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861 to 870 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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861) Commentary Note for line 2849:
2849 Quee. How cheerefully on the false traile they cry. {A noise within.}
    ... common enough in European monarchies in Shakespeare's time (Redgrave, 230).&#x20 ...
862) Commentary Note for line 2850:
2850 O this is counter you false Danish dogges. 2850
    ... cer</sc> (ed. 1980): &#x201C;Presumably Shakespeare took it for granted that the ...
863) Commentary Note for line 2851:
2851 <Noise within.> Enter Laertes {with others}.
    ... oor</i> are modern stage directions. In Shakespeare's theater it appears that th ...
864) Commentary Note for line 2863:
2863 Euen heere betweene the chast vnsmirched browe
    ... 76)] Hitherto it has only been found in Shakespeare, who has also <i>besmircht</ ...
    ... &#x201C;This seems the only place where Shakespeare uses &#8216;unsmirched' mean ...
    ... 963, 2:300): &#x201C;it is evident that Shakespeare intended to write the plural ...
865) Commentary Note for line 2866:
2866 That thy rebellion lookes so gyant like?
    ... thy as identifying speakers' words with Shakespeare's sentiments. Of course, I a ...
    ...  and the Classics</i>, p. 118) and that Shakespeare had it in mind is suggested  ...
    ... Heaven and overthrow the Olympian Gods. Shakespeare would have known the story f ...
866) Commentary Note for line 2868:
2868 There's such diuinitie doth hedge a King,
    ... ht justify this fine sentiment, or else Shakespeare himself may be suspected of  ...
    ...  in <i>R2</i> than in any other play of Shakespeare. But the theory is an anachr ...
    ... breach with the Papacy and the Emperor. Shakespeare's history was coloured by th ...
    ... dea of the Divine Right of Kings, which Shakespeare makes much of in <i>RII</i>, ...
867) Commentary Note for line 2869:
2869 That treason can but peepe to what it would,
    ...  mode of construction sometimes used by Shakespeare. See Note 14, Act 2, <i>H8</ ...
868) Commentary Note for line 2870:
2870 Act's little of his will, tell me Laertes 2870
    ... ession of the motive of an action. Thus Shakespeare in <i>R2</i> 4.1.177 [2100]: ...
869) Commentary Note for line 2878:
2878 To hell allegiance, vowes to the blackest deuill,
    ... and the Tyranny of the King, &amp;c. <i>Shakespeare</i> gives him Nothing but ab ...
870) Commentary Note for line 2879:
2879 Conscience and grace, to the profoundest pit
    ... sense of <i>salvation</i>. See Schmidt, Shakespeare-Lexicon, s.v., No. 6, where, ...

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