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Line 3746, 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.
3746 Ostrick. A hit, a very palpable hit. {Drum, trumpets and shot.}5.2.281
3747 Laer. Well, againe. {Florish, a peece goes off.}5.2.281
1777 Pilon
Pilon
3746 Pilon (1777, pp. 23-24): <p. 23> “When Ostrick cries a hit, a very palpable hit; Laertes’ point is at Hamlet’s breast, owing to Mr. Henderson’s ignorance of the sword. Fencing is an accomplishment, not to be dispensed with in an actor; and nothing so much promotes grace-</p. 23> <P. 24>fulness of deportment.” </p. 24>
1882 elze2
elze2
3746 A hit, a very palpable hit] Elze (ed. 1882): “Compare Farquhar, Love and a Bottle, II, 2: ‘Nimblewrist: Oh Lord, sir! he did not touch me not in the least, sir; the foil was crzcked, a palpable crack! (Blood runs down his face). Club: A very palpable crack, truly! Your skull is only cracked, palpably cracked, that’s all.”
elze2
3746 Drum, trumpets and shot] Elze (ed. 1882): om. [Q1] and [F1]. Immediately below [Q2] repeats the same stage-direction in a different wording [3747]: Florish, a peece goes off. It seems evident that only one (if either) of these two wordings can have come from the poet’s pen. The modern editors have substituted the ususal Flourish, although Drum, Trumpets, and Shot is much more in accordance with the text, especially if compared to §40 [616], where the King’s pledge is accompanied with kettledrum, trumpet, and shot, which, as we learn from Gfrörer, was the fashion with the northern nations (see note on §40: His pledge). It may, however, be submitted, whether we are not justified in considering, at the same time, the King’s fondness for noisy music and the fireing of ordnance as a characteristic feature in the royal murderer. May not Shakespeare, who everywhere shows sucha miraculous insight into the very deepest recesses of a criminal’s mind, have known or divined, that criminals try to deafen the reproaches of their conscience by means of noise? I recollect a murderer being executed some forty years ago, who, after the perpetration of his crime, had proceeded to a dancing saloon, and given the drummer there a fee (out of the money taken from his victim), on condition that he should bat his drum with the least possible intermission. Similar instances may no doubt be found in the criminal annals of all countries.”
1980 pen2
pen2
3746-7 Drum . . . off] Spencer (ed. 1980): “Presumably the King or an official gives the order.”
3747 peece] Spencer (ed. 1980): “piece of ordnance, cannon.”
1993 dent
dentpen2
3747 peece
1999 Dessen & Thomson
Dessen & Thomson
176 Florish] Dessen & Thomson(1999): “A widely used signal (over 500 examples) for . . . a fanfare usually played within on a trumpet or cornet, primarily when important figures enter and exit but also at such events as the reading of proclamations and the start of entertainments. . . . theatrical fanfares were likely the same patterned sounds as those used in the real world and probably varied little from play to play. . . .” In Q2 only, for first formal entrance of king. See also Q2 only, for Exeunt (311); Q2 only, offsstage for the king’s celebration (610); Q2 only, for second entrance of king (1019), Q2 and F1, for the Players (1415), Q2 only, for Hamlet’s first hit (3747).
Dessen & Thomson
611 peeces goes of] Dessen & Thomson(1999): “ . . . the sound of a cannon or gun fired offstage.” See also 3747
3746 shot] Edelman (2000), discussing chamber: “As most students of Shakespeare know, on 29 June 1613, the Globe burned to the ground when, as Sir Henry Wotton wrote to his friend, ‘King Henry making a masque at the Cardinal Wolsey’s house, and certain chambers being shot off at his entry, some of the paper, or other stuff wherewith one of them was stopped, did light on the thatch.’ Chambers discharged from this attic space could serve” for the shots within in the last act.
3746 3747