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Line 2557 - 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.
2557 Ham. Not this by no meanes that I bid you doe,3.4.181
1723- mtby2
mtby2
2557 bid] Thirlby (1723-): “bad fsql.”
1733- mtby3
mtby3 = mtby2
1747-53 mtby4
mtby4 ≈ mtby3 +
2557 bid] Thirlby (1747-53): “fsql bad. Does he use bid for bad?”
1891 dtn
dtn
2557 Deighton (ed. 1891): “do anything in the world except this that I bid you do.”
1930 Granville-Barker
Granville-Barker
2557-63 Granville-Barker (1930, rpt. 1946, 1: 230): Hamlet “turns bitterer still. She will betray her son to her paramour. . . . He ranks her with his traitor schoolfellows . . . .
“But in all this he is wrong. She is repentant and she does not betray him.”
1947 cln2
cln2
2557-72 Rylands (ed. 1947): “The speech is bitter and sarcastic. Hamlet wishes to ensure secrecy by again taunting her with her lustful life.”
1993 dent
dent
2557-2564 Not . . . craft] Andrews (ed. 1993): “Hamlet tells his mother neither to submit to the King’s lust, nor to let him know that Hamlet is sane.”
1997 Dash
Dash
2557-72 Dash (1997, pp. 120-2) points out that standard performance practices eliminate many of Hamlet’s most vicious lines, which would, if kept, probably engender sympathy for her. Most productions end with the mild “I must be cruel only to be kind [2554]”; therefore in many performances “audiences never heard Hamlet draw the vow of secrecy from his mother: ’Be thou assur’d . . . . hast said to me’ [2573-5].”
2006 ard3q2
ard3q2
2557 Not. . . means] Thompson & Taylor (ed. 2006): “Hamlet’s double negative emphasizes the irony or sarcasm of his advice. In performance it is possible to play this speech as ’mad’: Hamlet reverts to his antic disposition, partly in order to test his mother’s sincerity.”
2557