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961 to 970 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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961) Commentary Note for lines 3217-18:
3217-8 more then theyr euen {Christen:}<Christi|an.> Come my spade, there is no aunci-

    ... s in Chaucer, Gower, and our elder writers; but no other instance of its use in Shakespeare's time has been pointed out.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> </cn> <cn> <s ...

    ... find many instances of the use of &#8216;even Christian' later than the time of Shakespeare.&#x201D; &lt;/p. 261&gt;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1854<tab> </tab><sc ...

    ... u.s.w. &#246;fters vorkommt, von dem sich aber nach Collier's Versicherung bei Shakespeare und seinen Zeitgenossen kein zweites Beispiel findet. Nares s. Even. ...

    ... on, of which, according to Collier's assurance, one finds no second example in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Nares see 'even.'&#8212;The texts read mostl ...
962) Commentary Note for lines 3218-20:
3218-9 ent gentlemen | but Gardners, Ditchers, and Grauemakers, they hold
3219-20 vp | Adams profession.

    ... am being a gardener was a favourite one throughout the middle ages, and also in Shakespeare's time. The annexed engraving is copied [illustration] from a sculpt ...
963) Commentary Note for line 3221:
3221 Other. Was he a gentleman? 3221

    ... However, it is more than doubtful whether Kemp belonged to the same company as Shakespere when Hamlet was produced. (See &#8216;Memoirs of the Actors in Shakes ...

    ... ny as Shakespere when Hamlet was produced. (See &#8216;Memoirs of the Actors in Shakespeare's Plays,' pp. 105. 115.)&#x201D; &lt;p. 431&gt;</para></cn> <cn> <si ...
964) Commentary Note for lines 3230-31:
3230-1 Clow. What is he that builds stronger then eyther the | Mason, the 3230
3231 Shypwright, or the Carpenter.

    ... 57): "Dergleichen R&#228;thselfragen bildeten eine h&#228;ufige Belustigung von Shakespeare's Vorfahren und Zeitgenossen; die &#228;lteste Sammlung derselben wu ...

    ... 1849)) p. 152 sqq." [Such riddling questions form a frequent entertainment from Shakespeare's ancestors and contemporaries; the oldest of such collection was pu ...
965) Commentary Note for lines 3232-33:
3232-3 Other. The gallowes maker, for that <Frame> out-liues a | thousand tenants.

    ... ems to be no necessity of grammar here, as it is a clown's speech; besides, <i> Shakespeare</i> would have hardly put such a word as <i> frame</i> in the sense ...
966) Commentary Note for line 3245:
3245 <Enter Hamlet and Horatio a farre off.> 3245

    ... would be curious to know whether the same opinion of us prevailed generally in Shakespeare's time, and what was the origin of it.* &lt;/p. 95&gt;</para> <para> ...

    ... with this imputation on our national sanity, it would occur to every reader of Shakespeare to see what Portia has to say of her English suitor. On referring to ...
967) Commentary Note for lines 3246-49:
3246-7 Clow. Cudgell thy braines no more about it, for your | dull asse wil
3247-8 not mend his pace with beating, and when | you are askt this question
3248-9 next, say a graue-maker, the | houses <that> hee makes lasts till Doomesday.

    ... al, but on the other hand it may be due to the fact that &#8216;lasts' stood in Shakespeare's manuscript, and that the solecism was deliberately placed in the G ...
968) Commentary Note for lines 3249-50:
3249-50 Goe get thee | {in, and} <to Yaughan,> fetch mee a soope of liquer.

    ... d of exercising his acuteness on the text of Virgil, had employed it on that of Shakespeare, he could hardly have offered a more felicitous conjecture than this ...

    ... hee in</b>] <sc>Lettsom</sc> (7 Sept. 1861, Letter 64): &#x201C;. . . The next [Shakespearean difficulty] also involves the same companion of <i>thee</i> or <i> ...

    ... o </i> yon.'<small> 1865. Mr. <sc>Collier</sc> in the second edition of his <i>Shakespeare</i> adopts his Corrector's &#8216;yon:' and certainly the Corrector ...

    ... </i>), Ben. Jonson has (Ev. Man out, etc. v.4) &#8216;a few, one <i>Yohan</i>.' Shakespeare got Johan along with the other Danish names&#8212;Guildenstern, Rose ...

    ... te. Nun geh&#246;rte aber, wie wir aus Halliwell's Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare p. 88 wissen, zum Globustheater eine Kneipe ((<i>tap-house</i>)), di ...

    ... at the Globe. But as we know from Halliwell's <i>Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare</i>, p. 88, a <i>tap-house</i> near the Globe was owned, which was l ...

    ... pud</i> <sc>Furness</sc>, ed. 1877): &#x201C;<i>to Yaughan</i>]] This is merely Shakespeare's English way of representing the Danish <i>Johan,&#8212;John</i>.&# ...

    ... /b>] <sc>Furness</sc> (ed. 1877): &#x201C;<i>to Yaughan</i>]] <sc>Elze</sc> (<i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, xi, 297), who accepts without qualification <sc>San</s ...

    ... word is a corruption for one not guessed, and with its root found only once in Shakespeare, and in equally strange company. In the original texts <i>I</i> and ...

    ... either to withdraw from, or to add to my my note in the Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XI, 296 seq., except that I take the reading of [F1] t ...

    ... n that somehow or other found its way into the text. See Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XIV, 14 seq.&#x201D;</para> <para><HA>See v1877 above, ...

    ... some other word, than that which we have at present, was in all probability in Shakespeare's MS. In that famous Scene, where two clowns in a churchyard rub the ...

    ... en </sc>(ed. 1899): &#x201C;Of several emendations recorded in the <i>Cambridge Shakespeare</i>, the most plausible is that of Mr. Tovey: &#8216;Go to, y'are go ...

    ... /sc> (ed. 1900):"<i>Yaughan]]</i>Perhaps the name of an actual tavern-keeper in Shakespeare's London. Traces of a German 'Johan' in London have been discovered, ...

    ... al, but on the other hand it may be due to the fact that &#8216;lasts' stood in Shakespeare's manuscript, and that the solecism was deliberately placed in the G ...

    ... rve Burbadge's dying groans. And yet, is it not just as likely that he jest was Shakespeare's own? 1 It was quite in his manner to introduce references to place ...

    ... tesan, which, as Mrs. Murrie discovered, was the name of a tavern or brother in Shakespeare's London. 2 And if the Q2 compositor omitted the words &#8216;to Yau ...

    ... 260&gt; &#x201C;1The point is further developed in anote in <i>Hamlet</i> (New Shakespeare). &#8216;Yaughan' is not a Welsh name.&#x201D;</para> <para>&lt;n&gt ...

    ... 547&gt; &lt;pp. 548&gt;reference to a particular alehouse-keeper, it is less in Shakespeare's manner than in Jonson's and may be an actor's gag, which F happens ...

    ... account ((<i>N&amp;Q</i>, 4th ser. viii, 81-2)). <small>Another fancy would see Shakespeare here translating into Danish a common English name (<i>Johan</i>, Jo ...
969) Commentary Note for lines 3252-55:
3252 In youth when I did loue did loue, {Song.}
3253 Me thought it was very sweet
3254 To contract ô the time for a my behoue,
3255 O me thought there {a} was nothing {a} meet.

    ... r&gt; &#x201C;I have found that the stanzas sung by the Grave-digger are not of Shakespeare's composition, but owe their original to the old Earl of Surrey's Po ...

    ... ark &amp; Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): &#x201C;This line has no sense, and doubtless Shakespeare made it untintelligible, in order to suit the character of the singe ...

    ... ongs of Lord Surrey and Others,' 1557. Line 62 [3253] has no meaning. Doubtless Shakespeare meant this in accordance with the character of the clown. The follow ...

    ... ipp'd me intil the land' certainly is; the resulting nonsense beign designed by Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1931<tab> </tab><sc>crg1</sc></sigl ...

    ... (1934, 2:304-05): &lt;p. 304&gt; &#x201C;Mistakes might, of course, arise from Shakespeare's use of ambiguous forms which were in no way peculiar to himself. T ...

    ... &gt; as he makes the appropriate noise. Still, it is just as well to be sure of Shakespeare's intention. The &#8216;a' after &#8216;for' which recurs twice in t ...

    ... time' being the sexton's shot at &#8216;And tract of time'. Surely, then, what Shakespeare meant him to sing was &#8216;To contract o' the time'.&#x201D;&lt;/p ...

    ... <sc>ard2</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>ard2</sc> &#8776; standard (v1877) ; Noble <i>Shakespeare's Use of Song</i><sc> +</sc></hanging><para>3252-55 <b>In </b>. . . ...

    ... perversions of the original may, but of course need not, have been designed by Shakespeare in fitting the song to the dramatic occasion and singer. A <i>pit </ ...

    ... have printed one or other; both may be found together in Sternfeld, <i>Music in Shakespearean Tragedy</i>, 1963, pp. 162-5, in his <i>Songs from Shakespeare's T ...

    ... d, <i>Music in Shakespearean Tragedy</i>, 1963, pp. 162-5, in his <i>Songs from Shakespeare's Tragedies</i>, 1964, pp. 14-16, and in Simpson, <i>The British Bro ...

    ... 158-9. Whether either</small> of these was actually sung by the grave-digger on Shakespeare's stage we cannot know. Chappell records that the tune which had bec ...
970) Commentary Note for lines 3263-66:
3263 {Clow. } But age with his stealing steppes {Song.}
3264 hath {clawed} <caught> me in his clutch,
3265 And hath shipped me {into} <intill> the land,
3266 as if I had neuer been such. 3266

    ... ts mehrere Bewohner, welche dem neuen Ank&#246;mmling Platz machen m&#252;ssen. Shakespeare folgt hierbei einer barbarischen Unsite der Engl&#228;nder, welche s ...

    ... helia already holds more inhabitants, which must make room for the new arrival. Shakespeare follows here a barbaric custom of England, which it has held unfortu ...

    ... ilson's conclusion is: &#x201C;A study of these variants is a lesson at once in Shakespearian diction and in the kind of degradation his verse suffered at the h ...

    ... one, I think, can reasonably doubt that the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inferior redaings here come from the better ...

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