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601 to 610 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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601) Commentary Note for line 2114:
2114 Ham. I could interpret betweene you and your loue
    ... Judy show today, so in a puppet-play in Shakespeare's day, the puppet-master or  ...
602) Commentary Note for line 2115:
2115 If I could see the puppets dallying. {H3}
    ...  to the young fashionable of the age of Shakespeare, which was, by no means, an  ...
    ... a doubt, that even in this conversation Shakespeare shows &#8216;the very age an ...
    ... s and the most outspoken obscenities of Shakespeare's clowns; nay, Shakespeare w ...
    ... scenities of Shakespeare's clowns; nay, Shakespeare would not have introduced su ...
    ... the female genitals (<i>Explorations in Shakespeare's Language</i>, p. 114; see  ...
603) Commentary Note for line 2116:
2116 Oph. You are keene my lord, you are keene. 2116
    ... re the refitting of this play was done. Shakespeare was wont to say that he neve ...
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>.
    ... > (1765, p. 539): "Mr. Theobald, in his Shakespear restored, p. 89, 90. had clea ...
    ... 1C;Theobald proposed the same in his <i>Shakespeare Restored</i>, however, he lo ...
    ... > Singer is &#x201C;vindicating&#x201D; Shakespeare from &#x201C;the interpolati ...
    ... 1857): &#x201C;(Need I observe that, in Shakespeare's time, this imprecation und ...
    ... <b>Rauen</b>] <sc>Malleson</sc> (<i>New Shakespeare Society's Transactions</i>,  ...
    ... The late Mr. Simpson thought this was a Shakespearian allusion to the line: &#82 ...
    ... f buried Denmark&#x201D; '&#8212;<i>New Shakespeare Society's Transactions</i>,  ...
    ... ;<sc>Dyce</sc>: Need I observe that, in Shakespeare's time, this imprecation und ...
    ... ry of the Queen's Men, to which company Shakespeare probably belonged before 159 ...
605) Commentary Note for lines 2124-25:
2124-5 Luc. Thoughts black, hands apt, | drugges fit, and time agreeing,
    ... rau</sc> (ed. 1909): &#x201C;Of course, Shakespeare wrote the whole of the inter ...
    ...  was available. The question is whether Shakespeare was content to resort to thi ...
    ...  One would think it no more likely that Shakespeare once and again created a fal ...
606) Commentary Note for line 2126:
2126 {Considerat} <Confederate> season els no creature seeing,
    ...  unusual and are not found elsewhere in Shakespeare. Assuming the use of a long  ...
607) Commentary Note for line 2128:
2128 VVith Hecats ban thrice blasted, thrice {inuected} <infected>,
    ...  to magic and is elsewhere mentioned by Shakespeare. See <i>Mac.</i> [1.3.35, 36 ...
    ... s; Hecate's, a disyllable, as always in Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
    ... 428-69)] (<small>a scene not written by Shakespeare</small>).&#x201D;</para></cn ...
    ... t, seems to have had a special place in Shakespeare's imagination, probably beca ...
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.
    ... , such as Bandello's and Cinthio's, but Shakespeare may well have taken it from  ...
609) Commentary Note for line 2136:
2136 Oph. The King rises.
    ...  [it was]  her father's office.&#x201D; Shakespeare thus impresses upon us that  ...
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.>
    ... que loqui, nitique Cothurno</i>: And <i>SHAKESPEARE</i> himself, in his <i>Troil ...
    ...  suppose Sophocles' white shoe was what Shakespeare in Hamlet, Act 3 [2149], cal ...
    ... feathers were much worn on the stage in Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;</para> <hang ...
    ... > Singer is &#x201C;vindicating&#x201D; Shakespeare from &#x201C;the interpolati ...
    ... phrase to express apostacy of any kind. Shakespeare uses it again in <i>Ado</i>  ...
    ... Steevens and other critics thought that Shakespeare probably wrote raised shoes, ...
    ...  custom which the London players had in Shakespeare's time, of flaunting it in g ...
    ... feathers were much worn on the stage in Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;</para> <hang ...
    ...  custom which the London players had in Shakespeare's time, of flaunting it in g ...
    ... feathers were much worn on the stage in Shakespeare's time;' <small>but the only ...
    ... vincialis</i>. Hunter (Illustrations of Shakespeare, vol. ii, p. 254) gives an e ...
    ... feathers were much worn on the stage in Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;</para> <hang ...
    ... #x201C;share, partnership; like the one Shakespeare had with the Chamberlain's M ...

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