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341 to 350 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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341) Commentary Note for line 781:
781 I thou poore Ghost {whiles} <while> memory holds a seate

    ... ndermost of which they placed the memory. That this division was not unknown to Shakespeare we learn from [<i>LLL </i>4.2.70 (1233)], &#8216;A foolish, extravag ...

    ... et's answer to his father's words, 'Remember me' [776] is: [quotes 781-2]. Thus Shakespeare, in a triple pun (one meaning of which is unfortunately lost in mode ...
342) Commentary Note for line 783:
783 Yea, from the table of my memory

    ... a></cn> <cn><sigla>1902<tab></tab>Reed</sigla> <hanging>Reed: claims Bacon is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i> notebooks begun Dec. 1594.</hanging> <p ...

    ... n for noting down memoranda. Yet it evidently brought such writing-tablets into Shakespeare's mind (cf. <i>saws, copied</i> [785-6]) and suggested the business ...
343) Commentary Note for line 785:
785 All sawes of bookes, all formes, all pressures past

    ... sed as an abbreviated form of &#8216;impressures,' meaning &#8216;impressions.' Shakespeare elsewhere uses &#8216;impressure' for &#8216;impression.' See <small ...

    ... 'table'. Cf. <i>pressures,</i> impressions, and 1872, 'his form and pressure'. Shakespeare often uses <i>form</i> to refer to an exact image such as is given ...
344) Commentary Note for line 786:
786 That youth and obseruation coppied there,

    ... ent viewpoint--even a youthful one. 'observation' more often than not meant in Shakespeare's time a deferential, even obsequious, attention to one's superiors, ...
345) Commentary Note for line 788:
788 Within the booke and volume of my braine

    ... sc> (ed. 1987): "voluminous book (hendiadys). Hamlet, in the manner typical of Shakespeare's time, thinks of his mind as a memory bank."</para></cn> <cn> <sig ...
346) Commentary Note for line 790:
790 O most pernicious woman.

    ... smiling'&#8212;the seductively smiling&#8212;'damned villain,' so convulses and shakes him that he tries the seemingly ridiculous remedy of setting down upon th ...
347) Commentary Note for line 792:
792 My tables, <my Tables;> meet it is I set it downe

    ... ing of the metaphor</i>, that it is a great relief to me to feel convinced that Shakespeare never intended it.</para> <para>&#x201C;In Hamlet's discourse there ...

    ... &#8216;<i>Tables</i>, or books, or registers for memory of things' were used in Shakespeare's time by all ranks of persons, and carried in the pocket; what we c ...

    ... ge for the blood of a kinsman a maxim in primitive societies (and on this point Shakespeare was faithful to the spirit of the original saga), but Hamlet [. . . ...
348) Commentary Note for line 793:
793 That one may smile, and smile, and be a villaine,

    ... ce, to be written in Hamlet's tables, is expressed in the aphoristic form which Shakespeare had been taught to recognize ever since he was exposed to the <i>Bre ...
349) Commentary Note for line 800:
800 Hora. {Heauens} <Heauen> secure him.

    ... s here used in the sense of &#8216;keep safe,' &#8216;guard,' &#8216;protect.' Shakespeare uses the words &#8216;secure&#x201D; and &#8216;safe' thus respectiv ...
350) Commentary Note for line 803:
803 Ham. Hillo, ho, ho, boy come, {and} <bird,> come.

    ... e</sigla><hanging>Coleridge</hanging> <para><sc>803 Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, 1813, Coleridge's notes, transcribed by Er ...

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