in Hamlet (4.5 [TLN 2745, IV.v.3]) Gertrude enters, speaking the line ’I will not speak with her,’ we immediately feel both the Gentleman’s offstage request and Gertrude’s refusal to see Ophelia -- that is, both the action and the reaction. In the course of his career, Shakespeare comes to rely less and less on the flat statements and more and more upon the energy caught in mid-sentence to galvanize a scene into action.”
1980 pen2
pen2
2745 Spencer (ed. 1980): “The Queen is reluctant to see her son’s beloved, the daughter of the man he has murdered.”
2006 ard3q2
ard3q2
2745 her] Thompson & Taylor (ed. 2006): “Ophelia is not named before her appearance in Q2 or F, though she is in Q1, where the Queen explicitly attributes her madness to her father’s death.”
2745