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651 to 660 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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651) Commentary Note for line 2298:
2298 For we will fetters put {about} <vpon> this feare

    ... ee-footed</b>] <sc>Clarke &amp; Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868, rpt. 1878): &#x201C;Here Shakespeare poetically uses the word &#8216;fear' as personifying Hamlet, who go ...

    ... used in a causative sense, is equivalent to <i>object of fear</i>; see Schmidt, Shakespeare-Lexicon, s. <i>Fear</i>. Compare Psalm LIII, 5: <i>There were they ...
652) Commentary Note for line 2303:
2303 Behind the Arras I'le conuay my selfe

    ... s, where the principal manufacture of such stuffs was. Dr. Johnson thought that Shakespeare had outstepped probability in supposing Falstaff to sleep behind the ...

    ... g unseen, We may of their encounter frankly judge.'&#8212;The arras-hangings in Shakespeare's time, says <i>Malone</i>, were hung at such a distance from the wa ...

    ... rity</sc> (ed. 1904): &#x201C;implying secrecy. Convey often has a bad sense in Shakespeare, e.g. as a colloquial word for &#8216;steal'; cf. <i>Wiv</i>. [1.3.2 ...
653) Commentary Note for line 2304:
2304 To heare the processe, I'le warrant shee'letax him home,

    ... F has the uncontracted form in contrast to [1.2.242 (443)], 3.4.6 (2382)]. But Shakespeare's ms. need not have been consistent, and whatever the spelling, the ...
654) Commentary Note for line 2306:
2306 Tis meete that some more audience then a mother,

    ... s &#8216;a mother,' and not to audience; according to an occasional practice of Shakespeare's in this respect. See Note 11, [4.2.70 (2332)].&#x201D; </para></cn ...
655) Commentary Note for line 2312:
2312 O my offence is ranck, it smels to heauen,

    ... erpent. From such an error we are rescued by one of the supreme passages in all Shakespeare&#8212;the King's soliloquy after &#8216;The Mousetrap' has caught hi ...
656) Commentary Note for line 2315:
2315 Though inclination be as sharp as will,

    ... ce of Opinion, That <i>Will</i> is the true Reading, which is sometimes with <i>Shakespear</i> of the same Signification with <i>Libido</i>. See [3.4.88 (2463)] ...
657) Commentary Note for line 2327:
2327 My fault is past, but oh what forme of prayer

    ... .&#x201D; &lt;/p.256&gt;</para> <para><fnc> Hunter clearly believes that Q1 was Shakespeare's earlier version of the later quarto and first folio. </fnc></para> ...
658) Commentary Note for line 2328:
2328 Can serue my turne, forgiue me my foule murther,

    ... on</sc> (ed. 1891): &#x201C;be of service in my case? A phrase very frequent in Shakespeare, turn being equivalent to occasion, exigence.&#x201D;</para></cn> <c ...
659) Commentary Note for line 2330:
2330 Of those effects for which I did the murther; 2330

    ... d. 1987): &#x201C;fruits, things acquired. This sense appears to be peculiar to Shakespeare (<i>OED sb.</i> 4).&#x201D;</para> </cn> <cn> <sigla>1997<tab></tab> ...
660) Commentary Note for line 2332:
2332 May one be pardond and retaine th'offence? {I1v}

    ... the same as to ask whether his offence could be remitted while it was retain'd. Shakespear here repeated a word with propriety and elegance which he employed tw ...

    ... i>[arburton] reads <i>th'effects</i>, esteeming the other reading improper. <i>Shakespeare's</i> meaning is plain enough, May I be pardoned, yet still go on of ...

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