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Line 1904-05 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1904 Ham. Horatio, thou art een as iust a man3.2.54
1905 As ere my conuersation copt withall. 3.2.55
1710 Gildon
Gildon
1904-25 Horatio . . . do thee] Gildon (1710, p. 403): Hamlet’s “Speech to Horatio p. 2414. has many good Lines.”
1736 Stubbs
Stubbs
1904-05 Stubbs (1736, pp. 38-9): “HAMLET’s Expression of his Friendship for Horatio, has great Beauties; it is with Simplicity and Strength, and the Diction has all the Graces of Poetry. It was well imagin’d, that he should let his Friend know the Secret of his Father’s Murder, because, thus his Request to </p. 38> <p. 39> him, to observe the King’s Behaviour at the Play, is very naturally introduc’d as a prudent Desire of the Prince’s.”
1784 davies
davies
1904-05 Davies (1784, p. 89): "The warm and pathetic address of Hamlet to his friend is, I think, not unlike that of Orestes to Pylades in the Electra of Euripides:’Thee, o my Pylades, I deem the first/Of men for thy fidelity and friendship,/And my unsever’d comrade!’[notes that this is Wodhull’s Translation}."
1784 richardson
richardson
1904-05 Richardson (1780, p. 126): “Hamlet knew the sanctity of friendship, its uses, and its importance. His friend was not merely the partner of his amusements, to be his associate in his pleasures, and to cherish his vanity by adulation: he was a friend to counsel and assist him in doubtful emergencies, to improve his heart, and correct his judgment. The qualities that distinguish Horatio, and render him worthy of the esteem of Hamlet, are not affluence, nor pageantry, nor gay accomplishments, nor vivacity, nor even wit, and uncommon genius, too often allied to an impetuous temper; he is distinguished by that equanimity and independence of soul which arise from governed and corrected passions, from a sound and discerning judgment.”
1791- rann
rann
1905 As ere my conuersation copt withal] Rann (ed. 1791-): “—As ever I encountered, met with.”
1872 cln1
cln1
1905 conuersation] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): “converse, intercourse.”
copt withal] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): “encountered with. In Merchant of Venice, iv. 1. 412, ’to cope’ means ’to reward.’ "
1882 elze
elze
1905 ere my conuersation copt wihal] Elze (ed. 1882): “Compare Nat. Field, A Woman is a Weathercock (Dodsley, ed. Hazlitt, XI, 99): One-and-thirty good morrows to the fairest, wisest, richest widow that ever conversation coped withal.”
1885 macd
macd
1904 -7 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “To know a man, there is scarce a readier way than to hear him talk of his friend—why he loves, admires, chooses him. The Poet here gives us a wide window into Hamlet. So genuine is his respect for being, so indifferent is he to having, that he does not shrink, in argument for his own truth, from reminding his friend to his face that, being a poor man, nothing is to be gained from him—nay, from telling him that it is through his poverty he has learned to admire him, as a man of courage, temper, contentment, and independence, with nothing but his good spirits for and income—a man whose manhood is dominant both over his senses and over his fortune—a true Stoic. He describes an ideal man, then clasps the ideal to his bosom as his own in the person of his friend. Only a great man could so worship another, choosing him for such qualities; and hereby Shakspere shows us his Hamlet—a brave, noble, wise, pure man, beset by circumstances the most adverse conceivable.
“That Hamlet had not misapprehended Horatio becomes evident in the last scene of all. 272”
1899 ard1
ard1
1904. iust] Dowden (ed. 1899): “Hamlet, at this moment, needs before all else a man of sound judgement, unswayed by passion. The eulogy that follows has here a dramatic proprierty.
copt withal] Dowden (ed. 1899): “as ever my intercourse with men encountered. So copest in Winter’s Tale, IV. Iv. 435.”
1904 1905