what does "Not Hannah Samuel more" mean?

I'm reading A Woman of No Importance by Oscar Wilde. Below is from Mrs. Arbuthnot to her son, Gerald:

[...] Gerald, when you were naked I clothed you, when you were hungry I gave you food. Night and day all that long winter I tended you. No office is too mean, no care too lowly for the thing we women love- and oh! how I loved you. Not Hannah Samuel more. And you needed love, for you were weakly, and only love could have kept you alive. Only love can keep any one alive. [...]

Really, I couldn't understand "Not Hannah Samuel more", from a grammar point of view. What does it mean actually?

Are some parts omitted? What is the complete form of this sentence?

Background

I suppose Hannah and Samuel are from Bible, below is quoted from Wikipedia:

In the biblical narrative, Hannah is one of two wives of Elkanah; the other, Peninnah, who bore children to Elkanah, but Hannah remained childless.

Nevertheless, Elkanah preferred Hannah. Every year Elkanah would offer a sacrifice at the Shiloh sanctuary, and give Penninah and her children a portion but he gave Hannah a double portion "because he loved her, and the LORD had closed her womb" (NIV). One day Hannah went up to the temple, and prayed with great weeping (I Samuel 1:10), while Eli the High Priest was sitting on a chair near the doorpost. In her prayer she asked God for a son and in return she vowed to give the son back to God for the service of the Shiloh priests. She promised he would remain a Nazarite all the days of his life.

Eli thought she was drunk and questioned her. When she explained herself, he sent her away and effectively said that her prayer would be heard and her desire granted. As promised, she conceived and bore a son. She called his name Samuel, "since she had asked the Lord for him" (1 Samuel 1:20 NAB). She raised him until he was weaned and brought him to the temple along with a sacrifice. The first 10 verses of 1 Samuel 2 record her song of praise to the Lord for answering her petition. Eli announced another blessing on Hannah, and she conceived 3 more sons and 2 daughters, making six in total.


Solution 1:

In isolation, Not Hannah Samuel more is an ungrammatical utterance. In the context of the paragraph, though, we can make out that this is a highly elliptical way of saying:

Hannah did not love Samuel more.

This sort of ellipsis is very rarely found in modern speech or writing.