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971 to 980 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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971) Commentary Note for lines 3267-68:
3267-8 Ham. That skull had a tongue in it, and could sing | once, how the
    ... de Granada, comparison with which shows Shakespeare characteristically elaborati ...
972) Commentary Note for lines 3268-69:
3268-9 knaue iowles it to the ground, as if {twere} <it | were> Caines iawbone, that did the
    ... be a curious allusion to the art of the Shakesperian era, when Cain was commonly ...
    ... ropriety and force of effect with which Shakespeare uses words, and words of eve ...
    ... 140-6)) it seems certain that it was in Shakespeare's mind as he wrote, because  ...
    ... ;n&gt;&#x201C;1See Rosalie L. Colie, <i>Shakespeare's Living Art</i>, 1974, p. 2 ...
973) Commentary Note for lines 3269-70:
3269-70 first {murder, this} <murther: It> | might be the pate of a pollitician, which this asse {now}
    ... &#8216;I believe both the words were<i> Shakespeare's. </i> An authour in revisi ...
    ... e word is always used in a bad sense by Shakespeare, as [<i>1H4</i> 1.3.249[569] ...
    ... ed. 1890): &#x201C;This word is used by Shakespeare in only four other places: [ ...
    ... c>Herford</sc> (ed. 1900): "The word in Shakespeare suggests Machiavelism."</par ...
974) Commentary Note for lines 3270-71:
3270-1 {ore-reaches;} <o're Of-| fices:>one that {would} <could> circumuent God, might it not?
    ... ; &#x201C;<i>could circumuent God</i>]] Shakespeare, certainly, was never guilty ...
    ... that time, were so overbearing, that <i>Shakespear</i> speaking of insolence at  ...
    ... 12;</i>I believe both the words were<i> Shakespeare's. </i> An authour in revisi ...
    ... 12;</i>I believe both the words were<i> Shakespeare's. </i> An authour in revisi ...
    ... &#8216;I believe both the words were<i> Shakespeare's. </i> An authour in revisi ...
    ... here known, perhaps a misprint, perhaps Shakespeare's coinage for his thought.&# ...
    ... blunderer arrived at a word which is in Shakespeare's finest manner, both invent ...
975) Commentary Note for lines 3274-75:
3274-5 how doost thou {sweet} <good> lord? This | might be my Lord such a one, that
    ...  284&gt; &#x201C;We cannot be sure that Shakespeare's word was &#8216;good' and  ...
976) Commentary Note for lines 3277-79:
3277 Hor. I my Lord.
3278-9 Ham. Why een so, & now my Lady wormes | {Choples} <Chaplesse>, & knockt
    ... . 1987): &#x201C;The word seems to be a Shakespearian coinage, the earliest inst ...
977) Commentary Note for lines 3279-81:
3279-80 about the {massene} <Mazard> with a Sextens | spade; heere's fine reuolution {and}
3280-1 <if> we had the tricke to | see't, did these bones cost no more the breeding,
    ... ans only a jaw. The very quotation from Shakespeare contradicts it, where the sk ...
    ... ms to have been regarded as colloquial. Shakespeare puts into the mouth of Touch ...
978) Commentary Note for lines 3281-83:
3281-3 but | to play at loggits with {them} <’em?>: mine ake to thinke | on't. 3281
    ... en &#8216;loggats;' a fact that renders Shakespeare's allusion more appropriate. ...
    ...  465&gt; &#x201C;There is no mention in Shakespeare of Ninepins or Skittles. Sim ...
    ... /sc></sigla><hanging><sc>ard2</sc> : <i>Shakespeare's England</i> +</hanging><pa ...
979) Commentary Note for lines 3284-88:
3284 <Clowne sings.>
3285 {Clow. } A pickax and a spade a spade, {Song.}
3286 for and a shrowding sheet,
3287 O a pit of Clay for to be made
3288 for such a guest is meet.
    ... marks on Collier's and Knight's eds. of Shakespeare</i>, p. 218, I adduced sever ...
    ...  which one finds here and there also in Shakespeare's time. It equals further, o ...
    ... llier's </i> <i>and Mr.Knight's eds. of Shakespeare </i>, p. 218.&#x201D;</para> ...
980) Commentary Note for lines 3289-90:
3289-90 Ham. There's another, why {may} <might> not that be the | skull of <of> a Lawyer,
    ... olete. The term <i>fine</i>, as used by Shakespeare in this passage, signified a ...
    ... ill from this explanation perceive that Shakespeare has used the terms <i>recove ...
    ...  the follliwng passages it appears that Shakespeare uses the term fne in that se ...
    ...  . The knowledge of the law revealed by Shakespeare's plays rarely goes beyond c ...

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