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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 371) Commentary Note for line 885:885 The time is out of ioynt, ô cursed spight... I believe, lies the key to Hamlet's whole behavior, and it is clear to me what Shakespeare has set out to portray: a heavy deed placed on a soul which is not a ...
... hompson & Taylor</sc> ed. 2006, p. 38) believes that “the lament of Shakespeare's hero that 'the time is out of joint' was topical in 1600. Hamlet e ...
... full of business, and that of so important a nature, that perhaps no author but Shakespeare could have produced any thing after, relative to the same story, wor ...
... ned most of that scene at the beginning of the second act, which good sense and Shakespeare's friends must lament the general omission of.”<tab> </tab></ ...
... ></tab> <sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982): “The Q2 <i>old</i> gives a clue to Shakespeare's conception of the character, and occurring now instead of at Polon ...
... rance, perhaps suggests that the conception has developed. Q2's (and presumably Shakespeare's) <i>or two</i> is redundant; the scene as it came to be written e ...
... ppears in Sannazaro's <i>Arcadia, </i>1504 (cf. <i>Ophelia</i>) and is used by Shakespeare in <i>Oth.</i>”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1939<tab> </tab><sc>k ...
375) Commentary Note for line 892:892 Pol. You shall doe meruiles wisely good Reynaldo,... ging><para>892<tab> </tab><b>meruiles</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "very. Shakespeare often uses <i>marvellous</i> in this sense; compare [<i>MND</i> 3.1. ...
... 1C;<sc>Clarendon</sc> adopts the Qq reading, and justifies is on the thoroughly Shakespearian usage of various parts of speech as nouns, such as ‘avouch,' ...
377) Commentary Note for line 898:898 Enquire me first what Danskers are in Parris,... dable because “in modern Danish Dansker does in fact mean a Dane. But in Shakespeare's time it was not so. Dansker then signified something coming from D ...
... ebster in <i>The White Devil,</i> (1612) who confused Danske with Denmark, and Shakespeare may also have been one. <p. 65> </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1970 ...
... (his fellow-countrymen). The unusually correct form of the word seems to imply Shakespeare's interest in giving local colour.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla ...
... t leaves no doubt that this, as in modern Danish, means Danes. But a Dansker in Shakespeare's time was strictly a citizen of Dansk or Danzig —as in Purcha ...
... y Contributions', <i>Stockholm Studies in Modern Philology, </i> 17: 1949, and 'Shakespeare's Danskers', <i>Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik,</i ...
... > 100-101: 1964-5) suggests that it may have been some such confusion that led Shakespeare to suppose that Denmark bordered on Poland (1102, 2735-8).” ...
... sk or Danzig' (a city now in Poland, well known to travelling English actors in Shakespeare's time); this is the only example listed in <i>OED</i>, though there ...
378) Commentary Note for line 899:899 And how, and who, what meanes, and where they keepe,... <sc>Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868): “These two lines afford a notable example of Shakespeare's elliptical style: ‘they live there' being understood after & ...
379) Commentary Note for line 901:901 By this encompasment, and drift of question... c> (ed. 2006): “act of encompassing, i.e. of talking around the topic (a Shakespearean coinage: see [275 CN]”</para> <br/> <hanging><sc>ard3q2</s ...
380) Commentary Note for line 902:902 That they doe know my sonne, come you more neerer... rer] <sc>Spencer</sc> (ed. 1980):“The 'double comparative' is common in Shakespeare's grammar.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1982 <tab></tab> <sc>ar ...
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