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Line 787 - 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.
787 And thy commandement all alone shall liue,1.5.102
1993 Parker
Parker
787-90 thy . . . pernicious woman] Parker (1993, pp. 79-82, quotes by Griffiths 2005, p. 153): “There is an even more striking juxtaposition of ’woman’ and a frail or ’baser matter’ that might be interposed or come between in the commission delivered by Hamlet-father to Hamlet-son: [quotes 787-90]. Beyond the generalized oedipal paradigms of a mother who ’comes between’ a father and son as the object of rivalry (elicited more readily from Hamlet by the shift from brother to nephew [2112] as the murderer in the Mousetrap Scene), the reference here to mixture with a ’baser matter’ summons the specific historical resonance of Aristotelian notions of female ’frailty’ as a ’matter’ or material that comes between father and son in a different sense. In a generative context, this female ’matter’ is the ’woman’s part’ in man [Cym. 2.5.20] that undermines and adulterates the perfect copying or reproduction of parthenogenesis—a lapse in what might otherwise be the replication of Hamlet-father in Hamlet-son. In the influential tradition of woman as imperfect and secondary, a lapsus or falling off from the more perfect male, she is both ’baser matter’ [789] and adulterating mixture, a frail or ’weaker vessel’ whose coming between involves an aberrant and translative detour, a creature whose status is also figured by sexual parts that are secret, ’occult.’ or hidden from the eye. In this historically contemporary model of the female matrix, the matter of woman thus ’comes between’—as lapsus, error, detour, frailty—the generative reproduction of a paternal original in a son who might be a faithful copy or representative, perfect instrument of a father’s will.”
787