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Line 2569 - 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.
2569 Vnpeg the basket on the houses top,3.4.193
1784 Davies
Davies: v1773
2569-72 Davies (1784, pp. 110-11): <p.110> “Mr. Warner’s note, referring to the story of the jackanapes and the partridges, in a letter of Sir John Suckling, is by no means satisfactory. The author seems rather to allude to some well-known story or fable, of an ape, who, being near a basket, in some tower, or high place, was curious to see what was in it; he contrived to open it; and, on seeing the birds which were in it fly away, to make experiment, whether he could not do the like, he crept into the basket; and, by his weight, tumbled it down, and broke his neck.
“But, let the story be as it will, the meaning of the passage seems plainly to be this: ‘Be not, mother, induced, by any means, to betray my simulation of madness to my uncle; if you do, he will not only put an end to my life, but he will, from </p.110><p.111> his guilty suspicions, treat you as an accomplice.’” </p.111>
1819 cald1
cald1
2569-70 Vnpeg . . . fly] Caldecott (ed. 1819): “‘Make a full disclosure, although you draw down ruin upon yourself.’ Of the popular story, to which allusion must here have been made, we find no satisfactory account.”
1857 fieb
fieb
2569 vnpeg] Fiebig (ed. 1857): “To unpeg, to open any thing closed with a peg.”
1872 cln1
cln1
2569-72 Clark and Wright (ed. 1872): “The reference must be to some fable in which an ape opened a basket containing live birds, then crept into it himself, and ‘to try conclusions, whether he could fly like them, jumped out and broke his neck. No one has yet found any such fable recorded elsewhere.”
Comment agrees with Davies’s challenge to Warner.
1873 rug2
rug2 = rug1
1877 v1877
v1877 = Warner (v1773); ≈ cln1
2570 famous Ape] Furness (ed. 1877): “Warner: Sir John Suckling, in one of his letters, may possibly allude to the same story. ‘It is the story of the jackanapes and the partridges; thou starest after a beauty till it is lost to thee, and then let’st out another, and starest after that till it is gone too.’ Clarendon: No one has yet found the fable here alluded to.”
v1877 ≈ v1778 minus Ant. //
2571 conclusions] (ed. 1877): “Steevens: Experiments.”
1877 neil
1878 rlf1
rlf1 ≈ v1773 (Warner)
2569-71 Rolfe (ed. 1878): “The reference is to some old story that has not come down to us; perhaps, as Warner suggests, also alluded to by Sir John Suckling in one of his letters: ‘It is the story of the jackanapes and the partridges; thou starest after a beauty till it be lost to thee, and then let’st out another, and starest after that till it is gone too.’”
1889 Barnett
Barnett: standard
2569-72 Barnett (1889, p. 53): “The fable is not recorded anywhere.”
1889-90 mBooth
mBooth
2569-72 E. Booth (ms. notes in PB 82, HTC, Shattuck 108): “I was told last night that an ape carried a cage of birds to the roof of a museum here—during the present week—and after letting the birds escape, one at a time, he got into the cage & was precipitated to the ground: his neck was not broken, however. E.B. April ’90.
“Since writing the above I have learned that this Shakespearean co-incidence did not occur here but in some Southern town & several years ago, and that ’twas not a cage but a basket, as in the case to wh[ich] Hamlet refers.”
1899 ard1
ard1: contra Warner
2569-72 Dowden (ed. 1899): “The famous ape is now unknown. Warner suggests that Suckling alludes to the forgotten story in a letter, where he speaks of the Jackanapes and the partridges; but Suckling’s jackanapes, though he lets out the partridges, does not break his neck.”
1903 p&c
p&c ≈ rlf1 (Suckling analogue) without Warner attribut1on
2569 Vnpeg] Porter & clarke (ed. 1903): “An allusion to some popular fable not now known. Sir John Suckling seems to refer to the same in one of his letters: ‘It is the story of the the Jackenapes and the partridges; thou starest after a beauty till it be lost to thee, and then lets’t out another and starest after that till it is gone too’.”
1939 kit2
kit2: standard
2569-72 Kittredge (ed. 1939): “The fable cited, though it has not been found elsewhere, is easy to reconstruct. An ape finds a basket full of birds on the housetop and opens it. The birds fly away. The ape gets into the basket and jumps out in an attempt to fly, but fall from the roof and breaks his neck.”
1974 evns1
evns1
2569 Vnpeg the basket] Evans (ed. 1974): “open the door of the cage.”
1980 pen2
pen2 ≈ kit2 + magenta underlined
2569 Vnpeg the basket . . . down] Spencer (ed. 1980): “This story is not known from any other source. It can be reconstructed as follows: an ape steals a wickerwork cage (basket) of birds and carries it to the top of a house. Out of curiosity, or by accident, he releases the pegs of the cage, and the birds fly out. The ape is prompted to imitate them; he creeps into the basket and then leaps out, supposing that he will be able to fly like the birds. But, of course, he falls to the ground and breaks his neck
“Hamlet’s application of the fable is as follows: if you reveal my secrets to the King, you will be like this ape. You will gain nothing by it; and if you imagine you can act with the King as cleverly as I can independently of me, you will be like the ape trying to fly, and so will come to grief.”
1982 ard2
ard2
2569-70 Unpeg . . . fly] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “Birds let out of baskets, like cats out of bags, are not easily recaptured.”
1988 bev2
bev2 ≈ ard2
2569 Vnpeg the basket] Bevington (ed. 1988): “open the cage, i.e., let out the secret.”
1997 evns2
evns2 = evns1
2569