601 to 610 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... in a puppet-play in Shakespeare's day, t ...
... nable of the age of Shakespeare, which w ...
... n this conversation Shakespeare shows &# ...
... oken obscenities of Shakespeare's clowns ...
... eare's clowns; nay, Shakespeare would no ...
... (<i>Explorations in Shakespeare's Langua ...
... this play was done. Shakespeare was wont ...
604) Commentary Note for lines 2120-23: 2120-1 Ham. So you mistake
{your} husbands.
| Beginne murtherer,
<Pox> leaue
2121-2 thy damnable faces and | begin, come, the croking Rauen doth bellow
2122-3 for {reuenge} <Re-| uenge>.
... r. Theobald, in his Shakespear restored, ...
... the same in his <i>Shakespeare Restored ...
... vindicating” Shakespeare from &#x ...
... I observe that, in Shakespeare's time, ...
... lleson</sc> (<i>New Shakespeare Society' ...
... thought this was a Shakespearian allusi ...
... 01D; '—<i>New Shakespeare Society' ...
... I observe that, in Shakespeare's time, ...
... n, to which company Shakespeare probably ...
... “Of course, Shakespeare wrote th ...
... question is whether Shakespeare was cont ...
... no more likely that Shakespeare once and ...
... found elsewhere in Shakespeare. Assumin ...
... ewhere mentioned by Shakespeare. See <i> ...
... lable, as always in Shakespeare.” ...
... cene not written by Shakespeare</small>) ...
... a special place in Shakespeare's imagin ...
608) Commentary Note for lines 2132-35: 2132-3 Ham.
{A} <He> poysons him i'th Garden
{for his} <for's> estate, his
| names
Gonza-
2133-4 go, the story is extant, and {written in very} <writ in> choice | Italian, you shall see
2134-5 anon how the murtherer gets the | loue of Gonzagoes wife.
... and Cinthio's, but Shakespeare may well ...
... r's office.” Shakespeare thus imp ...
610) Commentary Note for lines 2146-50: 2146-7 {Thus} <So> runnes the world away.
| Would not this sir & a forrest of fea-
2147-8 thers, if the rest of | my fortunes turne Turk with me, with <two> prouinciall
2149-50 Roses on my {raz'd} <rac'd> shooes, get me a fellowship in a cry | of players? <sir.>
... othurno</i>: And <i>SHAKESPEARE</i> hims ...
... white shoe was what Shakespeare in Hamle ...
... orn on the stage in Shakespeare's time.& ...
... vindicating” Shakespeare from &#x ...
... ostacy of any kind. Shakespeare uses it ...
... ritics thought that Shakespeare probably ...
... ndon players had in Shakespeare's time, ...
... orn on the stage in Shakespeare's time.& ...
... ndon players had in Shakespeare's time, ...
... orn on the stage in Shakespeare's time;' ...
... r (Illustrations of Shakespeare, vol. ii ...
... orn on the stage in Shakespeare's time.& ...
... rship; like the one Shakespeare had with ...