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551 to 560 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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551) Commentary Note for line 1909:
1909 That no reuenew hast but thy good spirits

    ... <sc>Hudson</sc> (ed. 1881): &#x201C;Here, and generally, though not always, in Shakespeare, <i>revenue </i> has the account on the second syllable. And so, I ...
552) Commentary Note for line 1911:
1911 No, let the candied {tongue licke} <tongue, like> absurd pompe,

    ... rd</b>] <sc>Clark</sc> &amp; <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): "In all other passages Shakespeare accents this word on the second syllable, as we do."</para></cn> <cn ...
553) Commentary Note for line 1912:
1912 And crooke the pregnant hindges of the knee

    ... ln1</sc></hanging> <para>1912 <sc>Clark</sc> &amp; <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): "Shakespeare has here unconsciously made a bold use of the figure synecdoche, whe ...
554) Commentary Note for line 1914:
1914 Since my deare soule was mistris of {her} <my> choice,

    ... 4th and 5th, Sh'ath Quarto 6th); &#8216;distinguish her election' is decidedly Shakespearian, and may be what the poet wrote. The use of a cognate accusative i ...

    ... be what the poet wrote. The use of a cognate accusative is a marked feature of Shakespeare's diction. &#8216;of men,' too, joins better to &#8216;election' tha ...
555) Commentary Note for line 1920:
1920 Whose blood and iudgement are so well {comedled} <co-mingled>,

    ... end, fuse together'. It surely is of OE. origin and we can possibly assume that Shakespeare wrote &#8216;co-melded', which fits his meaning precisely.&#x201D;</ ...
556) Commentary Note for line 1924:
1924 In my harts core, I in my hart of hart

    ... have become a cat rather than a king.' <sc>War. </sc></para> <para>&#x201C;Poor Shakespear! your anomalies will do you no service, when once you go beyond Mr. W ...

    ... ; or the Passions of Love</i>, 1604 &#8212; in which he notices &#8216;friendly Shakespeare's tragedies' and &#8216;Prince Hamlet' &#8212; borrows the idea of h ...

    ... assion's slave, which runs as a steady theme through the plays and sonnets that Shakespeare wrote toward the end of Elizabeth's reign, his sympathies repeatedly ...
557) Commentary Note for line 1930:
1930 Euen with the very comment of {thy} <my> soule

    ... of my Soule," &amp;c.--See my Remarks on Mr. Collier's and Mr. Knight's eds. of Shakespeare, p. 214.--Mr. Knight declares himself "not convinced" by what I have ...
558) Commentary Note for line 1949:
1949 Ham. Excellent yfaith,

    ... 8216;the bird Taurus hath <i>a great voice</i>, but a small body;' and Lyly and Shakespeare both say, the empty vessel gives or makes the greatest sound.&#x201D ...
559) Commentary Note for line 1953:
1953 Ham. No, nor mine now my Lord.

    ... > m<sc>mal1</sc></sigla><para>1953 <sc>Malone</sc> (m<sc>mal1</sc>): &#x201C;As Shakespeare gives the customs &amp; mannors of his own country to all <tab> </ta ...
560) Commentary Note for line 1958:
1958 Pol. I did enact Iulius Cæsar, I was kild i'th Capitall,

    ... ed this passage to show that Chaucer uses <i>bodkin</i> for <i>dagger</i>, like Shakespeare. See p. 240.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1843<tab> </tab>col ...

    ... . Malone thinks that there was an English play on the same subject previous to Shakespeare's. Caesar was killed in <i>Pompey's portico</i>, and not in the Cap ...

    ... s to the place of Caesar's death appears in Chaucer, <i>Monkes Tale</i>, and in Shakespeare's <i>Julius Caesar</i>. So Fletcher, <i>The Noble Gentlemen</i>, V. ...

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