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391 to 400 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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391) Commentary Note for line 955:
955 Your bait of falshood {take} <takes> this {carpe} <Cape> of truth,

    ... </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 ...
392) Commentary Note for line 957:
957 With windlesses, and with assaies of bias,

    ... p. 226&gt;&lt;p. 227&gt; in Golding's Ovid, the seventh book, the book in which Shakespeare was so well read: &#8216; . . . like a wily fox he runs not forth di ...

    ... assaies of bias</b>] <sc>Anon. </sc>(1869, pp. 47-8): &lt;p. 47&gt; &#x201C;In Shakespeare's day, . . . <i>windlace, </i>literally a winding, was used to expr ...

    ... h the player does not aim at the Jack (&#8216;or mistress,' as it was called in Shakespeare's time) directly, but in a curve, so that the bias bring the ball ro ...
393) Commentary Note for line 958:
958 By indirections find directions out,

    ... c and affected phrase, being given to Polonius, whose talk is of that kind; but Shakespeare seriously uses it for indirect or crooked moral conduct, dishonesty ...

    ... us strategies to approach Claudius on the bias [. . .]&#x201D;; Norwegians are Shakespeare's bait: &#x201C;by such pageants that detain us in false gaze he ref ...
394) Commentary Note for line 966:
966 Pol. And let him ply his musique.

    ... ll was among the indications of an interior (cp. G. H. Cowling, <i>Music on the Shakespearean Stage </i>[1915]). &#x201D; </para> </cn> <cn> <sigla>1930<tab></t ...

    ... para>966<tab> </tab><b>ply</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "work hard at. In Shakespeare's day a gentleman was expected to be proficient in music."</para></c ...
395) Commentary Note for line 973:
973 Ophe. My Lord, as I was sowing in my {closset} <Chamber>,

    ... oet's Conduct in this Particular. To conform to the Ground-work of his Plot, <i>Shakespeare</i> makes the young Prince feign himself mad. I cannot but think thi ...

    ... naturally than this description she gives us: 'tis another fine instance of <i>Shakespear</i>'s excellence in the <i>Hyperbaton</i>, which the reader will reme ...
396) Commentary Note for line 974:
974 Lord Hamlet with his doublet all vnbrac'd,

    ... 16;double,' i.e. inner garment, as compared with the overcoat or outer garment. Shakespeare makes his characters (e.g. Julius Caesar) wear &#8216;doublets,' wha ...

    ... the astounding pantomime with the frightened, distracted and puzzled girl, that Shakespeare decided we should not witness, but which we can visualize thanks to ...

    ... tab> doublet] <sc>Thompson &amp; Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;jacket. Shakespeare here as elsewhere imagines his characters as being dressed in Englis ...
397) Commentary Note for line 975:
975 No hat vpon his head, his stockins fouled,

    ... the line that comes after, which is a sort of explaining; a perpetual usage of Shakespeare's when he has brought in a word that is remov'd from the common, and ...

    ... s &#8216;Shakespeare Restored,' knew of no Quarto earlier than that of 1637 (<i>Shakespeare Restored</i>, p. 70), and it is just possible that some copy of this ...

    ... /sc></hanging><para>975<tab> </tab><b>No hat</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "Shakespeare and his contemporaries, living in draughty houses, wore their hats i ...
398) Commentary Note for line 976:
976 Vngartred, and downe gyued to his ancle,

    ... rom thence adopted both the Verb and Substantive into their Tongues: so that <i>Shakespeare </i>could not be at a Loss for the Use of the Term.&#x201D;</para></ ...

    ... rom thence adopted both the Verb and Substantive into their Tongues: so that <i>Shakespeare </i>could not be at a Loss for the Use of the Term.&#x201D; somewhat ...

    ... nkins</sc> (ed. 1982): &#x201C;fallen down so as to resemble gives (fetters). A Shakespearean coinage &#x201D; </para></cn> <cn><sigla>1985<tab> </tab><sc>c ...

    ... sc> (ed. 1987): "hanging down round his ankles like fetters &#8211; a typically Shakespearian compound coinage."</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1988<tab></tab><sc>bev ...

    ... ed] <sc>Thompson &amp; Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;down-gyv&#232;d (a Shakespearean coinage)&#x201D;</para></cn> <tlnrange>976</tlnrange> </book> ...
399) Commentary Note for line 984:
984 Oph. He tooke me by the wrist, and held me hard,

    ... pon Ophelia's simple nature the belief that he was mad; I cannot but think that Shakespeare meant something more than this.&#x201D; Hamlet must have entertained ...
400) Commentary Note for line 986:
986 And with his other hand thus ore his brow,

    ... (1988, p. 33) quotes 986: &#x201C;What you do, of course is make a sign--a sign Shakespeare required to give an idea of Ophelia's image of Hamlet's distraction. ...

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