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411 to 420 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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411) Commentary Note for line 1030:
1030 I cannot {dreame} <deeme> of: I entreate you both

    ... ot dream of':--So the 4tos. The folio, &#8216;deeme of,' and not improbably so Shakespeare wrote.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1870<tab> </tab><tab> </tab><s ...
412) Commentary Note for line 1051:
1051 And heere giue vp our selues in the full bent,

    ... as any relation to archery, the technical terms of which were too well known in Shakespear's time to be misapplied; to bend the bow is to <i>fasten</i> the stri ...

    ... general:--&#8216;in the devoted force of our faculty.' The latter is more like Shakespere.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1899<tab> </tab>ard1</sc></sigla> ...
413) Commentary Note for line 1081:
1081 His fathers death, and our <o're->hastie marriage.

    ... y herein advance a <i>false Nicety</i> of Ear against the <i>Licence of </i><sc>shakespeare</sc>'s <i>Numbers:</i> nay, indeed, against the Licence of all <i>En ...
414) Commentary Note for line 1092:
1092 Was falsly borne in hand, sends out arrests

    ... eluded, imposed on, deceived by false appearances. It is used several times by Shakespeare, Macbeth, Act iii. Sc. 1; Much Ado about Nothing, Act iv. Sc. 1; Cym ...

    ... #x201C;The nominative pronoun was not <i>quite</i> indispensable to the verb in Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1899<tab> </tab>ard1</sc> ...
415) Commentary Note for line 1098:
1098 Giues him {threescore}<three> thousand crownes in anuall fee,

    ... i>Pope</i> would advance a false Nicety of Ear against the <i>License</i> of <i>Shakespeare's</i> Numbers; nay, indeed, against the License of all <i>English</i ...
416) Commentary Note for lines 1106-08:
1106 King. It likes vs well,
1107 And at our more considered time, wee'le read,
1108 Answer, and thinke vpon this busines:

    ... give anAnswer to an Affair before he had considered it. It is to be supposed <i>Shakespeare</i> wrote to this Purpose. &#8216;And our more consider'd Time we'll ...

    ... ers, Schollers, eye, tongue, sword</i> instead of <i>Schollers, Souldiers</i>). Shakespeare does nowhere care for an unimpeachable correspondence in the parts o ...
417) Commentary Note for line 1109:
1109 Meane time, we thanke you for your well tooke labour,

    ... sc> &amp; <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): "This form of the participle is common in Shakespeare. See Two Gentlemen of Verona, v. 4. 105."</para> </cn><tlnrange>110 ...
418) Commentary Note for lines 1112-13:
1112 Pol. This busines is <very> well ended.
1113 My Liege and Maddam, to expostulate

    ... self with this reflexion, that at least it was <i>method</i>. It is certain <i>Shakespear</i> excels in nothing more than in the preservation of his character ...

    ... d variety of character</i> (says our great poet in his admirable preface to <i>Shakespear</i>) <i>we must add the wonderful preservation of it</i>. We have sa ...

    ... ly violated in the excellent <i>Precepts </i>and <i>Instructions</i> which <i>Shakespear</i> makes his statesman give to his son and servant in the middle of ...

    ... g> <para><sc>1112 Caldecott</sc> (ed. 1819): &#x201C;Because Pope, speaking of Shakespeare, had said what is generally true, that &#8216;to the life and variet ...

    ... overshoots himself. Possibly, The Earl of Suffolke. Both were Chamberlains. And Shakespeare <small>not</small> not seem to have been in the same favour with him ...

    ... The Lord Chamberlain's Servants were appearing in the <small>titles</small> of Shakespeare's plays <small>after the cast held the offier </small>&amp; often be ...

    ... otes collected by Sir Nicholas L'Estrange, in which we have the story of Jonson Shakespeare and the <i>Latin</i> spoons, there is one, No. 77, in which the mast ...

    ... Two Gentlemen of Verona, iii. 1. 251:' The time now serves not to expostulate.' Shakespeare also uses the word in its modern and legitimate sense."</para></cn> ...

    ... ng and end of a speech'. Dr Abbott, Sh. Gr., &#167; 511. Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XVI, 235.&#x201D;</para> <para>1113 <b>to expostulate< ...

    ... (ed. 1882): &#x201C;i.e. to discuss. Compare A Larum for London (The School of Shakespeare, ed. R. Simpson, Lon. 1872, p. 42):&#8212; &#8216;<i>That men are sl ...

    ... x201C;That is, &#8216;discuss in full.' <i>Expostulate </i>occurs five times in Shakespeare, which are are all inserted in Schmidt under the meaning of <i>discu ...
419) Commentary Note for lines 1117-18:
1117 Therefore <since> breuitie is the soule of wit,
1118 And tediousnes the lymmes and outward florishes,

    ... ng><para>1117 <b>brevity is the soul of wit</b>] <sc>Jenkins </sc>(ed. 1982): "Shakespeare glances at the current stylistic controversy and the cult of brevity ...
420) Commentary Note for line 1132:
1132 Thus it remaines, and the remainder thus
1132 Perpend,

    ... i>perpend</i>.&#x201D; Again: &#8216;My queen <i>perpend</i> what I pronounce.' Shakespeare has put the same word into the mouth of Polonius. <sc>Steevens</sc>. ...

    ... hus . . . Perpend</b>] <sc>Caldecott</sc> (ed. 1819): Because Pope, speaking of Shakespeare, had said what isgenerally true, that "to the life and variety of hi ...

    ... ons</sc> (in IRVING &amp; MARSHALL ed. 1890): &#x201C;This word is only used in Shakespeare as a sign of affection or mockery; it is put into the mouth of the b ...

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