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Line 3462 - 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.
3462 {Hora.} <Gen.> Good my Lord be quiet.5.1.265
1875 Marshall
Marshall
3453-68 Marshall (1875, p. 99): <p. 99> “It is impossible for me to describe the effect which that cry of agony, ‘I loved Ophelia,’ has upon me. I never heard it yet spoken on the stage with one-thousandth part of the force that rightly belongs to it. Is it not the key to much of the mystery which Hamlt has been to all around him, and, in some degree, even to himself? It is the cry of a love which has been cruelly beaten down, which has been kept, as it were, chained and gagged in the farthest corner of his sorrow-darkened heart; it has never ceased to struggle against its fetters; and now at last, in the anguish of death, its bonds are burst and its voice can be stifled no longer. Whatever the consequences, in the presence even of his uncle, before whom he would have shrunk from showing any glimpse of his real feelings, Hamlet is obliged to lay bare his heart’s wounds. Precisely in proportion to the sincerity and depth of his love for Ophelia has been the difficulty which he experienced in fulfilling a task involving the abandonment of that love. Much of his bitterness to her and others is now explained; for he was trying to kill an affection which would not die.” </p. 99>
3462