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Line 2401 - 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.
2401 {Ger.}<Qu.> What wilt thou doe, thou wilt not murther me,3.4.21
1754 Grey
Grey
2401-5 What wilt . . . . slaine] GREY (1754, pp. 297-8): “(a) Saxo: Saxo Grammaticus relates this matter with some small variation. <n. p.297> (a.) Delectatus sententia Fengo facta longinquæ profectionis simulatione discedit. Is vero qui consilium dederat, conclave </n. p.297><n. p.298> quo cum matre Amlethus recludebatur, tacite, submissusque stramento delituit: nec insidiarum Amletho rememium defuit. Veritus enim ne clandestinis cujuspiam auribus exciperetur, primum ad ineptæ consuetudinis ritum recurrens, obistrepentis Galli more occentum edidit, brachiisque pro alarum plausu concussis, conscenso stramento corpus crebris faltibus librare cœpit, si quid illic clausum delitesceret, experturus. At ubi subjectam pedibus molem persensit, serro locum rimatus suppositum confodit, egestumque latebra trucidavit. p.51.—Vid. Meursii Hist. Danic. lib. 1. p. 11.” </n p.298>
See also 2404 and 2411 for other source-related comments on the killing of Polonius.
1885 macd
macd
2401 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “The apprehension comes from the combined action of her conscience and the notion of his madness.”
1939 kit2
kit2
2401 What . . . doe] Kittredge (ed. 1939): “The Queen’s alarm is caused by some menace in Hamlet’s action. He has forced her to sit down and stands over her in a threatening attitude. See note on n. [3.2.388-99 (2259-70)]. In the First Quarto the Queen, in reporting the interview, says: ‘Whenas he came, I first bespake him faire, But then he throwes and tosses me about, As one forgetting that I was his mother; At last I call’d for help.’”
1953 Joseph
Joseph
2401-2 Joseph (1953, p. 94), denying the straightforward implications of these lines, asserts: “There is never any suggestion that Hamlet will lay hands on his mother.”
1984 klein
klein: xref.
2401 thou . . . murther me] Klein (ed. 1984): “That the Queen (still mistress of the situation) should now think of murder underlines once more that the play-within-the-play was generally interpreted as a (mad) threat on Hamlet’s part.”
2401