<< Prev     1.. 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 [77] 78 79 80 ..117     Next >>

761 to 770 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 80 characters of context... Expand Context
761) Commentary Note for line 2577+8:
2577+8 {And blowe them at the Moone: ô tis most sweete}
    ... s becoming unintelligible and vulgar in Shakespeare's time, and he generally use ...
762) Commentary Note for line 2578:
2578 <Ham.> This man shall set me packing, {K1}
    ... tion. I confess I do not understand why Shakespeare thought it necessary to add  ...
    ... , that the word &#8216;guts' was not in Shakespeare's time the abominable vulgar ...
    ... d in the Notes to Staunton's edition of Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
    ... a of contriving which is often found in Shakespeare, though here it does not see ...
    ... . &#8216;Pack' occurs in both senses in Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
763) Commentary Note for line 2579:
2579 Ile lugge the guts into the neighbour roome;
    ... i>guts</i> had not so vulgar a sound in Shakespeare's age as it has in ours.</sm ...
    ... ing of Polonius, for instance, exploits Shakespeare's several hints about Hamlet ...
    ... eys anything so grand as a 'reading' of Shakespeare, Arnold's fantastic <i>Hamle ...
    ... ing of Polonius, for instance, exploits Shakespeare's several hints about Hamlet ...
764) Commentary Note for line 2580:
2580 Mother {good night indeed,} <goodnight. Indeede> this Counsayler
    ... us</i> was in Conformity to the Plan <i>Shakespeare</i> built his Play upon; and ...
    ...  and bitterness, love and anger has not Shakespeare set his Hamlet to ring on th ...
765) Commentary Note for line 2583:
2583 Come sir, to draw toward an end with you.
    ... </i>, in a remark on this place, blames Shakespeare for having been unfortunate  ...
766) Commentary Note for line 2585:
2585 <Exit Hamlet tugging in Polonius.> 2585
    ... en ransacked to supply illustrations of Shakespeare's language and ideas, so lit ...
    ... ion of the exigencies of the theatre in Shakespeare's time, which not only oblig ...
    ... [4.14.138 (2993)]. These instances from Shakespeare alone, and they could easily ...
    ... t is made to end here; certainly not by Shakespeare's. The text of the quarto ru ...
    ... hought &#8216;one could swear . . . was Shakespeare's' (<i>SFF</i>, p. 319), app ...
767) Commentary Note for lines 2586-2586+1:
2586 Eenter King {, and Queene, with Rosencraus}
2586+1 {and Guyldensterne}.
    ... ng &#8216;enter the Queen's apartment', Shakespeare must have intended a new sce ...
768) Commentary Note for lines 2587-88:
2587-8 King. There's {matter} <matters> in these sighes, | these profound heaues,
    ... in favor of this theory should be added Shakespeare's demonstrated reluctance to ...
769) Commentary Note for line 2591:
2591 <Qu.> Ah {mine owne} <my good> Lord, what haue I seene to night?
    ... Baldwin</sc> (1964, p. 242): &#x201C;In Shakespeare, although she [Gertrude] pro ...
    ... Maxwell</sc> (1964, p. 242): &#x201C;In Shakespeare, although she [Gertrude] pro ...
770) Commentary Note for line 2592:
2592 King. What Gertrard, how dooes Hamlet?
    ...  Queen's character as it finally leaves Shakespeare's hands, see note . [1.2.213 ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


All Files Commentary Notes
Material Textual Notes Immaterial Textual Notes
Surrounding Context
Range of Proximity searches