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Line 3401 - 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.
3401 Might stoppe a hole, to keepe the wind away.5.1.214
1877 v1877
v1877 : ≈ dyce1(only are . . . quotation?) ; ≈ Col; dyce2 (condensed by FURNESS) ; clarke
3400-03 Imperious . . . flaw] Furness (ed. 1877): “Dyce (ed. 2) repeats his query, and answers: ‘I believe not.’”
v1877
3400-03 Imperious . . . flaw] Clarke (apud Furness, ed. 1877): “Ham. is merely putting into rhyming form the fancy that for the moment passes through his mind. Sh. has made this a marked characteristic with Ham.—a tendency to doggerelize when he is speaking lightly or excitedly; thus 3.2.281-2 [2145-46]. Again at the close of the present scene, where it is not so much a couplet that conventionally closes a scene as it is a fleer extemporaneously put into rhyme, by way of light turning off from serious thought and remonstrance to a maner that shall savor the belief in his madness.”
1885 macd
macd ≈ v1877
3400-03 Imperious . . . flaw] see n. 3403.
1889 Barnett
Barnett : standard
3400-03 Imperious . . . flaw] Barnett (1889, p. 68): <p. 68> “Hamlet’s four lines on Cæsar in [5.1.213-15 (3400-02)] are in rimed heroics. [cites 3400-03]” </p. 68>
1982 pen2
pen2kit2 w/o attribution ?
3400-3 Spencer (ed. 1980): “Perhaps this impromptu verse-epigram (a characteristic specimen of its kind) serves, like the love poem to Ophelia (II.2.115-18), to identify Hamlet as a ‘university wit’.”
1982 ard2
ard2 : kit1 w/o attribution
3400-3 Jenkins (ed. 1982): “The citation of Caesar along with Alexander was tradiitional, but the burst of rhyme must be taken to be one of Hamlet’s impromptus. Cf. [3.2.265ff].”
1987 oxf4
oxf4
3400-03 Imperious . . . flaw] Hibbard (ed. 1987):“Hamlet’s shift into verse at this point is reminiscent of his similar shift from prose to verse after Claudius has made his abrupt exit in the play scene. Here he sums up what he has learned form his exchanges with the Grave-digger—the vanity of human ambition.”
3401