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751 to 760 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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751) Commentary Note for line 2563:
2563 That I essentially am not in madnesse,
    ...  to pronounce, after reading this, that Shakespeare intended to represent Hamlet ...
752) Commentary Note for line 2564:
2564 But {mad} <made> in craft, t'were good you let him knowe,
    ... his prose text but without assertion of Shakespeare's use of it as a source. </f ...
    ... inds no support in the ultimate text of Shakespeare beyond 3 or 4 passages. One  ...
753) Commentary Note for line 2566:
2566 Would from a paddack, from a bat, a gib,
    ... and boney, and big.' Part I.ch.viii. By Shakespeare it is made the name of a fam ...
754) Commentary Note for line 2569:
2569 Vnpeg the basket on the houses top,
    ... ting the above I have learned that this Shakespearean co-incidence did not occur ...
755) Commentary Note for line 2573:
2573 {Ger.}<Qu.> Be thou assur'd, if words be made of breath
    ... I confess,' says Coleridge, &#8216;that Shakespeare has left the character of th ...
    ... Baldwin</sc> (1964, p. 242): &#x201C;In Shakespeare, although she [Gertrude] pro ...
    ...  slightly modifying, J.M. Nosworthy, <i>Shakespeare's Occasional Plays</i> (Lond ...
756) Commentary Note for line 2576:
2576 Ham. I must to England, you knowe that.
    ... knew the king's intention. Most likely, Shakespear, as &lt;/p.321&gt;&lt;p.322&g ...
    ... n speaking to his &#8216;uncle-father.' Shakespeare, like the all-accomplished d ...
    ... er (Scene 4). It is quite possible that Shakespeare meant us to suppose that, wh ...
    ... onceive that it was a mere oversight on Shakespeare's part; for we must not forg ...
    ... . But the quotation given suggests what Shakespeare implies, that he &#8216;doub ...
    ... ready learned of the project&#8212;how, Shakespeare does not say, but it is easy ...
    ... d Guildenstern at 3.3.2-4 [2273-5], but Shakespeare often uses the convention wh ...
757) Commentary Note for line 2577+1:
2577+1 { Ham. Ther's letters seald, and my two Schoolefellowes,} 2577+1
    ... <i>Act</i>, save a slight one, in which SHAKESPEARE is no ways concern'd, commit ...
    ...  their removal is part of a revision by Shakespeare of the later part of the pla ...
    ... rds argues that this passage was cut by Shakespeare as part of a revision of the ...
758) Commentary Note for line 2577+3:
2577+3 {They beare the mandat, they must sweep my way}
    ...  oversight on &lt;/p.57&gt;&lt;p.58&gt; Shakespeare's part, or whether we should ...
759) Commentary Note for line 2577+5:
2577+5 {For tis the sport to haue the enginer}
    ...  der Endsylbe, ist Sh.'s Wort.&#x201D; [Shakespeare's word is <i>&#233;nginer</i ...
    ... tineer</i> for &#8216;mutineer,' though Shakespeare has it both ways; and the wo ...
760) Commentary Note for line 2577+7:
2577+7 {But I will delue one yard belowe their mines,}
    ... the explosives buried in such tunnels). Shakespeare had drawn on Holinshed's des ...

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