Line 926 - Commentary Note (CN) 
Commentary notes (CN):
1. SMALL CAPS Indicate editions. Notes for each commentator are divided into three parts:
In the 1st two lines of a record, when the name of the source text (the siglum) is printed in SMALL CAPS, the comment comes from an EDITION; when it is in normal font, it is derived from a book, article, ms. record or other source. We occasionally use small caps for ms. sources and for works related to editions. See bibliographies for complete information (in process).
2. How comments are related to predecessors' comments. In the second line of a record, a label "without attribution" indicates that a prior writer made the same or a similar point; such similarities do not usually indicate plagiarism because many writers do not, as a practice, indicate the sources of their glosses. We provide the designation ("standard") to indicate a gloss in common use. We use ≈ for "equivalent to" and = for "exactly alike."
3. Original comment. When the second line is blank after the writer's siglum, we are signaling that we have not seen that writer's gloss prior to that date. We welcome correction on this point.
4. Words from the play under discussion (lemmata). In the third line or lines of a record, the lemmata after the TLN (Through Line Number] are from Q2. When the difference between Q2 and the authors' lemma(ta) is significant, we include the writer's lemma(ta). When the gloss is for a whole line or lines, only the line number(s) appear. Through Line Numbers are numbers straight through a play and include stage directions. Most modern editions still use the system of starting line numbers afresh for every scene and do not assign line numbers to stage directions.
5. Bibliographic information. In the third line of the record, where we record the gloss, we provide concise bibliographic information, expanded in the bibliographies, several of which are in process. 
6. References to other lines or other works. For a writer's reference to a passage elsewhere in Ham. we provide, in brackets, Through Line Numbers (TLN) from the Norton F1 (used by permission); we call these xref, i.e., cross references. We call references to Shakespearean plays other than Ham. “parallels” (//) and indicate Riverside act, scene and line number as well as TLN. We call references to non-Shakespearean works “analogues.”
7. Further information: See the Introduction for explanations of other abbreviations.
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Notes for lines 0-1017 ed. Bernice W. Kliman
| 926		A sauagenes in {vnreclamed} <vnreclaim’d> blood, | 2.1.35 | 
|---|
| 926		Of generall assault. | 2.1.35 | 
|---|
 
1747		warb
warb
926		sauagenes] Warburton (ed. 1747): “Savageness, for wildness.”
 
warb
926		Of generall assault] Warburton (ed. 1747): “i.e. such as youth in general is liable to.”
 
1765		john1
john1 = warb 
926		sauagenes] 
 
john1 = warb
926		Of generall assault]
 
1773		v1773
v1773 = john
926		Of generall assault]
 
1778		v1778
v1778 = v1773
926		Of generall assault]
 
1785		v1785
v1785 = v1778
926		Of generall assault]
 
1787		ann
ann = v1785
926		Of generall assault]
 
1790		mal
mal = v1785
926		Of generall assault]
 
1793		v1793
v1793 = mal
926		Of generall assault]
 
1803		v1803
v1803 = v1793
926		Of generall assault]
 
1805		Seymour
Seymour ≈ warb without attribution 
926		Of generall assault] Seymour (1805,  2:166): “Attacking the constitutions of most young men.”
 
1813		v1813
v1813 = v1803
926		Of generall assault]
 
1826		sing1
sing1 ≈ warb without attribution; magenta shows new elements
926		sauagenes Of generall assault] Singer (ed. 1826): “‘A wildness of untamed blood, such as youth is generally assailed by.’” 
 
1833		valpy
valpy ≈ warb without attribution 
926		sauagenes] Valpy (ed. 1833): “For Wildness.”
 
valpy = warb  without attribution 
926		Of generall assault] Valpy (ed. 1833): “Such as youth in general is liable to.”
 
1854		del2 
del2 
926		sauagenes]Delius (ed. 1854): “savageness sagt bei Sh. weniger, als es jetzt sagt, = Ausgelassenheit.” [savageness in Sh. means less than it now does, = exuberance.]
 
del2
926		Of generall assault] Delius (ed. 1854): “ ‘Die Jeden anfällt, der sich Keiner entziehen kann.” [That which happens to everyone, can detract from no one.]
 
1856		hud1
hud1 = sing1 without attribution 
926		Of generall assault]
 
1867		dyce2
dyce2 ≈ warb without attribution 
926		sauagenes Of generall assault] Dyce (ed. 1867, Glossary): “A wildness in untamed blood, to which all young men are liable.”
 
1868		c&mc
c&mc = warb  without attribution + two additional synonyms in magenta
926		sauagenes] 
Clarke & 
Clarke (ed. 1868): “‘Wildness,’ ‘
irregularly,’ ‘
lawlessness.’”
 
 
c&mc ≈ warb  without attribution 
926		Of generall assault] 
Clarke & 
Clarke (ed. 1868): “‘Which generally attacks youth,’ or ‘to which youth is generally liable.’”
  
1870		rug1
rug1: standard
926		Of generall assault] Moberly (ed. 1870): “such as generally attacks people.”
 
1872		hud2 
hud2 = hud1 
926		Of generall assault]
 
1872		cln1
cln1: xref; Cotgrave
926		vnreclamed] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): “untamed. See [Rom. 4.1.47 (2476)]: ‘Since this same wayward girl is so reclaim’d.’ Cotgrave has: ‘Adomestiquer: To tame, reclaim, make gentle.’ A term of falconry.”
 
cln1 ≈ sing2
926		Of generall assault] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): “such as generally attack youth.”
 
1873		rug2 
rug2 = rug1
926		Of generall assault] 
 
1877		v1877
v1877 = cln1 (minus 1st sentence)
926		vnreclamed] 
Furness (ed. 1877): “
Clarendon: Cotgrave has ‘Adomestiquer: to tame, reclaim, make gentle.’ A term of falconry.”
 
 
v1877 = Dyce2
926		Of generall assault] 
Furness (ed. 1877): “
Dyce (
Gloss.): A wildness in untamed blood, to which all young men are liable.”
  
1881		hud3 
hud3 = hud2
926		Of generall assault]
 
1885		macd
macd = cln1 (minus //, including falconry from Cotgrave) without attribution 
926		vnreclamed] MacDonald (ed. 1885): “Untamed, as a hawk.”
 
macd
926		MacDonald (ed. 1885): “The lines are properly arranged in Q. 
 
macd ≈ warb without attribution 
926		Of generall assault] MacDonald (ed. 1885): “which assails all.”
 
1885		mull
mull  contra standard 
926		Of generall assault] Mull (ed. 1885): “All the editors regard this line as meaning, ‘that generally besets youth.’ I submit another for consideration: ‘breathe his faults in such a manner that they may seem like the taints of liberty, &c., and only like imputations (‘assaults’) of a common (‘general’) but not dishonourable nature breathe or put upon him.”
 
1904		ver
ver: standard
926		vnreclaimed] Verity  (ed. 1904): “untamed; like a wild animal or bird.”
 
ver: standard
926		of generall assault] Verity  (ed. 1904): “such as most young men are liable to.”
 
1938	parc 
parc 
926		Of generall assualt]  Parrott & Craig  (ed. 1938): “common to all men.”
 
 1939		kit2
kit2: standard
 926		vnreclaimed] Kittredge (ed. 1939): " "not recalled from a state of wild nature; untamed by age and experience." 
kit2: standard
 926		of generall assault] Kittredge (ed. 1939): "attacking everybody; to which all young men are exposed." 
 
1947		cln2
cln2: standard
 926		vnreclaimed] Rylands (ed. 1947): "untamed."
cln2: standard
 926		of generall assault] Rylands (ed. 1947): "to which many are liable." 
 
1957	pel1 
pel1: standard
926		vnreclamed] Farnham (ed. 1957): “untamed.”
pel1: standard
926		Of generall assault] Farnham (ed. 1957): “assailing all young men.”
 
1970	 pel2 
 pel2 = pel1 
926  	     vnreclamed] Farnham (ed. 1970): “untamed”
 pel2 = pel1
926  	     Of generall assault] Farnham (ed. 1970): “assailing all young men”
 
1980	pen2 
pen2 
926		     Spencer (ed. 1980): “a wildness . . . that attacks all indiscriminately.”
pen2 
926		  vnreclamed]  Spencer (ed. 1980): “unreformed (like an untamed hawk).”
 
1982 	 ard2 
 
ard2: xref; //
926 	 sauagenes] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “The characteristic of wild creatures, whose animal instincts, supposedly situated in the blood  (see 468 CN, and cf. Tem. 4.1.53,  ’th’ fire i’th’ blood’), are unreclaimed,   i.e. untamed.”  
 
ard2: standard
926 	 Of . . . assault] Jenkins (ed. 1982): “which assails men in general, i.e. to which most men are liable.” 
  
 
1985		cam4
cam4
926		Of generall assault] Edwards (ed. 1985): "Which assails everyone."
 
1987		oxf4
oxf4: standard
926		sauagenes . . . assault] Hibbard (ed. 1987): "i.e. natural wildness of undisciplined passion to which all young men are prone."
oxf4
926		vnreclamed] Hibbard (ed. 1987): "untamed, unsubdued (originally a technical term in falconry."
 
1988	bev2 
bev2:  standard 
926		    Bevington (ed. 1988): “a wildness in untamed youth that assails all indiscriminately.”
 
1992  	  fol2 
fol2:  standard 
926	 Mowat & Werstine (ed. 1992): “i.e., a wildness in untamed blood, which all young people can be accused of”
  
2006	 ard3q2
 ard3q2: //; xref 
925 	                 Thompson & Taylor  (ed. 2006): “This indulgent view of Laertes’ misdemeanours is expressed in the same terms as Lepidus’ excuses for Antony: ’His faults, in him, seem as the spots of heaven, / More fiery by night’s blackness’ (Ant. 1.4.12-13). See also [3700 CN]”
 
926