HW HomePrevious CNView CNView TNMView TNINext CN

Line 1639 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1639 May be {a deale} <the Diuell>, and the {deale} <Diuel> hath power2.2.599
1597 King James VI
James VI
1639 a deale] James VI (1597, pp. 57-9): “For doubtleslie they are in effect but all one kinde of spirites, who for abusing the more of mankinde, takes on these sundrie shapes, and vses diuerse formes of out-ward actiones, as if some were of nature better then other. [. . . ] If they appeared in likenesse of anie defunct to some friends of his, they were called vmbra mortuorum: [. . . ] </p. 57> <p. 58> For out nature is such, as in companies, wee are not so soone mooued to anie such kinde of feare, as being solitare, which the Deuill knowing well inough, hee will not therefore assaile vs but when we are weake: And besides that, G O D will not permit him so to dishonour the societies and companies of Christians, as in publicke times and places to walke visiblie amongst them. On the other parte, when he troubles certain houses that are dwelt in, it is a sure token either of grosse ignorance, or of some grosse and slanderous sinnes amongst the inhabitantes thereof: which God by that extraordinarie rod punishes.” </p. 58> <p. 59> Epistemon says that such devils can use the bodies of the dead and these dead may be good or bad: the use won’t disturb their rest.
</p. 59>
1824 farren
Farren
1639 Farren (1824, p. 376): “Although he had before declared to Horatio that is was ‘an honest ghost,’ he now begins to waver, and timidly debates.”
1843- mlewes
mlewes
1638-9 The spirit . . . deale] Lewes (ms. notes in Knight, ed. 1843): “The audience knows that the ghost is not a Phantom.”
1843 col1
col1
1639 Collier (ed. 1843): “‘May be a deale,’ in the quarto, 1604, but that of 1611 alters it to ‘devil’. Possibly ‘devil’ was then sometimes pronounced as it is still in Scotland. The folio has it, ‘May be the devil.’”
1867 ktlyn
ktlyn
1639 Keightly (1867, p. 291): “For the first ‘the devil,’ 4to 1604 reads a deale; so the reading was probably ‘a devil,’ which is best.”
1877 clns
clns
1639-40 Neil (ed. 1877): Compare Love’s Labour’s Lost, IV, iii, 254; Comedy of Errors IV, iii, 55; Othello, II, iii, 348; Macbeth, I, iii, 123; and 2 Cor. xi, 14.
1885 macd
macd
1639 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “Emphasis on May, as resuming previous doubtful thought and suspicion.”
1899 ard1
ard1
deale] Dowden (ed. 1899): “Coleridge quotes from Berowne’s Religio Medici, Part I. 37, to show that he held the belief that ghosts are often devils abusing men to damn them. See on this subject Spalding’s Elizabethan Demonology.”
1982 ard2
1639-40 Jenkins (ed. 1982): “LeLoyer (III.7) quotes Chrysostom to the effect that when an apparition claims to be the spirit of a particular person, one should suspect a deception of the devil. That the devil can appear in the likeness of a good man ’we need not doubt at all’, says Lavater (II. ix), supporting his case with many references to the scriptures and the Fathers. While admitting that ghosts may be ’either good or evil angels’, he supposed them normally to be diabolical; and James I insisted that they were invariably so. ’What means then these kind of spirits, when they appear in the shadow of a person newly dead. . . . And this way he easily deceived the Gentiles. . . . And to that same effect is it, that he now appears in that manner to some ignorant Christians’ (Demonology, III, ch. 1). Only the ignorant could imagine that a good angel might assume such a form or that the spirit of a dead man might return. Sir Thos. Browne (Religio Medici, I. 37) believed ’that those apparitions and ghosts of departed persons are not the wandering souls of men, but the unquiet walks of devils, prompting and suggesting us unto mischief, blood, and villainy.’ Nashe (in The Terrors of the Night) specifies the shape of father, mother, or kinsman as that in which the devil often appears in order that his victim shall the sooner hearken to him (i. 348). For other expressions of this belief, see Stoll, Hamlet: an Historical and Comparative Study, 1919, pp. 47-8. See also nn. on I. ii. 244, 245, I. iv. 40, 43, I. v. 54."
1639