Hamlet

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Hamlet Page 29

by William Shakespeare


  112 without outside

  116 keep guard

  120 cuckold man with an unfaithful wife

  121 between in the middle of

  121 unsmirched unstained

  122 true faithful

  125 fear fear for

  126 hedge protect

  127 but ... will only peep through at what it desires, and carry out little of its intention 135 juggled with tricked, deceived

  138 To ... stand I am fixed in this resolve

  139 both ... negligence I disregard both this world and the next 141 throughly thoroughly, completely

  142 stay prevent

  143 My ... world by my will, not all the world shall stop me 144 husband manage

  149 sweepstake indiscriminately (from gambling, where one person sweeps up all the stakes on the table) 149 draw gather

  154 pelican supposedly this bird fed its young with its own blood 155 Repast feed

  159 sensible feeling

  160 level directly

  165 virtue power, efficacy

  167 turns the beam tilts the crossbar of the scales (i.e. tips in our favor) 171 Nature human nature

  171 fine in refined by

  172 instance sign, token

  173 After ... loves i.e. after Polonius, to the grave 174 bier movable stand on which a corpse is carried to the grave 175 Hey ... nonny a refrain more usually associated with merry love songs 179 move affect (me)/persuade

  180 You Ophelia assigns parts to the individuals in the room "a-down ... a-down-a" well-known refrains 181 wheel refrain

  181 false ... daughter refers to a story or ballad that remains unidentified 183 This ... matter this nonsense is actually more meaningful than sane talk/this nonsense contains significance that is beyond the reach of sense 184 rosemary herb symbolizing remembrance

  185 pansies flowers symbolic of love, named from French pensees (thoughts) 186 document lesson

  187 fitted put together

  188 fennel herb said to symbolize flattery

  188 columbines flowers symbolic of infidelity

  188 rue herb symbolizing repentance

  190 o'Sundays on Sundays

  190 difference variation on a coat of arms to distinguish different members or branches of a family (or Ophelia may simply mean "differently") 191 daisy possibly symbolic of deception; alternatively, a springtime flower associated with love 191 violets flowers symbolic of faithfulness and of chastity 194 For ... joy a line from a well-known song

  195 Thought melancholy

  195 passion extreme grief

  196 favour charm, attractiveness

  203 flaxen white

  203 poll head, i.e. hair

  205 cast away moan waste our laments

  206 Gramercy great mercy

  207 God buy ye goodbye (literally, "God be with you")

  211 whom whichever of

  212 'twixt between

  213 collateral indirect

  214 touched implicated

  222 trophy memorial

  222 hatchment tablet bearing the coat of arms of the dead person, placed over the tomb 223 ostentation ceremony

  225 That so that

  225 call in question demand an explanation

  Act 4 Scene 5

  8 an't if it

  13 overlooked looked over, read

  13 means means of access

  15 appointment equipment

  16 compelled necessary

  17 grapple forcible seizing of a ship for the purpose of boarding 19 thieves of mercy merciful thieves

  21 repair come

  23 too ... matter i.e. inadequate to convey the importance of the issue 23 bore caliber of a gun (Hamlet's words are bullets that are too small to fit) 28 way access

  Act 4 Scene 6

  1 my acquittance seal confirm my innocence

  3 Sith since

  3 knowing understanding/knowledgeable

  7 proceeded not did not take legal proceedings

  7 feats deeds/crimes

  8 capital punishable by death

  9 As ... up i.e. given that it was greatly in the interests of safety and prudence to do so 12 unsinewed weak

  16 conjunctive closely united (an astronomical term referring to proximity between planets) 17 sphere orbit; individual stars and planets were thought to be contained within concentric hollow spheres that revolved around the earth 18 but except, unless I were

  19 count account, reckoning, indictment

  20 general gender common people

  20 gender kind, sort

  22 spring ... stone a spring with high levels of lime in its water would petrify a piece of wood placed in it 23 gyves fetters

  24 Too slightly timbered i.e. too light

  28 terms circumstances

  29 go back again i.e. recall her as she was

  30 on mount on high

  34 shook with tugged (contemptuously) by

  43 Claudio a bluff, an intermediary, or Shakespeare's slip when he meant "Horatio"

  45 naked destitute

  47 pardon permission

  51 abuse deceit

  51 no such thing not what it seems, a trick

  53 character handwriting

  63 If so so long as

  65 As checking at as a result of deviating from or aborting (a falconry term referring to the hawk turning away from its pursuit in mid-flight) 67 device devising

  70 uncharge the practice acquit the plot from blame

  74 can well are skilled

  74 gallant fine young man

  77 As as if

  77 incorpsed of one body

  77 demi-natured half of the same nature

  78 brave splendid

  78 passed my thought surpassed anything I could have imagined 79 forgery ... tricks imagining feats of horsemanship

  83 Lamond some editors prefer Quarto's Lamord, with its hint of death (la mort, French for "death") 85 brooch jewel/ornament

  87 made ... you testified to your skill

  89 For ... defence with regard to your skill and performance in self-defense 93 envenom embitter/poison

  95 sudden immediate

  95 play compete

  103 begun by time generated by particular circumstances

  104 passages of proof events that have proved it

  105 qualifies weakens, diminishes

  110 sanctuarize give sanctuary to, protect

  112 Will you if you are to

  112 close secluded

  114 put on encourage/organize

  116 in fine in conclusion, finally

  117 remiss negligent, not vigilant

  118 generous noble-minded

  119 peruse examine carefully

  119 foils light swords, blunted for use in fencing

  121 unbated not blunted

  121 pass of practice treacherous thrust/deliberately planned thrust 122 Requite repay, have revenge on

  125 unction ointment

  125 mountebank quack doctor who traveled around selling various remedies 126 I ... it Laertes leaves unfinished the account of what happened when he did this; or perhaps he means "one need but dip a knife in it"; some editors prefer Quarto's "so mortal that, but dip"

  127 cataplasm medicated plaster, poultice

  127 rare excellent

  128 simples medicinal herbs

  129 Under the moon i.e. anywhere, though gathering herbs by moonlight was thought to lend them extra potency 130 withal with it

  131 contagion poison

  131 gall graze

  135 fit ... shape suit our plan/fit us for the roles we are going to play 136 drift scheme, intention

  136 look becomes visible

  139 blast in proof explode when put to the test

  140 cunnings skills (i.e. Laertes' and Hamlet's)

  141 ha't have it

  143 As i.e. you should

  143 bouts rounds in a fight

  145 nonce purpose

  146 stuck thrust

  151 willow a tree associated with sadness and fo
rsaken love 152 hoar grayish white

  153 fantastic elaborate/fanciful

  154 crow-flowers buttercups/ragged robins (both types of wildflower) 154 long purples a type of purple orchid; the roots resemble testicles, hence the grosser name

  155 liberal freely spoken/licentious

  155 grosser coarser/more vulgar

  156 cold chaste

  157 pendent drooping, overhanging

  158 envious sliver malicious part of a branch

  159 weedy made of wildflowers

  163 incapable uncomprehending/insensible

  163 distress affliction, calamity

  164 indued adapted

  167 lay song

  173 trick way, habit

  174 these i.e. his tears

  175 woman ... out the woman in me will be finished

  177 folly i.e. his weeping

  177 douts extinguishes

  Act 5 Scene 1

  5.1 Location: a graveyard near the royal castle at Elsinore Clowns rustics 1 Christian burial suicides were not allowed Christian burial rites 2 salvation probably a malapropism for "damnation," though perhaps the Clown suggests Ophelia was trying to get to heaven early 4 straight straightaway (plays on the sense of "not crooked") 4 crowner coroner

  5 sat held an inquest (with a play on the literal sense)

  9 se offendendo perversion of se defendendo (Latin for "in self-defense," a legal term); literally "in self-offense"

  12 argal perversion of ergo (Latin for "therefore") 13 goodman title for a person below the rank of gentleman and often followed by the individual's occupation (here a delver or digger) 16 will ... he whether he will or no

  21 quest inquest

  25 there thou say'st i.e. how right you are

  26 countenance authority, permission

  27 even Christian fellow Christians

  28 ditchers ditch-makers

  29 Adam's profession in the Bible, Adam's job was to look after the Garden of Eden 31 bore arms had a coat of arms (the sign of a gentleman); with obvious play on sense of "limbs"

  36 confess thyself the saying continues "and be hanged"

  42 does well i.e. as an answer (the sense then shifts to "serves well") 49 unyoke give up, stop laboring (literally, unyoke the oxen) 54 mend improve

  56 Yaughan variant spelling of Vaughan, presumably the name of the local innkeeper, perhaps based on one near the Globe 57 stoup tankard

  58 In ... love this and the following stanza are loose versions of parts of Thomas Vaux's poem "The Aged Lover Renounceth Love," printed in 1557; O and a may be the gravedigger's grunts as he goes about his work 60 contract ... behove pass away the time to my own advantage 61 meet (more) fitting

  64 property of easiness something he can undertake with indifference 65 hath ... sense is more sensitive/fastidious

  69 shipped ... land dispatched me into the earth (i.e. my grave/dust) 69 intil into

  70 been such been a young man in love

  72 jowls strikes, dashes (puns on "jowl"-i.e. jawbone)

  72 Cain in the Bible, the first murderer; he killed his brother Abel 74 politician crafty schemer

  74 o'er-offices lords it over (on account of his office as gravedigger) 75 circumvent cheat, outwit

  82 chapless jawless

  83 mazzard head (from the term for a drinking bowl)

  84 revolution change/turn of the wheel of fortune

  84 trick knack

  84 Did ... 'em? Did these people cost so little to bring up that we may play games with their bones?

  85 loggats a game where pieces of wood shaped like bowling pins were thrown at a stake fixed in the ground 88 For and and furthermore

  88 shrouding sheet sheet in which the corpse was wrapped 92 quiddities ... quillets subtleties, verbal distinctions, quibbling arguments 93 tenures (documents or cases relating to) conditions on which property is held 93 rude ignorant/rough

  94 sconce head

  95 action of battery litigation concerning physical assault 96 statutes legal documents that secured a debt on land and property (similar to a mortgage) 97 recognizances legal documents that formally acknowledged a debt 97 fines ... recoveries legal processes concerned with securing the outright ownership of land; 97 double vouchers refers to the practice of having two people vouch for a claimant's ownership of the land 98 fine ... fines end of his fines (the sense of fine then shifts to "elegant, handsome" and then to "finely powdered") 99 vouch guarantee

  100 the ... indentures land (i.e. his grave) only as long and wide as a legal document 101 pair of indentures two copies of an agreement drawn up on the same sheet of paper, which was then halved along a zigzag line to form documents that, when placed together, were a unique match 102 conveyances deeds relating to the transfer of land and property (plays on the sense of "light-fingered theft/sleight of hand") 102 box deed-box/coffin

  103 inheritor i.e. owner

  107 assurance in that security in legal documents

  108 sirrah sir (used to a social inferior)

  114 not lie the First Clown begins a series of puns on the senses of "dwell/fib"

  116 quick living (in his reply, the First Clown plays on the senses of "quick-witted/speedy") 126 absolute strictly accurate

  126 by the card precisely (literally, according to either the sailor's map or compass) 127 equivocation verbal ambiguity

  129 picked over-refined/fastidious

  130 galls his kibe chafes his chilblain

  148 ground cause (but the First Clown responds to the literal sense of the word) 153 pocky diseased, especially with the pox i.e. syphilis 153 hold ... in hold together long enough to be buried 155 tanner one who converts animal hides into leather by tanning (infusing with an astringent liquid) 159 whoreson wretched (an abusive intensifier used in a jocular manner) 159 Here's a skull presumably one of the two thrown up earlier, but conceivably a third if he is still digging 165 A he

  166 Rhenish German wine from the area around the River Rhine 172 fancy imagination

  173 abhorred filled with horror

  173 My gorge rises i.e. I feel like vomiting

  173 gorge stomach contents

  177 No ... jeering? There's no one left to laugh at the way you mocked and made fun of people?

  178 chop-fallen downcast/lacking the lower jaw

  179 favour facial appearance

  183 Alexander Alexander the Great, fourth-century king of Macedonia and one of the world's most successful military leaders 190 bung-hole hole in a barrel stoppered with a bung

  191 too curiously too closely/overly ingeniously

  193 modesty moderation

  195 loam mortar made of clay, sand and straw

  201 flaw squall, violent gust of wind

  204 maimed truncated, insufficient

  205 desperate filled with spiritual despair, suicidal

  206 Fordo destroy

  206 estate status

  207 Couch hide

  211 obsequies commemorative rites for the dead

  212 warrantise authorization

  212 doubtful suspicious

  213 o'ersways overrules

  214 unsanctified not consecrated by the Church

  215 last trumpet i.e. Doomsday, which would, according to the Bible, be heralded by the sound of a trumpet 215 For instead of

  216 Shards fragments of broken pottery

  218 strewments flowers strewn on the coffin or grave

  218 bringing ... burial bringing her to her final resting place accompanied by the funeral bell and burial rites 223 sage requiem a solemn funeral chant

  223 such rest pray for the same rest

  224 peace-parted peacefully departed

  227 violets the flower was associated with chastity

  229 howling i.e. in hell

  237 ingenious sense quick, intelligent mind

  240 quick living (i.e. Laertes)

  242 Pelion the mountain in Thessaly that, in Greek mythology, the warring giants piled on top of Mount Ossa in their attempt to scale Olympus,
the mountain home of the gods 245 emphasis strength of expression (a rhetorical term)

  246 Conjures ... stars casts a spell on the planets

  252 splenitive hot-tempered (the spleen was thought to be the seat of the passions) 257 quiet calm

  259 wag open and shut

  265 forbear him leave him alone

  267 Woo't wilt thou

  267 tear tear violently at (hair, clothing)/injure/destroy 268 eisel vinegar

  268 crocodile i.e. something tough and dangerous, the creature that was supposed to shed copious hypocritical tears 270 outface defy/defeat

  273 our ground the piled-up earth above us

  274 burning zone sun's orbit between the tropics

  275 Ossa in Greek mythology, the mountain on which the giants piled Pelion in their attempt to reach Olympus 275 an if

  275 mouth grimace/rant

  277 mere complete

  280 golden couplets baby birds covered in golden down

  280 disclosed hatched

  283 use treat

  285 Let ... day i.e. even Hercules could not stop Laertes from his tiresome rant/my turn will come and even Hercules (or the ranting Laertes) cannot stop me 288 in i.e. by remembering

  289 present push immediate test (push may also be suggestive of the thrust of a weapon) 291 living lasting (but also implies that murdering Hamlet will serve as a memorial) Act 5 Scene 2

  5.2 Location: within the royal castle at Elsinore

  1 this the pair enter mid-conversation; this refers to what Hamlet has just been telling Horatio 1 see the other hear the other news

  2 circumstance details

  6 mutines ... bilboes mutineers in shackles

  6 Rashly on impulse (Hamlet then digresses before returning to his tale in line 13) 7 know acknowledge

  8 indiscretion lack of forethought and prudence

  9 dear important

  9 pall weaken/become flat and stale

  11 Rough-hew carve roughly

  14 sea-gown short-sleeved, calf-length sailor's gown made of coarse material 14 scarfed wrapped loosely

  15 them i.e. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern

  16 Fingered stole

  16 in fine finally, in conclusion

  21 Larded garnished, interspersed

  21 several various

  22 Importing concerning

  23 bug hobgoblin, bogeyman

  23 bugs ... life terrors to be feared were I to be allowed to continue living 24 supervise reading (of the commission)

  24 leisure bated time wasted

  25 stay await

  31 benetted round snared, surrounded as if in a net

  32 Ere ... play i.e. before my brain could begin to consider the issue, I had already taken action 34 fair in elegant handwriting

  35 statists statesmen

  38 yeoman's i.e. efficient, loyal (a yeoman was an attendant in a royal household) 39 effect nature

  41 conjuration entreaty

  42 tributary country owing him a tribute (a regular payment after defeat in war) 44 still always (i.e. continue)

  44 wheaten garland symbolic of peace

  45 comma the mark of punctuation that indicated only a slight break between words, thus a symbol of closeness and connection between the two countries 45 amities friendship

 

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