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Line 3004, etc. - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 2951-end ed. Hardin A. Aasand
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
3004 And doo’t the speedier that you may direct me 
3005 To him from whom you brought them. {Exeunt.} <Exit> 3005
rug1, rug2
1909 subb +
subb = mCLR2 ; Miles ; Snider (Miles and Snider are repeated verbatim from v1877 and mCLR2 is Coleridge’s L.R. found at 2986)
3004-05 Subbarau (ed. 1909): "It is his action with reference to Guil. and Ros. that Hamlet, in his account ((V.ii.)) ascribes ’wholly to instinct.’ Snider fails to note the effect of Ophelia’s death on Hamlet. It is this unexpected sad event, shattering all his hopes in life, which inclines Hamlet to resign himself in some measure to Fate. There is no doubt the capture by the pirate-ship was pre-arranged. The matter will be made clear in the Exposition."
1929 trav
trav
3005 Exeunt] Travers (ed. 1929): “Exeunt, after a scene to which justice has not alway.been done. Even its "sea-faring man," however briefly sketched and on merely typical lines, makes, for the moment, a breezy change. As to the news, why not accept them in the spirit that Sh. would expect from his audience: appreciation of their exciting nature, of the intricate opportuneness of the affair with the "thieves of mercy," of the hero’s valiancy and resourcefulness, of his epistolary style too, as sharp as any rapier (cp. sc.vii, 43-52 [3054-57])?
3004 3005