them to controversy; there was, for a while,
no money bid for argument,[b 1] unless the poet 375
and the player went to cuffs in the
question.[b 2]
Ham. Is 't possible?
Guil. Oh, there has been much throwing about of
brains. 380
Ham. Do the boys carry it away?[b 3]
Ros. Ay, that they do, my lord; Hercules[b 4] and his
load too.
Ham. It is not very strange; for my[a 1] uncle is King
of Denmark, and those, that would make 385
mows[a 2][b 5] at him while my father lived, give
twenty, forty, fifty,[a 3] an[a 4] hundred ducats a-piece,
for his picture in little.[b 6] 'Sblood,[a 5] there is something
in this more than natural, if philosophy
could find it out. 390
[Flourish of trumpets within.
Guil. There are the players.
Ham. Gentlemen, you are welcome to Elsinore.
Your hands, come;[a 6] the appurtenance[b 7] of wecome
is fashion and ceremony: let me comply[b 8]
- ↑ 375. argument] plot of a play, as in III. ii, 244.
- ↑ 376, 377. question] Perhaps means dialogue; perhaps controversy, debate; the poet for the children attacks the common players.
- ↑ 381. carry it away] win the day.
- ↑ 382. Hercules] In allusion to the Globe Theatre, the sign of which was Hercules carrying the globe.
- ↑ 386. mows] grimaces, Fr. moue.
- ↑ 388. picture in little] miniature. The children—miniature actors—now carry away Hercules; so too have fashions changed with respect to kings.
- ↑ 393. appurtenance] adjuncts.
- ↑ 394. comply] observe the formalities of courtesy, as in V. ii. 192 ; garb, fashion.