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Notes for lines 0-1017 ed. Bernice W. Kliman
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
44 Hora. Well, sit we downe,1.1.33
44 45
- 1761 Rochester?
Rochester?
44-5 Rochester? (-1761, p. 191) shows that he is using a Players’ Quarto, which has, “Well, let’s down, And let us hear Barnardo speak of this”; Rochester, without annotation, emends to eliminate the doubling of the word let: “Well, let’s down, And hear Barnardo speak of this.”
Ed. note: See Browne; Rochester in alphabib.
1829 Neele
Neele
44 et passim Neele (1829, pp. 305-7) after writing in general about the ecellence of Sh.’s supernatural beings, continues: <p. 305>“The introduction to the entrance of the Ghost in ‘Hamlet,’ shows infinite taste and judgment. Just as our feelings are powerfully excited by the narration of it’s appearance on the foregoing evening, the speaker is interrupted by ‘majesty of buried Denmark’ [61] once more standing before him:—‘The bell then beating One,— But soft, break off! —look where it comes again!” [50-1] then the solemn adjuration to it to speak; the awful silence which it maintains; the impotent attempts to strike it; and the exclamation of Horatio, when it glides away,—‘We do it wrong, being so majestical, To offer it the shew of violence,’ [142-3] present to us that shadowy and indistinct, but at the same time, appalling and fearfully interesting picture, which constitutes one of the highest efforts of the sublime. The interview with Hamlet is a masterpiece. The language of this awful visitant </p. 305 ><p. 306> is admirably characteristic. It is not of this world. It savours of the last long resting-place of mortality: ‘of worms, and graves, and epitaphs.’ It evinces little of human feeling and frailty. Vengeance is the only possible passion which has survived the wreck of the body; and it is this passion which has burst the cerements of the grave, and sent it’s occupant to revisit the ‘glimpses of the moon.’ It’s discourse is of murder, incest, suffering, and revenge; and gives us awful glimpses of that prison-house, the details of which are not permitted to ‘ears of flesh and blood.’ Whether present or absent, we are continually reminded of this perturbed Spirit. When on the stage, “it harrows us with fear and wonder;’ and when absent, we see it in it’s influence on the persons of the Drama, especially Hamlet. The sensations of horror and revenge which at first possess the mind of this Prince; then his tardiness and irresolution, which are chided by the re-appearance of the Spectre; and his fears, notwithstanding all the evidence to the contrary, that it may be an evil Spirit, which,— ‘Out of his weakness and his melancholy Abuses him to damn him,’ form one of the most affecting and interesting </p.306 ><p. 307> pictures in the whole range of Shakspeare’s dramas.” </p. 307>
1870 Abbott
Abbott
44-5 Abbott (§ 361): “Subjunctive, simple form. . . . The indicative is sometimes found where the subjunctive might be expected . . . . Perhaps we may thus explain the so-called imperative in the first person plural [quotes 44-5], i.e. ‘suppose we sit down?’ ‘what if we sit down?’ Compare [167].”
1877 v1877
v1877 ≈ Abbott § 361
44-5
1881 hud3
hud3 = Abbott without attribution
44
1891 dtn1
dtn1 = Abbott § 361
44
1934 cam3
cam3
44 Wilson (ed. 1934): “Hor. is bored.”
1947 cln2
cln2 = dtn without attribution
44
1953 Alexander
Alexander
44 sit we downe] Alexander (lecture 1953, published 1955, p. 27): clearly the men sit down so that they can leap to their feet when the ghost appears.