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Line 1702 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1702 How smart a lash that speech doth giue my conscience.3.1.49
1736 stubbs
1702-06 How smart a lash...O heauy burthen.] STUBBS (1736): “The Poet here is greatly to be commended for his Conduct. As consummate a Villain as this King of Denmark is represented to be, yet we find him stung with the deepest Remorse, upon the least Sentence that can any ways be supposed to relate to his Crime. How Instructive this is to the Audience, how much it answers the End of all publick Representations by inculcating a good Moral, I leave to the Consideration of every Reader.”
1841 knt1
knt1
1702 Knight (ed. 1839): “Some editors have destroyed the original metrical arrangement, and print these two lines thus, against all authority: ‘The devil himself. | King. O, ‘t is too true! how smart | A lash that speech doth give my conscience.’ [3.1.48-9. (1701-2)]”
1934a cam3
cam3
1702-5 Wilson (ed. 1934): “An anticapation of the theme elaborated by Ham. later in the scene.”
1702