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Line 3112, etc. - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 2951-end ed. Hardin A. Aasand
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
3112+1-3112+10 There liues . . . of th ’vlcer, 
1929 trav
trav:
3112+1-3112+10 Travers (ed. 1929):“Such eloquently prolonged moralising, however ((on a significant theme, which was also that of the Player King’s longest speech, III,ii,175ff. [2054])), besides being quite in the style of Claudius ((cp. E.g. I,ii,89-106 [270-99]), has obvious tactical value ((cp. p. 199 n.8 [3090])).”
1982 ard2
ard2
3112+1-3112+10 Jenkins (ed. 1982): “These lines do not so much restate the idea as combine it with another. Love now grows dim not merely through the ordinary process of time but through being self-consuming: it dies [3112+5] through the very intensity with which it lives [3112+1]. The snuff is the charred portion of the wick which dims the flame which has created it. There is a similar paradox in the sigh of [3112+9-3112+10].
1985 cam4
cam4
3112+1-3112+10 Edwards (ed. 1985): “F omits the whole passage. The unkindest cut of all, since the passage is of such great interest thematically, and so illuminating of Claudius’s philosophy of life. We cannot think that Shakespeare would delete it unless he were under considerable pressure to shorten the play—which he may have been. Compare the cut at [5.2.100].”
1987 oxf4
oxf4
3112+1-3112+10 Hibbard (ed. 1987): “For a passage following this line in Q2 but not in F, see Appendix A, xvi.”
3112+1-3112+10 Hibbard (ed. 1987, Appendix, p. 366): <p. 366> “The excision of these lines from F is a gain. An audience eager to know Claudius’s plan may well become impatient at his elaborate moralizing. He himself acknowledges it has gone on too long when he concludes by saying: ‘But to the quick of th’ ulcer.’” </p. 366>
3572-85 Hibbard (ed. 1987, Introduction, pp. 109-10): <p. 109>“The cutting of Q2 is, then, the most important part of a logical and coherent process of revision designed to make a better acting version with a wide appeal. The excisions leave the action untouched but free the dialogue from some intricate and unnecessary elaborations, as well as from some matter that is rather tangential to the play’s main concerns. A typical instance of the former is the King’s discourse, after 4.7.99, on the way in which time eats into the essence of love, which is, in any case, self destructive. </p. 109><p. 110>Before he finishes with the subject, even Claudius seems to feel that he is overworking it, since he cuts himself short with the words ‘But to the quick of th’ulcer’. Moreover, the discourse itself is distinctly repetitive of the Player King’s lucubrations on the same topic at 3.2.176-99, a passage that has significantly left no mark whatever on Q1, suggesting that it had been cut from the acting version of Hamlet on which the reporter relied.” </p. 110>
3112+1 3112+2 3112+3 3112+4 3112+5 3112+6 3112+7 3112+8 3112+9 3112+10