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221 to 230 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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221) Commentary Note for line 767:
767 Let not the royall bed of Denmarke be {D3v}

    ... the fact that he represented as a spirit in a state of spiritual safety. Again, Shakespeare insists too often on the divine right of kings for him to have taugh ...
222) Commentary Note for line 768:
768 A couch for luxury and damned incest.

    ... ompare [<i>MM </i>5.1.506 (2900)]: &#8216;One all of luxury, an ass, a madman.' Shakespeare never uses the word in its modern sense. Compare &#8216;luxurious' i ...
223) Commentary Note for line 770:
770 Tain't not thy minde, nor let thy soule contriue

    ... ab> </tab><sc>Anon. [Auditor]</sc> (<i>Gent. Mag. </i>3 [1733]:114): &#x201C;<i>Shakespeare </i>has found room for <i>Pity</i>, where he would have been excusab ...

    ... on): &#x201C;By saying these words and those that follow the ghost is, whether Shakespeare means to have him do it on purpose or inadvertently, making it impos ...
224) Commentary Note for line 774:
774 The Gloworme shewes the matine to be neere

    ... ng><para>774<tab> </tab><b>matine</b>] <sc>Elze</sc> (ed. 1882): &#x201C;Drake, Shakespeare and his Times, II, 414, print <i>matins</i> in his quotation of the ...
225) Commentary Note for line 775:
775 And gins to pale his vneffectuall fire,

    ... /i>equal, <i>in</i>equality. [. . .] <i>Un- </i>seems to have been preferred by Shakespeare before <i>p</i> and <i>r</i>, which do not allow <i>in-</i> to prece ...

    ... 216;a glowworm in the night, The which hath fire in darkness, none in light.' Shakespeare does not use <i>uneffectual</i> elsewhere."</para></cn> <cn> <sigla ...
226) Commentary Note for line 776:
776 Adiew, adiew, {adiew,} <Hamlet:> remember me. <Exit>

    ... I believe, lies the key to Hamlet's whole behavior, and it is clear to me what Shakespeare has set out to portray: a heavy deed placed on a soul which is not a ...
227) Commentary Note for line 778:
778 And shall I coupple hell, ô fie, hold, {hold} my hart,

    ... common than the interchange or omission of ? and !; and this I believe is what Shakespeare wrote. </para> <para>&#x201C;Hamlet has just been told that his fath ...
228) Commentary Note for line 780:
780 But beare me {swiftly} <stiffely> vp; remember thee,

    ... s that once 'transformed the Whitsun crowd into witnesses at Golgotha" [Barton, Shakespeare and the Idea of the Play, p. 164]. </para> </cn> <tlnrange>780 781- ...
229) Commentary Note for line 781:
781 I thou poore Ghost {whiles} <while> memory holds a seate

    ... ndermost of which they placed the memory. That this division was not unknown to Shakespeare we learn from [<i>LLL </i>4.2.70 (1233)], &#8216;A foolish, extravag ...
230) Commentary Note for line 785:
785 All sawes of bookes, all formes, all pressures past

    ... sed as an abbreviated form of &#8216;impressures,' meaning &#8216;impressions.' Shakespeare elsewhere uses &#8216;impressure' for &#8216;impression.' See <small ...

    ... 'table'. Cf. <i>pressures,</i> impressions, and 1872, 'his form and pressure'. Shakespeare often uses <i>form</i> to refer to an exact image such as is given ...

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