Line 3269-70 - Commentary Note (CN)
Commentary notes (CN):
1. SMALL CAPS Indicate editions. Notes for each commentator are divided into three parts:
In the 1st two lines of a record, when the name of the source text (the siglum) is printed in SMALL CAPS, the comment comes from an EDITION; when it is in normal font, it is derived from a book, article, ms. record or other source. We occasionally use small caps for ms. sources and for works related to editions. See bibliographies for complete information (in process).
2. How comments are related to predecessors' comments. In the second line of a record, a label "without attribution" indicates that a prior writer made the same or a similar point; such similarities do not usually indicate plagiarism because many writers do not, as a practice, indicate the sources of their glosses. We provide the designation ("standard") to indicate a gloss in common use. We use ≈ for "equivalent to" and = for "exactly alike."
3. Original comment. When the second line is blank after the writer's siglum, we are signaling that we have not seen that writer's gloss prior to that date. We welcome correction on this point.
4. Words from the play under discussion (lemmata). In the third line or lines of a record, the lemmata after the TLN (Through Line Number] are from Q2. When the difference between Q2 and the authors' lemma(ta) is significant, we include the writer's lemma(ta). When the gloss is for a whole line or lines, only the line number(s) appear. Through Line Numbers are numbers straight through a play and include stage directions. Most modern editions still use the system of starting line numbers afresh for every scene and do not assign line numbers to stage directions.
5. Bibliographic information. In the third line of the record, where we record the gloss, we provide concise bibliographic information, expanded in the bibliographies, several of which are in process.
6. References to other lines or other works. For a writer's reference to a passage elsewhere in Ham. we provide, in brackets, Through Line Numbers (TLN) from the Norton F1 (used by permission); we call these xref, i.e., cross references. We call references to Shakespearean plays other than Ham. “parallels” (//) and indicate Riverside act, scene and line number as well as TLN. We call references to non-Shakespearean works “analogues.”
7. Further information: See the Introduction for explanations of other abbreviations.
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Notes for lines 2951-end ed. Hardin A. Aasand
3269-70 first {murder, this} <murther: It> | might be the pate of a pollitician, which this asse {now} | |
---|
1747 warb
warb:
3270-1 pate . . . God] Warburton (ed. 1747) : “This character is finely touched. Our great historian has well explained it in an example, where speaking of the death of Cardinal Mazarine, at the time of the Restoration, he says, The Cardinal was probably struck with the wonder, if not the agony of that undream’d-of prosperity of our King’s affairs; as if he had taken it ill, and laid it to heart that God Almighty would bring such a work to pass in Europe without his concurrence, and even against all his machinations. Hist. of the Rebellion, Book 16.”
1765 john1
john1 = warb
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1773 v1773
v1773 = john1
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1778 v1778
v1778 = v1773
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1785 v1785
v1785 = v1778
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1787 ann
ann = v1785
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1793 v1793
v1793 = mal
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1803 v1803
v1803 = v1793
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1813 v1813
v1813 = v1793
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1819 cald1
cald1 = john1 (reduced as below) + magenta underlined
3270-1 pate . . . God] Caldecott (ed. 1819) : “Has official superiority over. ‘O’er-reaches,’ the reading of the quarto, gives an idea more closely and immediately corresponding with the whole of this sentence, and the beginning of the next but one [3273]. Upon those readings Dr. Johnson has well observed, ‘I believe both the words were Shakespeare’s. An authour in revising his work, when his original ideas have faded from his mind, and new observations have produced new sentiments, easily introduces images which have been more newly impressed upon him, without observing their want of congruity to the general texture of his original design.’”
1821 v1821
v1821 = v1813
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1832 cald2
cald2 = cald1
3270-1 pate . . . God]
1848 Strachey
Strachey
3269-71 Strachey (1848, p. 89): <p. 89> “What depth, as well as accuracy and force, there is in his description of the Politician, the Courtier, and the Lawyer! That of the Politician in particular has a profoundness which the events of the last few months enable us to appreciate the better:—’ It might be the pate of a politician, which this ass o’er-offices; one that could circumvent God, might it not?’ God’s government of the world had become a fiction to us, we saw it everywhere superseded by the state systems and state craft of kings, ministers, and diplomatists, who were far too prudent in their own eyes to regard the designs of God’s providence, and far too flrm in their own strength to care for the indications of His will. They seemed to us—if we confessed the truth to have been not only willing, but able to ‘circumvent God,’ and to appropriate to their own selfish or philosophic uses, the men and nations whom God had formed for His glory:—but the wisdom of the wise has been turned into folly ; they are ’o’er- officed by asses;’ and the only prospect of a restoration from the anarchy is derived from the faith, that the old fiction of the government of the world by a Personal, though invisible, Lord, will again assert itself to be a fact.” </p. 89>
1855 Wade
Wade
3267-3308 Wade (1855, p. 20) : <p. 20> “After this accidentally sudden return of Hamlet to Denmark, we first see him, with Horatio, on his way to the palace, we may presume, in a church-yard beside the grave which a Clown is digging for the reception of the mortal remains of ‘the fair Ophelia,’ whom Hamlet’s neglect and ill-usage, and his mountebank murder of her father, had driven into madness and incident death. Here, his ever-present sense of his own and other men’s mortality is fearfully evidenced; and bitter is his gibing over the relics of man’s visible nature, as the Grave-digger throws up skeleton human skulls and bones out of the church-yard earth:— [cites 3267-3308].” </p. 20>
1859 stau
stau:
3270 politician] Staunton (ed. 1859) : “A plotter , a schemer for his own advantage; so Hotspur calls Henry the Fourth,—’this vile politician;’ (1H4 1.3.249[569]) and Sir Andrew Ague-cheek, who had scant brains for circumvention, declares he ‘had as lief be a Brownist as a politician .’” (TN 3.2.32 [1411])
1870 Abbott
Abbott
3269 that] Abbott (§262): “That is sometimes, but seldom, separated from the antecedent, like who. (See 263) [cites 3269]
“It is perhaps not uncommon after the possessive case of nouns and pronouns. (See §218). The antecedent pronoun is probably to be repeated immediately before the relative: ‘Cain’s jawbone, (him) that did.’”
1872 cln1
cln1 : standard (stau?)
3270 pollitician] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): “conspirator, schemer, plotter. The word is always used in a bad sense by Shakespeare, as [1H4 1.3.249[569]]: ‘This vile politician, Bolingbroke.’”
1874 Corson
Corson
3269-70 this . . . ore-reaches] Corson (1874, p. 32): <p. 32>“The old lout of a grave-digger, in the discharge of his office, lords it over the once scheming pate of the state-official who felt himself able, in the exercise of his state-craft, to circumvent God himself.” </p. 32>
1877 v1877
v1877 : ≈Abbott only “The antecedent . . . ‘(him) that did.’”)
3269 that]
v1877 : ≈ stau ; cln 1872
3270 pollitician]
Clark & Wright (
apud Furness, ed. 1877): “The word is always used in a bad sense by Sh.”
1877 Gervinus
Gervinus
3270-1 Gervinus (1877, p. 566): <p. 566>“The inclination to simple natural habits which is here manifested would also acount for his aversion to all mean subterfuge and falsehood. In the churchyard he expresses his sincere abhorrence of the vain folly of women, of politicians who ‘would circumvent God,’ of lawyers and courtiers; towards this kind of ‘water-flies,’ such as Polonius and Osric, the ‘diminutives of nature,’ as they are called in [Tro. 5.1.34 (2900-01)], he manifests his intense antipathy or sarcastic contempt.” </p. 566>
1881 hud3
hud3 : stau?
3270 pollitician] Hudson (ed. 1881): “Shakespeare uses politician for a plotter or schemer; one who is ever trying to out-craft and overreach his neighbour, and even Providence, and to intrigue his way to popularity or profit. The equivoque in ‘o’erreaches is obvious enough.”
1882 elze2
elze2
3269-70 this might be the pate of a pollitician] Elze(ed. 1882): “Hamlet’s reflexions on the skull seem to ahve been a welcome theme for imitation; see Dr Ingleby’s Centurie of Prayse (2d Ed.) p. 187 seq.; p. 451 seq. Compare also Dekker’s Honest Whore, Part IV, I (Middleton, ed. Dyce, III, 76).”
1885 mull
mull ≈ standard
3270 pollitician]
1890 irv2
irv2 : standard
3270 pollitician] Symons (in Irving & Marshall, ed. 1890): “schemer.”
3270 pollitician] Symons (in Irving & Marshall, ed. 1890): “This word is used by Shakespeare in only four other places: [TN. 2.3.80 (774); 3.2.34 (1411); 1H4 1.3.241 (569); and Lr. 4.6.176 (2614)]; always in a bad sense, meaning a plotter, conspirator.”
1899 ard1
ard1
3269 Caines iawbone] Dowden (ed. 1899): “Prof. Skeat (Notes and Queries, Aug. 21, 1880) showed that Cain, according to the legend, slew Abel with an ass’s jawbone. This is mentioned in Cursor Mundi, I, p. 71, lines 1071-74 (Early Eng. Text. Soc.).”
ard1≈cln1 (minus H4 //)
3270 pollitician] Dowden (ed. 1899):
1900 ev1
ev1≈standard +
3270 pollitician] Herford (ed. 1900): "The word in Shakespeare suggests Machiavelism."
1931 crg1
crg1 ≈ standard (with Ard1’s help?) : Onions’ Glossary
3270 pollitician]
1947 cln2
cln2 ≈ standard
3270 pollitician]
1951 alex
alex ≈ standard
3270 pollitician] Alexander (ed. 1951, Glossary)
1951 crg2
crg2=crg1
3270 pollitician]
1954 sis
sis ≈ standard
3270 pollitician] Sisson (ed. 1954, Glossary):
1957 pel1
pel1 : standard
3270 pollitician]
1970 pel2
pel2=pel1
3270 pollitician]
1974 evns1
evns1 ≈ standard
3270 pollitician]
1980 pen2
pen2 ≈ standard
3270 pollitician]
pen2
3270 this asse] Spencer (ed. 1980): “(the gravedigger).”
1982 ard2
ard2 ≈ standard
3270 pollitician]
1984 chal
chal : standard
3270 pollitician]
chal:
3269 pate] Wilkes (ed. 1984): "skull."
1987 oxf4
oxf4 ≈ standard
3270 pollitician]
1993 dent
dent ≈ standard
3270 pollitician]
3269 3270