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Line 3623 - 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.
3623 {Cour.} <Osr.> The {carriage} <Carriages> sir are the hangers.5.2.157
1822 Nares
Nares
3623 hangers] Nares (1822; 1906): “The part of a sword-belt in which the weaon was suspended. [cites Ham. 5.2]
“Osrick, affecting fine speech, calls these hangers carriages; which Hamlet ridicules, and begs that, till cannon are worn by the side, they may not be called carriages, but hangers. ‘Thou shalt give my boy that girdle and hangers , when thou hast worn them a litle more.’ Jonson’s Poetaster, iii.4.] ‘You know my state; I sell no perspective, Scarfs, gloves, nor hangers, nor put my trust in shoe-ties.’ (B&F Scornf. L.ii)
“Bobadil uses it in the singular; and it apears there, and elsewhere, that they were fringed and ornamented with various colours: ‘I happened to enter into some discourse of a hanger, which, I assure you, both for fashion and workmanship, was the most peremptory beautiful and gentleman-like; yet he condemned and cried it down, for the most pied and ridiculous he ever saw.’ [cites EM in his Humour 1.4].”
1860 mHal1
mHal1 : notes that 2104 is like 3623.
1864 c&mc
c&mc
3623 hangers] Clarke (ed. 1864, Glossary): “The loop of the belt in which the sword was suspended.”
1867 Ktly
Ktly
3623 hangers] Keightley (1867, p. 402): <p. 402> “the short straps by which a sword was hung from the belt.” </p. 402>
1873 rug2
rug2
3623 hangers] Moberly (ed. 1873): “Straps pendent from a sword-belt.”
1939 kit2
kit2
3623 carriage] Kittredge (ed. 1936): “This use is an affectation of Osric’s and, as such, is humorously criticised by Hamlet, to whom the word sugests a gun carriage, the wheeled frame that carries a cannon.”
3623