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Line 2131 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 2023-2950 ed. Frank N. Clary
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
2131 <Powres the poyson in his eares.>..
1875 Marshall
Marshall: xref.; Kean (performance)
2131-2135 Powres . . . . Gonzagoes wife] Marshall (1875, pp. 43-44): <p.43> “While the mimic poisoner is in the very act of pouring the poison into the sleeping king’s ear on the stage, Hamlet half rises from his recumbent attitude and thus explains the incident: [quotes Q2 version of 2132-5].
“At this point most of the actors, that I have seen in the part of Hamlet, are wont to execute what I must venture to call the most vulgar piece of melodramatic absurdity which can be conceived. They crawl on their hands and knees from the feet of Ophelia to the King, whilst the poisoner is speaking his short speech on the stage; they then scream, or rant, in </p.43><p.44> the king’s ear these words, in such a manner as to justify any respectable and sane member of the Court of Denmark in conducting Hamlet to the nearest dungeon. Tradition, deriving itself from Edmund Kean, is said to justify this astonishing piece of business (technically so called); but not every actor, much less every man, is an Edmund Kean, and what may have appeared natural and effective to him, certainly appears quite the contrary to his imitators. To me it seems an error from the actor’s point of view, for surely it would be much more effective, as well as natural, that Hamlet should not abandon himself to the intensity of his excitement until he is alone with Horatio.” </p.44>
1877- Fleay
Fleay
2131 Fleay (n.d., p. 96): “the alteration made by Hamlet in the play is the poisoning in the garden a sleeping man by pouring a drug into his ears: it is this reproduction of his own act that frights the King: because it shows him Hamlet knows of his guilt; it is his fright that tells Hamlet the ghost was true: hence this incident (altered from some other manner of murder and the speech thereto belonging must have been the speech in question.” See n. 1581.
1953 Joseph
Joseph
2131-6 Joseph (1953, p. 82): Hamlet and Claudius each “learns what is behind the others mask at precisely the same moment: Hamlet when he sees his adversary blench, Claudius, when the ’talk of the poisoning’ convinces him unmistakably that his nephew has guessed his secret.”
1993 dent
dent: Mac. //s
2131 Powres] Andrews (ed. 1993): “Pours (with the same wordplay on ’powers’ as in Macbeth, 1.5.28 [373], 4.1.18 [1598]).”
2131