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Line 3178 - 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.
3178 Laer. Too much of water hast thou poore Ophelia, 
1639- mWright
mWright
3178 Wright (ms. notes, 1639-): “[cites 3178] (speaking of one drownd).”
1843- mlewes
mlewes
3178-9 water . . . tears] Lewes (ms. notes in Knight, ed. 1843): “This is surely a wretched conceit in the midst of grief!”
I have answers to this also; Laertes like his father is a phrase maker. And someone once said how well Sh captures the banality of expressions of real grief. Malcolm’s response to the news of his father’s death could be an instance.
1860 mHal1
mHal1 : marks CLN 1896-7 as “nearly i[dentical” to 3176, 78
1889 Tomlinson
Tomlinson : Ulrici [n. 3189]
3178-84 Tomlinson (1889, pp. 13-14): <p. 13> “It is in the absence of Laertes that Polonius is killed and Ophelia goes mad and is drowned. Laertes being informed of his father’s death, returns home for the purpose of avenging it, and then he has to bear the additional stroke of his sister’s death. So also Hamlet, by boarding the pirates’ vessel, while the cowardly courtiers allow their ship to drift away, is conveyed back to Denmark, when, as if by chance, he enters the churchyard at the very time when Ophelia’s grave is being prepared. This leads, in </p. 13> <p. 14>the most natural, but at the same time in the most unexpected manner, to the encounter between Hamlet and Laertes.
“Such incidents as the above belong to what Ulrici [see Ulrici, n. 3189] very properly terms, ‘internal necessity,’ in the course of the dramatic development, which he sees reflected in every turn of the action, in all the characters, and in all the various parts of the whole, and he does not hesitate to place ‘this extremely involved and complicated tragedy by the grandest creations of the great poet; yet it has frequently enough been censured on account of supposed defective composition.’” </p. 14>
1931 crg1
crg1
3178-79 Too . . . teares] Craig (ed. 1931): “an illustration of the fact that puns were not inappropriate under any circumstance in Shakespeare’s time.”
1939 kit2
kit2
3178-84 Kittredge (ed. 1939): “This speech seemed far less artificial to Shakespeare’s contemporaries than it does to us, for such punning expressions had come to be natural in Elizabethan style and were by no means inconsistent with deep feeling.”
1951 crg2
crg2=crg1
3178-79 Too . . . teares]
1982 ard2
ard2
3178-79 Too . . . teares] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “Cf. for the conceit, [TN 2.1.26-8 (0000)], ‘She is drowned already, sir, with salt water, though I seem to drown her remembrance again with more’.”
3178