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501 to 510 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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501) Commentary Note for lines 1671-2:
1671 And he beseecht me to intreat your Maiesties
1672 To heare and see the matter.
    ... bs were employed by Shakespeare with bot ...
502) Commentary Note for line 1681:
1681 Affront Ophelia; her father and my selfe,<(lawful espials)>
    ...  line to illustrate Shakespeare's use of ...
    ... nd often used by <i>Shakespeare</i> in t ...
    ... ut his dramas) that Shakespeare was not  ...
503) Commentary Note for line 1689:
1689 That your good beauties be the happy cause
    ... x201C;&#8216;Surely Shakespeare wrote &# ...
    ... Crit. Exam. I, 252, Shakespeare wrote <i ...
504) Commentary Note for lines 1696-7:
1696 That show of such an exercise may cullour
1697 Your {lowlines;} <lonelinesse.> we are oft too blame in this,
    ... as, I would believe Shakespere did not m ...
505) Commentary Note for line 1710:
1710 Ham. To be, or not to be, that is the question,
    ...  upon publishing <i>Shakespeare</i>. But ...
    ... s the conduct of <i>Shakespear </i>on th ...
    ...  in to which of all Shakespear's other c ...
    ... en a speech written Shakespeare, which h ...
    ... ds of his hero, but Shakespeare has left ...
    ... uy was suggested to Shakespeare by a boo ...
    ... e most discussed in Shakespeare, and the ...
    ...  and yet, among all Shakespeare's charac ...
    ... we might ascribe to Shakespeare, but jus ...
    ... ins, see Anders, <i>Shakespeare's Books< ...
    ... ns.).   By contrast Shakespeare, charact ...
    ... 212;contrary to the Shakespearean subtex ...
506) Commentary Note for lines 1711-12:
1711 Whether tis nobler in the minde to suffer
1712 The slings and arrowes of outragious fortune,
    ... ageous Fortune.' <i>Shakespeare</i> uses ...
    ... the contest is what Shakespeare's much-a ...
    ...  to terrify them.   Shakespeare could ha ...
    ... ics</i>, III. 7).   Shakespeare does not ...
507) Commentary Note for line 1713:
1713 Or to take Armes against a sea of troubles,
    ... bles<i> perhaps </i>Shakespear<i> wrote  ...
    ... Without question <i>Shakespear  </i>wrot ...
    ...  a supposition that Shakespear never mix ...
    ... e impropriety of<i> Shakespear</i>'s<i>  ...
    ...  frigid a reader of Shakespear</i> as to ...
    ... i>Whalley </i>on<i> Shakespear</i>'s<i>  ...
    ... he production of <i>Shakespear</i>, that ...
    ... t this metaphor. <i>Shakespeare  </i>bre ...
    ... 16;Without Question Shakespeare wrote &# ...
    ... hylus, the Athenian Shakespeare, from wh ...
    ... as an Argument that Shakespeare was conv ...
    ...  is not peculiar to Shakespeare, nor a s ...
    ... /i>, to prove, that Shakespeare is not s ...
    ...  similar to that of Shakespeare. I shall ...
    ... having been used by Shakespeare in other ...
    ...  which the pages of Shakespeare, as it i ...
    ...  the phraseology of Shakespeare), we hav ...
    ... iving comments upon Shakespeare have nev ...
    ...  fallen asleep.  If Shakespeare has gone ...
    ... e of which the good Shakespeare is guilt ...
    ...  his Oration at the Shakespeare Jubilee, ...
    ... afely conclude that Shakespeare never co ...
    ... not the lines which Shakespeare wrote.</ ...
    ... essions employed by Shakespeare in other ...
    ... how was employed by Shakespeare on more  ...
    ... ord &#8216;seat' in Shakespeare's writin ...
    ... dency manifested by Shakespeare and all  ...
    ... ext].'</para> <para>Shakespeare himself, ...
    ... cisive that neither Shakespeare nor Haml ...
    ... m &#8216;Pericles,' Shakespeare shows a  ...
    ... <para>&lt;p. 42&gt; Shakespearian in the ...
    ... C;Though we meet in Shakespeare with inc ...
    ... occurs once only in Shakespeare--'All's  ...
    ... with the sea, which Shakespeare might ha ...
    ... 1576. But elsewhere Shakespeare has &#82 ...
508) Commentary Note for lines 1714-15:
1714 And by opposing, end them, to die to sleepe
1715 No more, and by a sleepe, to say we end
    ... d be consonant with Shakespeare's phrase ...
    ... elied upon as being Shakespeare's, and I ...
509) Commentary Note for line 1718:
1718 Deuoutly to be wisht to die to sleepe,
    ... C;In these passages Shakespeare, with th ...
510) Commentary Note for line 1720:
1720 For in that sleepe of death what dreames may come
    ... 225&gt;&#x201C;What Shakespeare's notion ...

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