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751 to 760 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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751) Commentary Note for line 2563:
2563 That I essentially am not in madnesse,

    ... in a mental condition under examination, to pronounce, after reading this, that Shakespeare intended to represent Hamlet as really mad.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> ...
752) Commentary Note for line 2564:
2564 But {mad} <made> in craft, t'were good you let him knowe,

    ... pare 2380-4, where allusion is made to this prose text but without assertion of Shakespeare's use of it as a source. </fnc></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1832<tab> </ ...

    ... e theory of Hamlet's pretended madness finds no support in the ultimate text of Shakespeare beyond 3 or 4 passages. One of these [quotes 2563-4 That I am . . . ...
753) Commentary Note for line 2566:
2566 Would from a paddack, from a bat, a gib,

    ... s or breeds on land, and is very large, and boney, and big.' Part I.ch.viii. By Shakespeare it is made the name of a familiar spirit: &#8216;<i>Paddock</i> call ...
754) Commentary Note for line 2569:
2569 Vnpeg the basket on the houses top,

    ... pril '90.</para> <para>&#x201C;Since writing the above I have learned that this Shakespearean co-incidence did not occur here but in some Southern town &amp; se ...
755) Commentary Note for line 2573:
2573 {Ger.}<Qu.> Be thou assur'd, if words be made of breath

    ... udson</sc> (ed. 1851-6): &#x201C;&#8216;I confess,' says Coleridge, &#8216;that Shakespeare has left the character of the Queen in an unpleasant perplexity. Was ...

    ... i></hanging><para>2573-6<tab> </tab><sc>Baldwin</sc> (1964, p. 242): &#x201C;In Shakespeare, although she [Gertrude] protests to Hamlet: 'Be thou assured, if wo ...

    ... '</i> (Cambridge, 1941), pp.196-200 and, slightly modifying, J.M. Nosworthy, <i>Shakespeare's Occasional Plays</i> (London, 1965), pp. 208-210.&#x201D;</para> < ...
756) Commentary Note for line 2576:
2576 Ham. I must to England, you knowe that.

    ... observes, it does not appear how Hamlet knew the king's intention. Most likely, Shakespear, as &lt;/p.321&gt;&lt;p.322&gt; he knew he intended to send him there ...

    ... of manner and contemptuous flippancy when speaking to his &#8216;uncle-father.' Shakespeare, like the all-accomplished dramatist that he is, gives certain point ...

    ... scene 3) and his interview with his mother (Scene 4). It is quite possible that Shakespeare meant us to suppose that, while Hamlet passed through the corridors ...

    ... him of the King's intention. I cannot conceive that it was a mere oversight on Shakespeare's part; for we must not forget that he revised the whole play, and t ...

    ... ow Hamlet knows of it has not been shown. But the quotation given suggests what Shakespeare implies, that he &#8216;doubted' or guessed it would be the next mov ...

    ... The present passage shows that he had already learned of the project&#8212;how, Shakespeare does not say, but it is easy to imagine; for Hamlet was not destitut ...

    ... [1825-6] and announced to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern at 3.3.2-4 [2273-5], but Shakespeare often uses the convention whereby characters can be assumed to share ...
757) Commentary Note for line 2577+1:
2577+1 { Ham. Ther's letters seald, and my two Schoolefellowes,} 2577+1

    ... , got thro' all the Errors of this long <i>Act</i>, save a slight one, in which SHAKESPEARE is no ways concern'd, committed by Mr. POPE, in a <i>Note</i> of his ...

    ... ued in the Introduction (pp. 14-19) that their removal is part of a revision by Shakespeare of the later part of the play. (1) Hamlet's plan to postpone his rev ...

    ... </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;not in F. Edwards argues that this passage was cut by Shakespeare as part of a revision of the later part of the play; he claims that ...
758) Commentary Note for line 2577+3:
2577+3 {They beare the mandat, they must sweep my way}

    ... arged; whether we are to take this as an oversight on &lt;/p.57&gt;&lt;p.58&gt; Shakespeare's part, or whether we should understand Hamlet to be speaking of sus ...
759) Commentary Note for line 2577+5:
2577+5 {For tis the sport to haue the enginer}

    ... , nicht <i>engineer</i> mit dem Tone auf der Endsylbe, ist Sh.'s Wort.&#x201D; [Shakespeare's word is <i>&#233;nginer</i> from <i>engine</i>, not <i>engineer</i ...

    ... l enginer of phrases.' Heywood has <i>mutineer</i> for &#8216;mutineer,' though Shakespeare has it both ways; and the word <i>engineer</i> does not seem to have ...
760) Commentary Note for line 2577+7:
2577+7 {But I will delue one yard belowe their mines,}

    ... ing a town (the word was later used for the explosives buried in such tunnels). Shakespeare had drawn on Holinshed's description of the use of mines at the sieg ...

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