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801 to 810 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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801) Commentary Note for line 2733:
2733 How ere my haps, my ioyes {will nere begin} <were ne're begun>. Exit.

    ... with the same call number as Dyce's <i>Remarks</i> <i>on Collier &amp; Knight's Shakespeare</i>.&#x201D; </fnc></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1856<tab> </tab><sc>hud1 ...

    ... Collier's Ms. Corrector agrees with him;&#8212;see Mr. Collier's one-volume <i>Shakespeare</i>.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1857<tab> </tab><sc>fieb</sc></ ...

    ... I may fare (or whatever may happen to me), my joys will never have begun.' That Shakespeare could use &#8216;were ne'er' for &#8216;will never have,' is in cons ...

    ... this final couplet of the scene shows it to be the reading probably intended by Shakespeare; although the Quartos give the last line thus&#8212;'Howe'er my haps ...

    ... C;<sc>Johnson</sc>: &#x201C;This being the end of a scene, should, according to Shakespare's custom, be rhymed. Perhaps he wrote, &#8216;Howe'er my <i>hopes</i> ...

    ... st editions adopt the Folio reading, <i>were ne're begun</i>, which conforms to Shakespeare's frequent practice of concluding a scene-ending soliloquy with a rh ...
802) Commentary Note for line 2734:
2734 Enter Fortinbrasse with {his} <an>Army {ouer the stage}.

    ... tudy of Hamlet, pp. 193, 194, has the following note on this scene: &#8216;That Shakespeare intended to refer to some particular expedition in this passage I ha ...

    ... still the extent of it does not answer to the description in the text. In 1573 Shakespeare was only nine years old; in 1580, when Walter Raleigh joined Grey's ...

    ... short speech) has no parallel in the Quarto of 1603; it was evidently added by Shakespeare on the revision of the play, a circumstance which confirms me in the ...

    ... b><i><b><i>Army ouer the stage</i></b></i>] <sc>Edelman</sc> (2000): &#x201C;In Shakespeare, simply a synonym for &#8216;soldiers,' with no implication as to th ...
803) Commentary Note for line 2737:
2737 {Craues} <Claimes> the conueyance of a promisd march

    ... o <i>clame</i> my vantage doth mute me.' Once again the repetition of a word by Shakespeare, the word &#8216;kingdom.' has acted like a sort of memory-hook. &#8 ...

    ... e, was &#8216;in the kingdom of Norway' (<i>Itinerary</i>, 1907, 1.124), and if Shakespeare thought the same, the heightened proximity of Norway might, as G. Sj ...

    ... n its northern shore; and if some recollection of the earlier venue stayed with Shakespeare even while he transferred the scene to Elsinore, it might help him t ...

    ... up, pp. 94-6). But it is not profitable to seek geographical precision for what Shakespeare is content to leave vague. The play is consistent with itself in mak ...
804) Commentary Note for line 2740:
2740 We shall expresse our dutie in his eye, 2740

    ... presence.' The expression in the text was according to a state formula used in Shakespeare's time; since it is found in &#x201C;The Regulations for the Governm ...
805) Commentary Note for line 2743:
2743 For. Goe {softly} <safely> on. <Exit.>

    ... ivation of the F1 and Q1 from a shorter stage manuscript <i>certainly edited by Shakespeare himself</i>. About this see also Del. p. 118. Note 6.]</para></cn> < ...

    ... &amp; Marshall, ed. 1890): &#x201C;<i>Softly</i> is used in many other parts of Shakespeare for &#8216;gently,' &#8216;leisurely.' The Clarendon Press edd. quot ...
806) Commentary Note for line 2743+1:
2743+1 {Enter Hamlet, Rosencraus, &c.} 2743+1

    ... aracters but did not further the plot action. The choice of such places betrays Shakespeare's own hand, and it would be strange if he had entrusted to others su ...

    ... done so; with what success I do not know. It would be very interesting if some Shakespearian scholar, with special capabilities for the task, like Mr. Halliwel ...

    ... th soliloquy may &lt;/1:30&gt;&lt;1:31&gt; have been an addition to the play by Shakespeare after the performances of 1601 and the construction of the original ...
807) Commentary Note for line 2743+2:
2743+2 {Ham. Good sir whose powers are these?}

    ... b><b>powers</b>] <sc>Deighton</sc> (ed. 1891): &#x201C;forces; as frequently in Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1903<tab> </tab><sc>rlf3</sc></sigl ...
808) Commentary Note for line 2743+5:
2743+5 {Cap. Against some part of Poland.}

    ... ry offers no clue to the source of this description. It has been suggested that Shakespeare may have had in his mind Sir Walter Raleigh's attack upon the fort o ...
809) Commentary Note for line 2743+11:
2743+11 {We goe to gaine a little patch of ground}

    ... b> ground</b>] <sc>Marshall </sc>(1875, pp. 193-4): &lt;p.193&gt; &#x201C;That Shakespeare intended to refer to some particular expedition in this passage I ha ...

    ... still the extent of it does not answer to the description in the text. In 1573 Shakespeare was only nine years old; in 1580, when Walter Raleigh joined Grey's ...

    ... Devereux's expedition, or that of Grey, as the original which was suggested by Shakespeare's description in the text, I should make a proviso, that it is not t ...

    ... short speech) has no parallel in the Quarto of 1603; it was evidently added by Shakespeare on the revision of the play, a circumstance which confirms me in the ...

    ... n> <cn> <sigla>1885<tab> </tab><sc>macd</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>macd:</sc> <i>Shakespeare Lexicon</i> + magenta underlined</hanging><para>2743+11<tab> </tab>< ...

    ... bout it at all?</small> If the word &#8216;frontier' has the meaning, as the <i>Shakespeare Lexicon</i> says, of &#8216;an outwork in fortification,' <small>its ...

    ... ir Francis Vere which returned home on March 18. There can be little doubt that Shakespeare is here alluding to those events' (Dover Wilson).&#x201D;</para></cn ...

    ... barren plot of sand' (<i>de sterili arena</i>). In refutation see Chambers, <i>Shakespearean Gleanings</i>, pp. 70-5.&#x201D; </para> </cn><tlnrange>2743+11</t ...
810) Commentary Note for line 2743+18:
2743+18 {Ham. Two thousand soules, & twenty thousand duckets}

    ... r one. Moreover, there is mislineation at [3.4.52 (2435-6)] in Q2, showing that Shakespeare was not very careful about his speech headings. It therefore seems r ...

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