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Line 837 - 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.
837 Ham. Neuer make knowne what you haue seene to night.1.5.144
1625 Bacon
Bacon (1625) apud Feis
837 Neuer make known] Bacon (qtd. in Feis, 1884, p. 73, n.1) in ’Of Simulation and Dissimulation’ says, “dissimulation followeth many times upon secrecy by a necessity: so that he that will be secret must be a dissembler in some degree . . . . ”
1870 rug1
rug1
837 Moberly (ed. 1870, p. ix): Hamlet “binds his friends to secrecy as to what they know, instead of calling on them to assist him . . . .”
1873 rug2
rug2 = rug1
837
1884 Feis
Feis
837 Feis (1884, rpt. 1970, p. 73): “All [of Hamlet’s] procedures [837, 850, 856] have the evident object of throwing his comrades into a mystic frame of mind, and to make them keep silence (’so help you mercy!’ [865]) as to what they have seen.” Feis deplores the mystic state of mind and believes Hamlet to be a mystic who will not be able to perform as he should.
1885 macd
macd
837 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “He could not endure the thought of the resulting gossip;—which besides would interfere with, possibly frustrate, the carrying out of his part.”
837