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691 to 700 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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691) Commentary Note for line 2404:
2404 Ham. How now, a Rat, dead for a Duckat, dead.
    ...  Polonius was in Conformity to the Plan Shakespeare built his Play upon; and the ...
    ... <small>as well as with the novella that Shakespeare follows here more closely th ...
    ... great  fellow gives the fall). Schmidt, Shakespeare-Lexicon, s. <i>For</i>, 2, s ...
    ... name for a spy, or may be borrowed from Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
    ... yed themselves (see D.V. Falk in the <i>Shakespeare Quarterly </i>18 [1976], p.3 ...
692) Commentary Note for line 2409:
2409 Ham. A bloody deede, almost as bad, good mother
    ... hat the matter is entirely left open by Shakespeare, and no doubt deliberately,  ...
    ... ally distinct in her disavowal. May not Shakespeare have left the point in doubt ...
693) Commentary Note for line 2410:
2410 As kill a King, and marry with his brother.
    ... . . . Hamlet' [3.4.112-5 (2492-5)]. Had Shakespeare intended to attach greater c ...
    ... . She feels both guilty and not guilty. Shakespeare seems to have made the stron ...
694) Commentary Note for line 2411:
2411 {Ger.}<Qu.> As kill a King{.}<?>
    ...  king or queen make so good a defence.  Shakespeare wished to render them as odi ...
    ...  with asking if it can be supposed that Shakespeare intended so important a poin ...
695) Commentary Note for line 2413:
2413 Thou wretched, rash, intruding foole farwell,
    ... But Hamlet was still to appear mad. And Shakespeare seems to us to have sometime ...
696) Commentary Note for line 2414:
2414 I tooke thee for thy {better} <Betters>, take thy fortune,
    ...  be the aphetic form of abettor, a word Shakespeare uses at <i>Lucrece</i> 886,  ...
    ... n English since long before the time of Shakespeare' (Brook, p. 145).&#x201D;</p ...
697) Commentary Note for line 2421:
2421 {Ger.}<Qu.> What haue I done, that thou dar'st wagge thy tongue
    ... st her off. We all know how wonderfully Shakespeare has shown this complex feeli ...
698) Commentary Note for line 2422:
2422 In noise so rude against me?
    ... formerly in the hands of the editors of Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para> </cn><tlnran ...
699) Commentary Note for line 2425:
2425 Cals vertue hippocrit, takes {of}<off> the Rose 2425
    ... he nonce, there will be no phenomena in Shakespeare, or any other poet, too abst ...
700) Commentary Note for line 2430:
2430 The very soule, and sweet religion makes 2430
    ... e confusion or frenzy of words. This is Shakespeare's only use of the word<i> rh ...

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