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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... ging>Coleridge</hanging><para>804-77<tab> </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, rpt. in the<i> Bristol Gazette</i>, 11 Nov ...
352) Commentary Note for line 814:814 Dwelling in all Denmarke... ging>Coleridge</hanging><para>814-15<tab> </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, 1813, Coleridge's notes, transcribed by Er ...
353) Commentary Note for line 815:815 But hee's an arrant knaue.... 1C;veritable, downright (an 'opprobrious intensive' (<i>OED</i>) always used by Shakespeare with nouns like knave, traitor, thief, whore)”</para></cn> ...
354) Commentary Note for line 819:819 And so without more circumstance at all... nce</b>] <sc>Clarke & Clarke </sc>(ed. 1868): “Here, as elsewhere by Shakespeare, used in the sense which it formerly sometimes bore of ‘circum ...
... D;</para> <para><b>Ed. note:</b> Rushton quotes six other uses of this term in Shakespeare, including [F1] 1648.</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1929<tab> </tab><sc>tra ...
... account for his name having become a familiar oath with a prince of Denmark. As Shakespeare gave the living manners, customs, and habits of thinking of his own ...
... n. </hanging> <para>829<tab> </tab>by Saint Patrick] <sc>anon.</sc> “The Shakespearian Ghost,” rev. of a rpt of the 1572 trans. of Lavater, ed. J ...
... e. The idea of the Ghost as demon also appears in Voragine. “In a word, Shakespeare could have gleaned most of the theology in <i>Hamlet</i> from 'The G ...
... t. See Holinshed, <i>Chronicles, </i> 1587, 2: 28; D.P. Barton, <i>Ireland and Shakespeare,</i> 1919, pp. 30ff.” </para></cn> <cn><sigla>1985<tab> < ...
... reland (see <i>serpent</i> in [726]). This line (present in all three texts) is Shakespeare's only reference to the saint or the name apart from references to F ...
356) Commentary Note for line 831:831 It is an honest Ghost that let me tell you,... ost,' but so far reverts to the positivism [absence of religion] that underlies Shakespeare's thinking as to speak soon after of that 'undiscovered country from ...
... note:</b> James Gray (“‘Swear by my Sword': A Note in Johnson's <i>Shakespeare</i>.” <i>SQ</i> 27 (1976): 205-8) asserts that nowhere in Bra ...
... : 226): “The oath administered to the Knights of the Bath in the time of Shakespeare ended thus:—‘In witness of all these, you shall kiss you ...
... quoted Bartholinus to show that with the Danes it was a religious ceremony, but Shakespeare attended only to the manners of his own country. <small>In the openi ...
358) Commentary Note for line 845:845 Ghost. Sweare. <Ghost cries vnder the Stage.>... ition connected with the most mysterious truths of revealed religion,—and Shakespeare's consequent reverence in his treatment of it,—and the foul, e ...
... e dramatic purpose might be of having the ghost cry under the stage: “If Shakespeare did not expect (rightly or wrongly) that a weird effect could be thu ...
... ef' (for in the strictest sense it is that) has, in a manner characteristically Shakespearean, serious and even sinister overtones. The situation and dialogue a ...
... (see Dessen & Thomson, 'under the stage'), though the only other example of Shakespeare's use of the latter effect is the SD '<i>Music of the Hoboys is unde ...
... “[This and other similar quotations show the fame and and reputation of Shakespeare, being popularly known lines quoted or imitated for the puyrpose of ...
... ollier </sc>(ed. 1843): “ ‘True-penny' was used by authors besides Shakespeare, by Nash, for instance, in his ‘Almond for a Parrot.' <small>I ...
... r an honest fellow</small>; and it has peculiar appropriateness as here used by Shakespeare in reference to the ghost's voice beneath the earth, since it has be ...
... in <i>George Eliot Letters </i>9,166), says: “I have always fancied that Shakespeare intended Hamlet to be, not mad, but erratic in the brain, ‘on ...
... <i>True-Penny</i> has not been traced to any writer before or contemporary with Shakespeare; and Johnson's and other dictionaries cite him as the sole authority ...
... >846-7<tab> </tab>trupenny] <sc>Wilson</sc> (<i>apud</i> anon. rev. “The Shakespearian Ghost,” <i>TLS</i> 1930: 24) asserts that Hamlet speaks thi ...
... b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "trusty fellow – <small>not elsewhere in Shakespeare."</small></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1992 <tab> </tab> <sc>fol2 </sc ...
... – earliest instance of this sense in <i>OED</i>; <small>not elsewhere in Shakespeare. Could it have been a theatrical name for the space under the stage ...
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