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Line 1136 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1136 <The Letter.>..
1982 ard2
1137-51 The Letter.] Jenkins (ed. 1982): "rather parodies than represents a typical Elizabethan love-address. From one who is ’the mould of form’, its lack of eloquence may seem disappointing. But as a love-letter seen through Polonius’s eyes it fits the occasion rather than the writer - or rather, it fits a writer whose mental state is baffling all around him. It is unquestionably an affirmation of Hamlets love ; but it has enough possible double meanings to be ultimately enigmatic. Cf. ll. 116-17nn., and see SQ, XXXI (1980), 90-3. It does not confirm, yet does not dispel, suspicions of love-madness. If the question arises - as for most commentators it does - of when Ophelia, who has repelled Hamlet’s letters (II. i. 109), could then have received this one, we are at liberty to infer that it preceded her father’s prohibition. Indeed everything Polonius says is consistent with this. The letter is offered (and accepted, l. 128) as evidence not of Hamlet’s present madness but of the love which, frustrated, led to it. The reasons for the production of a letter instead of a mere narrative of events are of course dramatic."
1136