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

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671) Commentary Note for line 2350:
2350 Ham. Now might I doe it {, but} <pat,> now {a} <he> is {a} praying,
    ... to cursory observation. The beauties of Shakespeare, like the genuine beauty of  ...
    ... b> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(<i>Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton</i>, Lecture 12,  ...
    ... the improvement in stage business since Shakespeare's time renders superfluous,  ...
    ... to hell.&#x201D; &#8216; Wordsworth (<i>Shakespeare's Knowledge of the Bible</i> ...
    ... s seen a manuscript play of the time of Shakespeare intended for the use of a th ...
    ... d (= <i>but</i>) so he goes to heaven!' Shakespeare uses this meaning of &#8216; ...
    ...  have been held to be an excuse. But if Shakespeare had anticipated the criticis ...
    ... t only been adopted by more than one of Shakespeare's dramatic contemporaries, b ...
    ... ernment, and social condition, in which Shakespeare has laid the scene of the pl ...
    ...  bears every mark of being exactly what Shakespeare wished it to be: it is emine ...
    ... raying,' which proves beyond cavil that Shakespeare wrote &#8216;pat' not &#8216 ...
    ... ird act&#8212;or, in other words, until Shakespeare's play is more than half fin ...
    ... sumed to relate to the dialect roots of Shakespeare, who is one of the latest ci ...
    ... mulations present in public speech. Yet Shakespeare manifests the limitations of ...
672) Commentary Note for line 2351:
2351 And now Ile doo't, and so {a} <he> goes to heauen,
    ... mong semi-barbarous Christians, even in Shakespeare's own time, to justify its e ...
    ... e word seems to have been associated in Shakespeare's mind with the perfectly ti ...
673) Commentary Note for line 2353:
2353 A villaine kills my father, and for that,
    ... #8212;John Lord Chedworth's <i>Notes on Shakespeare's Plays</i>, p. 354.&#x201D; ...
674) Commentary Note for line 2355:
2355 To heauen. 2355
2355 {Why,} <Oh> this is {base and silly} <hyre and Sallery>, not reuendge,
    ... these lines does by no means  belong to Shakespeare exclusively, but is to be fo ...
    ...  for certainty: &#8216;Sallery' must be Shakespeare's word. Its graphical simila ...
    ... r something he could not read, and what Shakespeare actually wrote must be simil ...
    ...  as Hamlet remembers the Ghost's words. Shakespeare's silences are often most ef ...
    ... ointing out that the F reading would be Shakespeare's only use of 'salary'; Mack ...
    ... y means 'inferior' or 'illegitimate' in Shakespeare (see especially Edmund's com ...
675) Commentary Note for line 2358:
2358 And how his audit stands who knowes saue heauen,
    ... es, and some others, it appears that <i>Shakespear</i> had drawn the first sketc ...
    ... 1C;auditor&#x201D;; used by others than Shakespeare of the rendering of accounts ...
    ... jectured on the basis of this line that Shakespeare's 'first sketch' of the play ...
676) Commentary Note for line 2359:
2359 But in our circumstance and course of thought,
    ... mper. Circumstance is used, as often in Shakespeare, for details.&#x201D;</para> ...
    ... /i> (one of the most difficult words in Shakespeare) has much the same idea as i ...
    ... . The construction here is the familiar Shakespearean use of two nouns for an ad ...
677) Commentary Note for line 2361:
2361 To take him in the purging of his soule,
    ... mulations present in public speech. Yet Shakespeare manifests the limitations of ...
678) Commentary Note for line 2363:
2363 Vp sword, and knowe thou a more horrid hent,
    ... 'd his frequent Use of this Word, in my SHAKESPEARE <i>restor'd</i>; so shall sp ...
    ...  the right word.  To hent is used by <i>Shakespeare</i> for to <i>seize</i>, to  ...
    ... d. 1790): &#x201C;To hent is used by <i>Shakespeare</i> for to <i>seize</i>, to  ...
    ... ernment, and social condition, in which Shakespeare has laid the scene of the pl ...
    ... 857): &#x201C;To <i>hend </i>is used by Shakespeare for, to <i>seize</i>, to <i> ...
    ...  holder, a seizer, a grappler. But when Shakespeare makes Hamlet say, when he wi ...
    ... n <i>hent</i> is not found elsewhere in Shakespeare, but the verb occurs twice i ...
    ... ay be for <i>hint</i>, which usually in Shakespeare means &#8216;opportunity, oc ...
    ... verb of the same form used elsewhere by Shakespeare twice; the meaning would the ...
    ... soul; her conclusion, that the reaction Shakespeare intended to produce in his a ...
    ... ed, on the other hand, by Coleridge (<i>Shakespearean Criticism</i>, Vol. I, p.  ...
679) Commentary Note for line 2364:
2364 When he is {drunke, a sleepe,} <drunke asleepe:> or in his rage,
    ...  belied &#8216;his real sentiments' (<i>Shakespeare's Dramatic Charcters</i>, 17 ...
    ...  resolution' (Hazlitt, <i>Characters of Shakespear's Plays</i>. Cf. Coleridge, 1 ...
    ... nd Son</i>, 1955, pp. 144-6; Sisson, <i>Shakespeare's Tragic Justice</i>, 1962,  ...
    ... ional convention is brilliantly used by Shakespeare for his own dramatic ends. F ...
680) Commentary Note for line 2368:
2368 Then trip him that his heels may kick at heauen, {I2}
    ... l them (Jusserand, <i>Roman au temps de Shakespeare</i>).&#x201D;</para> <hangin ...

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