<< Prev     1.. 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 [68] 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 ..117     Next >>

671 to 680 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 40 characters of context... Expand Context
671) Commentary Note for line 2350:
2350 Ham. Now might I doe it {, but} <pat,> now {a} <he> is {a} praying,
    ... on. The beauties of Shakespeare, like th ...
    ... /sc>(<i>Lectures on Shakespeare and Milt ...
    ... tage business since Shakespeare's time r ...
    ... 216; Wordsworth (<i>Shakespeare's Knowle ...
    ... play of the time of Shakespeare intended ...
    ... he goes to heaven!' Shakespeare uses thi ...
    ... e an excuse. But if Shakespeare had anti ...
    ... by more than one of Shakespeare's dramat ...
    ... condition, in which Shakespeare has laid ...
    ...  being exactly what Shakespeare wished i ...
    ... s beyond cavil that Shakespeare wrote &# ...
    ...  other words, until Shakespeare's play i ...
    ... he dialect roots of Shakespeare, who is  ...
    ...  public speech. Yet Shakespeare manifest ...
672) Commentary Note for line 2351:
2351 And now Ile doo't, and so {a} <he> goes to heauen,
    ... Christians, even in Shakespeare's own ti ...
    ...  been associated in Shakespeare's mind w ...
673) Commentary Note for line 2353:
2353 A villaine kills my father, and for that,
    ... worth's <i>Notes on Shakespeare's Plays< ...
674) Commentary Note for line 2355:
2355 To heauen. 2355
2355 {Why,} <Oh> this is {base and silly} <hyre and Sallery>, not reuendge,
    ... no means  belong to Shakespeare exclusiv ...
    ... 16;Sallery' must be Shakespeare's word.  ...
    ...  not read, and what Shakespeare actually ...
    ...  the Ghost's words. Shakespeare's silenc ...
    ...  F reading would be Shakespeare's only u ...
    ... r 'illegitimate' in Shakespeare (see esp ...
675) Commentary Note for line 2358:
2358 And how his audit stands who knowes saue heauen,
    ...  it appears that <i>Shakespear</i> had d ...
    ... used by others than Shakespeare of the r ...
    ... s of this line that Shakespeare's 'first ...
676) Commentary Note for line 2359:
2359 But in our circumstance and course of thought,
    ... s used, as often in Shakespeare, for det ...
    ...  difficult words in Shakespeare) has muc ...
    ... ere is the familiar Shakespearean use of ...
677) Commentary Note for line 2361:
2361 To take him in the purging of his soule,
    ...  public speech. Yet Shakespeare manifest ...
678) Commentary Note for line 2363:
2363 Vp sword, and knowe thou a more horrid hent,
    ... of this Word, in my SHAKESPEARE <i>resto ...
    ...  hent is used by <i>Shakespeare</i> for  ...
    ...  hent is used by <i>Shakespeare</i> for  ...
    ... condition, in which Shakespeare has laid ...
    ... hend </i>is used by Shakespeare for, to  ...
    ...  grappler. But when Shakespeare makes Ha ...
    ...  found elsewhere in Shakespeare, but the ...
    ... >, which usually in Shakespeare means &# ...
    ... m used elsewhere by Shakespeare twice; t ...
    ... , that the reaction Shakespeare intended ...
    ... d, by Coleridge (<i>Shakespearean Critic ...
679) Commentary Note for line 2364:
2364 When he is {drunke, a sleepe,} <drunke asleepe:> or in his rage,
    ... eal sentiments' (<i>Shakespeare's Dramat ...
    ... t, <i>Characters of Shakespear's Plays</ ...
    ... . 144-6; Sisson, <i>Shakespeare's Tragic ...
    ... brilliantly used by Shakespeare for his  ...
680) Commentary Note for line 2368:
2368 Then trip him that his heels may kick at heauen, {I2}
    ... i>Roman au temps de Shakespeare</i>).&#x ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


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