Hamlet - Page 175

392 scene individable a play observing the unities of time, place and action/a play whose genre is unclassifiable 392 poem unlimited dramatic verse (a play) that does not observe the unities of time, place and action/a play whose genre is all-inclusive/a play that explores a general rather than a specific question (a rhetorical application of unlimited) 392 Seneca Roman writer of tragedies

393 heavy sorrowful/weighty

393 Plautus Roman writer of comedies

393 For ... liberty for plays written according to the rules and for those that disregard all prescriptions 395 O ... thou! In the Bible, Jephthah vowed to God that if he was successful in war he would sacrifice the first creature he met on his return home; he encountered his daughter but kept his word 399 "One ... well." lines from a well-known ballad

400 passing surpassingly, exceedingly

405 follows not is not logical/is not the next line

408 lot chance

408 wot knows

410 like likely

411 row line

411 chanson song

412 my abridgements things that cut me short/entertainment (in either case, the arrival of the players) 415 valanced fringed (with a beard)

415 beard defy, affront (plays on the usual sense)

416 By'r lady by Our Lady (the Virgin Mary)

417 your ladyship addressed to a teenage apprentice actor who plays women's parts 418 chopine high woman's shoe with a very thick platform sole

419 uncurrent not legal tender

419 cracked ... ring i.e. broken, and therefore unfit for women's roles, with play on the sense of "deflowered" (coins featured the monarch's head within a ring; if the coin was damaged within the ring it was no longer valid) 420 e'en to't go straight to it

422 straight straightaway

422 quality skill

427 caviar ... general i.e. wasted on the unappreciative multitude 429 cried ... of was superior to

430 digested arranged

431 modesty restraint/propriety

431 cunning skill, artistry

432 sallets salads or their components (i.e. spicy parts, vulgar phrases) 432 savoury highly flavored

433 indict accuse

434 as ... fine this line is missing from the Folio text, probably due to printer's error (the same goes for the short line at the end of Hamlet's speech) 435 handsome than fine seemly and graceful rather than showy

436 Aeneas' ... Dido after the Trojan war Aeneas landed at Carthage, where Dido was queen; he told of his experiences and she fell in love with him 437 Priam king of Troy, killed by Pyrrhus during the attack on his city 440 rugged harsh, severe

440 Pyrrhus Achilles' son; after the death of his father in the Trojan war, he took part in the conflict and was noted for his vengeful savagery 440 th'Hyrcanian beast the tiger of Hyrcania (land bordering the Caspian Sea), known for its ferocity 442 sable black

444 couched hidden

444 ominous horse fateful wooden horse by which the Greeks gained access to Troy 446 heraldry more dismal i.e. blood, imaged as heraldic markings 446 dismal ominous, fatal

Tags: William Shakespeare Classics
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