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721 to 730 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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721) Commentary Note for line 2517:
2517 Ham. Why looke you there, looke how it steales away, {I4}
    ... away, I am entirely ignorant. Surely <i>Shakespeare</i> wrote, &#8216;&#8212;loo ...
    ...  habit;' and they conclude, either that Shakespeare had &#8216;forgotten himself ...
    ... it. It is not difficult to believe that Shakespeare wrote the line as it stands  ...
    ... ness ad loc. it has been suggested that Shakespeare &#8216;surely' wrote <i>stal ...
722) Commentary Note for line 2518:
2518 My father in his habit as he liued,
    ... g <i>as if</i> the way it often does in Shakespeare. <i>My father just as if he  ...
    ... a scrivener.  </i>It is well known that Shakespeare excelled in the part of the  ...
723) Commentary Note for line 2520:
2520 {Ger.}<Qu.> This is the very coynage of your braine, 2520
    ... o not believe that they were written by Shakespeare. [quotes Q1 &#8216;Alas . .  ...
724) Commentary Note for line 2521:
2521 This bodilesse creation extacie is very cunning in.
    ... ed by madness&#8212;The word Ecstasy in Shakespeare, is often used for madness;  ...
725) Commentary Note for line 2522:
2522 <Ham. Extasie?>
    ... 858): &#x201C;This word, always used by Shakespeare to denote some strong mental ...
726) Commentary Note for line 2526:
2526 And <I> the matter will reword, which madnesse
    ... n practice, to prove the correctness of Shakespeare's test of insanity.</para> < ...
    ... i>re-word</i> the matter, as a test, on Shakespeare's authority, of his soundnes ...
    ... 7): &#x201C;repeat <small>(apparently a Shakespearian coinage).</small>&#x201D;< ...
727) Commentary Note for line 2527:
2527 Would gambole from, mother for loue of grace,
    ... r remonstrance, and ask himself whether Shakespeare could by possibility have in ...
    ... e action of a curvetting horse supplies Shakespeare with a metaphor for the wild ...
728) Commentary Note for line 2528:
2528 Lay not {that} <a> flattering vnction to your soule
    ... a mountebank</i> at 4.7.139 [3132], are Shakespeare's only uses of this word who ...
729) Commentary Note for line 2529:
2529 That not your trespasse but my madnesse speakes,
    ... try&#8212;written only ten years before Shakespeare began to work in the London  ...
730) Commentary Note for line 2531:
2531 {Whiles} <Whil'st> ranck corruption mining all within
    ...  written generally in the old copies of Shakespeare, and has been, in most insta ...

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