<< Prev     1.. 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 [31] 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 ..117     Next >>

301 to 310 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 40 characters of context... Expand Context
301) Commentary Note for line 696:
696 And for the day confind to fast in fires,
    ... ever will allow <sc>Shakespeare </sc>to  ...
    ... er. This Opinion <i>Shakespeare </i>agai ...
    ... enious Editor of <i>Shakespeare</i>, ods ...
    ... Versification of <i>Shakespeare</i>.&#x2 ...
    ... r. This opinion, <i>Shakespear </i>again ...
    ... y true reader of <i>Shakespear</i>, carr ...
    ... Chaucer is jocular, Shakespeare serious. ...
    ... burton</i>, that <i>Shakespeare</i> has  ...
    ...  practical justice, Shakespeare makes Ha ...
    ... ver, is as grave as Shakespeare. So like ...
    ... i>in the <i>Varior. Shakespeare </i>[v18 ...
    ... i>in the <i>Varior. Shakespeare </i>[v18 ...
    ... <i>Briefe &#252;ber Shakespeare's Hamlet ...
    ... , p. 5): &#x201C;In Shakespeare's <i>Ham ...
302) Commentary Note for line 698:
698 Are burnt and purg'd away: but that I am forbid
    ... a Blot on a Page of Shakespeare, and no  ...
    ... g conjecturing that Shakespear read the  ...
303) Commentary Note for line 702:
702 Make thy two eyes like stars start from their spheres,
    ... 4): &#x201C;used by Shakespeare of the o ...
    ... close connection in Shakespeare's mind b ...
304) Commentary Note for line 703:
703 Thy {knotted} <knotty> and combined locks to part,
    ... n place of the more Shakespearian usages ...
305) Commentary Note for line 705:
705 Like quils vpon the {fearefull} <fretfull> Porpentine,
    ... of the word, and so Shakespeare always h ...
    ... 56-8; <i>Aspects of Shakespeare, </i>pp. ...
    ...  this is the normal Shakespearean form." ...
    ... i>porpentine</i> is Shakespeare's usual  ...
306) Commentary Note for line 706:
706 But this eternall blazon must not be
    ... ate use of words in Shakespeare, some of ...
    ... e words employed by Shakespeare and his  ...
    ... may be however that Shakespeare uses &#8 ...
    ... ternal} was used by Shakespeare as an ad ...
    ... hrase is thoroughly Shakespearian; [. .  ...
    ... be misapplied. . .. Shakespeare, at all  ...
    ...  Schmidt notes that Shakespeare sometime ...
    ... f the supernatural. Shakespeare often as ...
307) Commentary Note for line 709:
709 Ham. O {God.} <Heauen!>
    ... ance' of 'O God' in Shakespeare.&#x201D; ...
308) Commentary Note for line 710:
710 Ghost. Reuenge his foule, and most vnnaturall murther.
    ... Eliz.</i> 1597. (<i>Shakespeare </i>then ...
    ... should not refer to Shakespeare's play.  ...
    ... rd one. . . . [but] Shakespeare does not ...
    ... itiful tragedies in Shakespeare.&#x201D; ...
    ...  the recognition of Shakespeare's theatr ...
    ... (printed 1599). But Shakespeare's ghost  ...
    ... presumably also for Shakespeare; the cha ...
309) Commentary Note for lines 714-15:
714-15 Ham. Hast <, hast> me to {know't} <know it>, | that {I} with wings as swift
    ... 20&gt;&lt;p. 21&gt; Shakespeare employs  ...
    ... ut the reverse. For Shakespeare with a t ...
    ... urite comparison of Shakespeare's (see e ...
310) Commentary Note for line 716:
716 As meditation, or the thoughts of loue
    ... Faith. I doubt that Shakespeare had Warb ...
    ... , not a release. So Shakespeare interpos ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


All Files Commentary Notes
Material Textual Notes Immaterial Textual Notes
Surrounding Context
Range of Proximity searches