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Line 3267-68 - 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.
3267-8 Ham. That skull had a tongue in it, and could sing | once, how the 
1604 Dekker
Dekker
3267- Dekker (The Honest Whore, Part 1 1604, published in Works, 1863, 2: 56, apud H. C. Hart for Ingleby et al. 1932, 1: 65 and 65 n.): “Though no passages are exactly similar, yet the whole idea of moralizing thus upon a skull (especially as it would show upon a stage) seems to me unmistakably taken from Hamlet’s gravedigger scene . . . .”
What’s here?
Perhaps this shrewd pate was mine enemies:
. . .
And must all come to this; fooles, wise, all hither,
Must all heads thus at last be laid together:
. . .
But here’s a fellow; that which he layes on,
Till domes day alters not complexion:
Death’s the best Painter then:
1855 Wade
Wade
3267-3308 Wade (1855, p. 20) : <p. 20> “After this accidentally sudden return of Hamlet to Denmark, we first see him, with Horatio, on his way to the palace, we may presume, in a church-yard beside the grave which a Clown is digging for the reception of the mortal remains of ‘the fair Ophelia,’ whom Hamlet’s neglect and ill-usage, and his mountebank murder of her father, had driven into madness and incident death. Here, his ever-present sense of his own and other men’s mortality is fearfully evidenced; and bitter is his gibing over the relics of man’s visible nature, as the Grave-digger throws up skeleton human skulls and bones out of the church-yard earth:— [cites 3267-3308].” </p. 20>
1982 ard2
ard2
3267 skull] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “The skull affords a traditional motif of moral reflection. LN [Longer Notes].
3267 skull] Jenkins (ed. 1982, Longer Notes, 550-1): <p. 550> “This passage on the skull and the indignities suffered </p. 550> <p. 551>by the dead is especially remisiscent of one in a popular book of meditation by Luis de Granada, comparison with which shows Shakespeare characteristically elaborating and revitalizing a traditional reflection. See Of Prayer and Meditation, trans. Hopkins, 1582, fols. 202-4: ‘Then do they make a hole in the earth of seven or eight foot long, ((and no longer though it be for Alexander the great [[cf. ll. 191-2]] [3385-6], whom the whole world could not hold)) and with that small room only must his body be content [[cf. 108-10]] [3301-3] . . . Then the grave maker taketh the spade, and pickaxe into his hand, and beginneth to tumble down bones upon bones [[cf. 90-1]] [3282-3], and to tread down the earth very hard upon him. Insomuch that . . . the rude grave maker . . . will not stick to lay him on the face, and rap him on the skull [[cf. 88, 99-100]] [3279-80, 3291-3] . . . And the fine dappered gentleman [[cf. 81-2]] [3273-4] who whiles he lived might in no wise abide the wind to blow upon him . . ., here they lay and hurl upon him a dunghill of filthiness and dirt [[cf. 105-6]] [3297-8]. And that sweet minion gentleman also that was wont forsooth to go perfumed with amber . . . must be contented here to lie covered all over with earth, and foul crawling worms, and maggots [[cf. 87, 191-4.]] [3278, 3385-8].’” </p. 551>
3267 3268