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Line 1641 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1641 Out of my weakenes, and my melancholy,2.2.601
1824 Farren
Farren
1641 Farren (1824, p. 376): “It cannot escape observation, that whenever Hamlet is alone, and relieved from the presence of those, whom it is his purpose to deceive, the true state of his mind developes itself in melancholy soliloquies. Even before the appearance of the Ghost, when harbouring no suspicion as to the cause of his father’s death, Hamlet debated on suicide. When reproaching himself for not executing hir purpose, he feels and confesses his own “weakness and melancholy,” and that the devil is very potent “with such spirits.”
1843- mLewes
mLewes: Chaucer
1641 Lewes (ms. notes in Knight, ed. 1843): “‘Out of his weakness + his melancholy.’ Chaucer.”
1885 macd
macd
1641 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “—caused from the first by his mother’s behaviour, not constitutional.”
1982 ard2
ard2
1641 Out of my . . . melancholy] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “’They say spirits appears To melancholy minds’ (Fletcher, The Night Walker, III. ii. 5-6). Cf. Taillepied, ch. 3, ’Ceux qui sont melancholiques . . . s’impriment en la fantaisie plusieurs choses merveilleuses et terribles’; The Terrors of the Night (Nashe, i. 354), ’From the fuming melancholy of our spleen mounteth that hot matter into the higher region of the brain, whereof many fearful visions are framed’. So the devil, in assuming a false shape, may be exploiting Hamlet’s own ’weakness’. As Nashe says, ’The Devil when with other any other sickness or malady the faculties of our reason are enfeebled and distempered, will be most busy to disturb and torment us’ (i. 348). See Babb, The Elizabethan Malady, pp. 108-9, 49-53; Prosser, p. 110. Accordingly it is not necessary to connect this passage with Belleforest; but see Intro., p.95
Melancholy of course was not merely a depression of spirits but a well-recognized disease supposedly arising from an abnormal preponderance of the one of the four bodily humours after which it is named. The word, however, like the complaint, was fashionable and had a wide range of meaning, from a transitory mood of dejection to a chronic condition indistinguishable from madness (see Burton, Anat. of Melancholy, I. i. 1 (iv)). In the latter stricter sense Burton takes it commonly to denote ’a kind of dotage without a fever, having for his ordinary companions fear and sadness, without any apparent occasion’ (I. i. 3 (i)). Burton’s book is only the most famous in the vast Renaissance literature on the subject. For Bright’s Treatise of Melancholy, 1971, ch. 4), the formulistic approach unduly restricts the characterization. It is perhaps as well to observe that though the word (in its full range of meanings) is a common one in Shakespeare, this is the only instance of its use by Hamlet to describe his own condition. It is used by the King at III. i. 167."
1999 Dessen & Thomson
1641 melancholy] Dessen & Thomson (1999) cite only fourteen SDs calling for melancholy and these “provide no indication of how the actor is to achieve the effect . . . . ”
1641