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Line 3167 - 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.
3167 Fell in the weeping Brooke, her clothes spred wide,4.7.75
1773 gent
gent
3167 weeping Brooke] Gentleman (apud Bell, ed. 1773): “This description of Ophelia’s end, is exceedingly pretty; but we perceive no absolute occasion for destroying the young lady.”
1884 Gould
Gould
3167 weeping Brooke] Gould (1884, p. 40): <p. 40> “I do not know what that is. Perhaps it is ‘sleeping,’ as Ophelia does not seem to have been carried along. The proverb was ‘Il n’est pire eau que l’eau qui dort’. [“It is not the worst water which glides, flows”] </p. 40>
1929 trav
trav:
3167 Fell] Travers (ed. 1929): “When Sh. was 15, one Katharine Hamlet had been found drowned in the Avon, within the jurisdiction of the Stratford coroner ((p. 206 n.11 [3193])); and the verdict, in English law Latin, had been: ‘per infortunium lapsit et cecidit,’ by mischance she slipt and fell.”
1980 pen2
pen2
3167 clothes] Spencer (ed. 1980): “Ophelia is imagined as wearing the elaborate farthingale of an Elizabethan court lady.”
1993 dent
dent ≈ standard
3167 weeping Brooke] Andrews (ed. 1993): “The Queen poetically absolves the water from blame.”
3167