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621 to 630 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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621) Commentary Note for line 2206:
2206 Ham. {And} <So I> doe still by these pickers and stealers.
    ... s proper emphasis.  Shakespeare's meanin ...
    ... s proper emphasis.  Shakespeare's meanin ...
    ... Simpson's School of Shakespeare, 1872, p ...
    ... ], and elsewhere in Shakespeare. In <i>2 ...
622) Commentary Note for lines 2207-09:
2207-8 Ros. Good my Lord, what is your cause of {distemper,} <distem-| per>, you do {sure-} {H4}
2208-9 {ly} <freely> barre the doore {vpon} <of> your owne {liberty} <Liber-| tie> if you deny your griefes to
2209 your friend.
    ... struction common in Shakespeare's work,  ...
623) Commentary Note for line 2212+1:
2212+1 {Enter the Players with Recorders.}
    ... ith other accounts. Shakespeare (in <i>H ...
    ... ng; but manhandling Shakespeare is a dan ...
    ... ears of Henry VIII, Shakespeare and Pepy ...
624) Commentary Note for lines 2213-18:
2213-4 Ham. I {sir}, but while the grasse growes, the prouerbe is | something
2214-16 musty, | <Enter one with a Recorder.> | ô the {Recorders,} <Recorder.> let mee see {one}, to withdraw with you, why
2217-8 doe you goe about to recouer the wind of mee, as if you | would driue
2218 me into a toyle?
    ... ith other accounts. Shakespeare (in <i>H ...
    ...  must remember that Shakespeare wrote fo ...
    ... ng; but manhandling Shakespeare is a dan ...
    ... ears of Henry VIII, Shakespeare and Pepy ...
625) Commentary Note for lines 2219-20:
2219-20 Guyl. O my lord, if my duty be too bold, my loue | is too vnmanerly.
    ... mannerly.' Probably Shakespeare intended ...
    ... rk, &#8216;Probably Shakespeare intended ...
626) Commentary Note for lines 2228-31:
2228-9 Ham. {It is} <'Tis> as easie as lying; gouerne these ventages |with your {fin-}
2229-30 {gers, & the vmber} <finger and thumbe>, giue it breath with your | mouth, & it wil discourse
2230-1 most {eloquent} <excellent> musique, | looke you, these are the stops. 2230
    ... gd fine dubio magis Shakesperianum v.v.3 ...
    ... rn than the time of Shakespeare. We may, ...
    ... at the recorders of Shakespeare's time h ...
    ...  found elsewhere in Shakespeare, the wor ...
    ...  word may well be a Shakespearian coinag ...
    ... rh. originally from Shakespeare. <b>1602 ...
627) Commentary Note for lines 2240-43:
2240-1 <Why > do you think <that> I am easier to be | plaid on then a pipe, call mee what in-
2241-2 strument you wil, | though you <can> fret me {not}, you cannot play vpon me.
2242-3 God | blesse you sir.
    ... > of the musicians. Shakespeare, in &#82 ...
    ... g of &#8216;yet' in Shakespeare's manusc ...
628) Commentary Note for lines 2247-48:
2247-8 Ham. Do you see {yonder} <that> clowd that's almost in shape | {of} <like> a Camel?
    ... member the Theatro. Shakespeare seems to ...
    ... cter of Polonius as Shakespeare intended ...
629) Commentary Note for line 2254:
2254 <Ham.>Then {I will} <will I> come to my mother by and by, {H4v}
    ... iately, as often in Shakespeare.&#x201D; ...
    ...  it good enough for Shakespeare. Apart f ...
630) Commentary Note for lines 2255-56:
2255-6 They foole me to the top of my bent, | I will come by & by, 2255
    ... tc. Now only in the Shakespearian phrase ...

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