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Line 148 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 0-1017 ed. Bernice W. Kliman
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
148 Vpon a fearefull summons; I haue heard,1.1.149
148 153 743 774 775 776
1752 Anon.
Anon.: Virgil
148-54 Anon. (1752, pp. 13-14): “To hold a firm Belief in Apparitions, Witches, Demons, &c. was general in the Time of our Poet. In that superstitious Age it was universally imagined, that Spirits who had Leave to wander Abroad during the Night, were obliged to return to their Graves at the first Approach of Day. [quotes 743, 774-6]. </p. 13> <p. 14> Virgil causes the Shade of Anchises to depart with the same Precipitation.—“Vale, torquet medios nox humida cursus, Et me saevus equis oriens afflavit anhelis.” </p. 14>
1780 mals1
mals1
148-50 I haue . . . throat] Malone (1780, 2:713): “Imitated by Mr. Gray in his Elegy: ‘The cock’s shrill clarion, or the echoing horn, No more shall rouse them from their lowly bed.’ Malone.
1844 verp
verp
148-53 See n. 153
1870 Abbott
Abbott: see also nn. 72, 398, 448, 621+14
148 fearefull] Abbott (§ 3): “Adjectives, espeically those ending in ful, les, cle, and ive, have both an active and a passive meaning; just as we still say, ‘a fearful (pass.) coward,’ and ‘a fearful (act.) danger.”
1870 rug1
rug1
148 summons] Moberly (ed. 1870) explains the s ending for this singular noun by etymology: French “sémonce,” and Latin “submoneas,” from which the legal sense of the word summons derives.
1878 rlf1
rlf1: Farmer; Milton Hymn + // MND 3,2,381 (0000).
148-54 I haue heard . . . confine]
1880 meik
meik rlf1 without attribution (Milton); deriv. ≈ rug without attribution
148 fearefull summons] Meikeljohn (ed. 1880): “Summons is from Fr. semonce; from Lat. submoneas—the first word of the law Lat. in which the paper is written.”
1891 dtn
dtn: Abbott + gloss
148 Vpon . . . summons] Deighton (ed. 1912): “Immediately upon hearing a summons that it dreads; for adjectives bearing both an active and a passive meaning, see Abb. § 3.”
check which dtn issues this should be and the one below too.
1903 rlf3
rlf3 = rlf1 minus Farmer
148-54 I haue heard . . . confine]
1909 subb
subb
148 fearefull] Subbarau (ed. 1909): “causing fear.”
1993 dent
dent
148 summons] Andrews (ed. 1993): “Elizabethans would have been reminded of the guilty disciple, Peter, who thrice denied his Lord before the crowing of the cock. Cf. Matthew 26:33-35, 69-75.”
2006 ard3q2
ard3q2: // MND; Greenblatt
148-54 I . . . confine] Thompson & Taylor (ed. 2006): “Puck expresses a similar belief at MND 3.2.378-87, distinguishing between ghosts of those who have been buried in churchyards and ’damned spirits’ who have not received proper funerals (see Greenblatt’s discussion of this distinction in Purgatory, 162).”