Pol. I haue my Lord.

[Footnote 1: 1st Q.

The Princes walke is here in the galery,
There let Ofelia, walke vntill hee comes:
Your selfe and I will stand close in the study,]

[Footnote 2: Not in Quarto.]

[Footnote 3: 1st Q.—

King. See where hee comes poring vppon a booke.]

[Footnote 4: The same as accost, both meaning originally go to the side of.]

[Footnote 5: A line back in the Quarto.]

[Footnote 6: 'Please you to go away.' 89, 203. Here should come the preceding stage-direction.]

[Footnote 7: Now first the Play shows us Hamlet in his affected madness. He has a great dislike to the selfish, time-serving courtier, who, like his mother, has forsaken the memory of his father—and a great distrust of him as well. The two men are moral antipodes. Each is given to moralizing—but compare their reflections: those of Polonius reveal a lover of himself, those of Hamlet a lover of his kind; Polonius is interested in success; Hamlet in humanity.]