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951 to 960 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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951) Commentary Note for line 3184:
3184 But that this folly {drownes} <doubts> it. Exit.
    ... 3&gt;&#x201C;As to drown, it is used by Shakespeare in the sense of &#8216;o'erw ...
    ...  hence reasonably be questioned whether Shakespeare ever wrote <i>doubts</i> in  ...
    ... se are the <i>only</i> four passages in Shakespeare where the word &#8216;douts  ...
    ... the origin of the variant. Misreading a Shakespearian spelling like &#8216;dowts ...
    ...  the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inf ...
952) Commentary Note for line 3189:
3189 Enter two Clownes.
    ...  Delight of the laurelled, the immortal Shakespeare.  Some of his foolish bigott ...
    ... o design, all powerful to express, / <i>Shakespeare</i> each Passion drew in ev' ...
    ... cially in the hands of such a genius as Shakespeare, may excite tears not laught ...
    ... nce, offered the public an amendment of Shakespeare's Hamlet. The respect, which ...
    ... ors, which were not absent in dramas in Shakespeare's time, together with the si ...
    ... e down by tradition from the players of Shakespeare's own time. The Doctor, in t ...
    ... rotesque, make up such a combination as Shakespeare only could conceive. Here we ...
    ... ork. But here is the very excellence of Shakespeare's genius&#8212;that he does  ...
    ... ary and solemn platitudes on death; but Shakespeare extorts from us involuntary  ...
    ... re was on the old stage and no doubt in Shakespeare's time an incident of by-pla ...
    ...  mattocks</i>. It seems evident that In Shakespeare's time the part of the secon ...
    ... n' and &#8216;Other'. This is evidently Shakespeare's designation, and it is int ...
953) Commentary Note for line 3190_319:
3190-91 Clowne. Is shee to be buried in Christian buriall, {when she} <that>| wilfully
3191 seekes her owne saluation? 3191
    ... i>, in accordance with the habit of all Shakespeare's clowns.&#x201D; &lt;/p. 58 ...
    ... l, Elmer, Edgar. <i>Art and Artifice in Shakespeare: A Study in Dramatic Contras ...
954) Commentary Note for line 3192_319:
3192-3 Other. I tell thee she is, <and> therfore make her graue | straight, the crow-
3193-4 ner hath sate on her, and finds it Chris|tian buriall.
    ... c>Johnson </sc>may take my word that <i>Shakespeare</i> meant; She is to be buri ...
    ...  which is characteristic of his role in Shakespeare, means <i>damnation</i> , wh ...
955) Commentary Note for line 3195_319:
3195-6 Clowne. How can that be, vnlesse she drown'd herselfe in | her owne
3196 defence. 3196
    ...  instance, among many in this scene, of Shakespeare's delight in &#8216;the uned ...
956) Commentary Note for line 3198_319:
3198-9 Clowne. It must be {so offended} <Se offendendo>, it cannot be els, for | heere lyes the
    ... C;in self-injury, used intentionally by Shakespeare instead of <i>se defendendo< ...
    ... 48): &lt;p.47&gt; &#x201C;It seems that Shakespeare has made the first clown con ...
957) Commentary Note for lines 3200-02:
3200-01 three branches, it is {to} <an>| act, to doe, <and> to performe, {or all;} <argall> she drownd her
3201-2 selfe | wittingly.
    ...  and abound in the legal instruments of Shakespeare's day, frequently occur also ...
    ... 980): &#x201C;divisions of an argument. Shakespeare is doubtless making fun of t ...
958) Commentary Note for line 3203:
3203 Other. Nay, but heare you good man deluer.
    ... nating a man by his occupation. Clearly Shakespeare does not think of the second ...
959) Commentary Note for lines 3205-07:
3205-6 man, good, if the man goe to this <wa-> | <ter and> {water &} drowne himselfe, it is will {M2}
3206-7 he, nill he, he goes, | marke you that{,}<?> but if the water come to him, &
    ... es s. Nill und Will I, nillI.&#8212;Bei Shakespeare kommen nur noch die Redensar ...
    ... . See Nill and Will I, nill I.&#8212;In Shakespeare, it appears even still in th ...
960) Commentary Note for line 3211:
3211 Clowne.I marry i'st, Crowners quest law.
    ... . Collectively 4. Enquiry; examination [Shakespeare all above def.] 5. Request;  ...
    ... <small><i>sig.  </i>Ll4r</small>&gt;<i> Shakespeare</i> was acquainted with and  ...
    ... sages in this scene. Yet I know not how Shakespeare could have come to the knowl ...
    ...  to supose that such a book appeared to Shakespeare as it does now to the unprof ...
    ... orts. The difficulty to be explained in Shakespeare's legal allusions is not in  ...
    ... Sir John <sc>Hawkins</sc>suggested that Shakespeare here designed a ridicule on  ...
    ... igger's dabbling with legal subtleties, Shakespeare has satirised those who figu ...
    ... rom French into English till long after Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;</para></cn>  ...
    ... nies for those who died in the faith in Shakespeare's time were more or less imp ...
    ... ed to by Gay, who wrote a century after Shakespeare lived.  &#8216;To shew their ...
    ... re in almost general use in the time of Shakespeare, and it is still to a consid ...
    ... s and burying grounds, until long after Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;&lt;/p. 25&gt ...
    ... ighteenth century. Malone suggests that Shakespeare may have heard of the case i ...

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