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701 to 710 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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701) Commentary Note for line 2431:
2431 A rapsedy of words; heauens face {dooes} <doth> glowe
    ... he kind (Honigmann, <i>The Stability of Shakespeare's Text</i>, pp. 135-6). But  ...
702) Commentary Note for line 2433:
2433 With {heated} <tristfull> visage, as against the doome
    ... n his thoughts? <sc>Wordsworth</sc> (<i>Shakespeare's Knowledge of the Bible</i> ...
    ... rrowful; despite his commitment to F as Shakespeare's revision of Q2, MacDonald  ...
    ... beyond an improver' (LN). Against this, Shakespeare had used the word in Falstaf ...
703) Commentary Note for line 2437:
2437 <Ham.> Looke heere vpon this Picture, and on this,
    ...  was born 1709. &lt;/n.&gt;&#x201C; (<i>Shakespeare and the Actors</i> 168). </f ...
    ... In Hunter's &#8216;New Illustrations of Shakespeare' there is the following note ...
    ... idow</i>, i, 1, 135-138 (ed. Brooke, <i>Shakespeare Apocrypha</i>, p. 222). On t ...
    ... , and the famous illustration in Rowe's Shakespeare (1709), with its portraits h ...
    ... sc>, 318-19, reprinted in<i> Studies in Shakespeare, Bibliography and Theater</i ...
    ...  of actual performance (cf. Sprague, <i>Shakespeare and the Actors</i>, pp. 162- ...
    ... ;miniatures' is well put in Sprague, <i>Shakespeare and the Actors</i>, pp. 166- ...
    ... pp. 166-8, and <i>The Stage Business in Shakespeare's Plays: A Postscript</i>, p ...
    ... f evidence is of much weight. In Rowe's Shakespeare is an engraving of the Close ...
    ... rthur Colby Sprague and J.C. Trewin, <i>Shakespeare's Plays Today</i>, 1970, pp. ...
704) Commentary Note for line 2439:
2439 See what a grace was seated on {this} <his> browe,
    ... vall wondered that Tubbe did not credit Shakespeare for the lines echoing Hamlet ...
705) Commentary Note for line 2442:
2442 A station like the herald Mercury,
    ... <i>Dido</i> elsewhere in <i>Hamlet</i>, Shakespeare may be recalling the appeare ...
706) Commentary Note for line 2448:
2448 Heere is your husband like a {mildewed} <Mildew'd> eare,
    ... some general remarks on the writings of Shakespeare</i>.  London: printed for W. ...
    ... raoh's dream (Genesis, 41.5-7), a story Shakespeare also refers to at <i>1H4 </i ...
707) Commentary Note for line 2452:
2452 You cannot call it loue, for at your age
    ... courtly elegance, is entirely absent in Shakespeare. Despite a long theatrical t ...
708) Commentary Note for line 2455:
2455 Would step from this to this, {sence sure youe haue} 2455
    ... +1-4] are not in F; Edwards argues that Shakespeare was dissatisfied with them a ...
709) Commentary Note for line 2455+2:
2455+2 {Is appoplext, for madnesse would not erre}
    ... s an apoplex.' The word is not found in Shakespeare; for the reading &#8216;apop ...
    ... </i>as a verb seems to be original with Shakespeare. It is certainly to the poin ...
    ... ke epilepsy, apoplexy was associated in Shakespeare's time with the deafness tha ...
710) Commentary Note for line 2455+3:
2455+3 {Nor sence to extacie was nere so thral'd}
    ...  transport, or rapture. In the usage of Shakespeare, and some others, it stands  ...

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