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231 to 240 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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231) Commentary Note for line 792:
792 My tables, <my Tables;> meet it is I set it downe

    ... ing of the metaphor</i>, that it is a great relief to me to feel convinced that Shakespeare never intended it.</para> <para>&#x201C;In Hamlet's discourse there ...

    ... ge for the blood of a kinsman a maxim in primitive societies (and on this point Shakespeare was faithful to the spirit of the original saga), but Hamlet [. . . ...
232) Commentary Note for line 793:
793 That one may smile, and smile, and be a villaine,

    ... ce, to be written in Hamlet's tables, is expressed in the aphoristic form which Shakespeare had been taught to recognize ever since he was exposed to the <i>Bre ...
233) Commentary Note for line 800:
800 Hora. {Heauens} <Heauen> secure him.

    ... s here used in the sense of &#8216;keep safe,' &#8216;guard,' &#8216;protect.' Shakespeare uses the words &#8216;secure&#x201D; and &#8216;safe' thus respectiv ...
234) Commentary Note for line 803:
803 Ham. Hillo, ho, ho, boy come, {and} <bird,> come.

    ... e</sigla><hanging>Coleridge</hanging> <para><sc>803 Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, 1813, Coleridge's notes, transcribed by Er ...
235) Commentary Note for line 804:
804 Mar. How {i'st} <ist't> my noble Lord? {D4}

    ... ging>Coleridge</hanging><para>804-77<tab> </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, rpt. in the<i> Bristol Gazette</i>, 11 Nov ...
236) Commentary Note for line 814:
814 Ham. There's {neuer} <nere> a villaine,
814 Dwelling in all Denmarke

    ... ging>Coleridge</hanging><para>814-15<tab> </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, 1813, Coleridge's notes, transcribed by Er ...
237) Commentary Note for line 815:
815 But hee's an arrant knaue.

    ... 1C;veritable, downright (an 'opprobrious intensive' (<i>OED</i>) always used by Shakespeare with nouns like knave, traitor, thief, whore)&#x201D;</para></cn> ...
238) Commentary Note for line 829:
829 Ham. Yes by Saint Patrick but there is {Horatio} <my Lord>,

    ... account for his name having become a familiar oath with a prince of Denmark. As Shakespeare gave the living manners, customs, and habits of thinking of his own ...

    ... e. The idea of the Ghost as demon also appears in Voragine. &#x201C;In a word, Shakespeare could have gleaned most of the theology in <i>Hamlet</i> from 'The G ...
239) Commentary Note for line 842:
842 Ham. Vppon my sword. {D4v}

    ... : 226): &#x201C;The oath administered to the Knights of the Bath in the time of Shakespeare ended thus:&#8212;&#8216;In witness of all these, you shall kiss you ...

    ... quoted Bartholinus to show that with the Danes it was a religious ceremony, but Shakespeare attended only to the manners of his own country. <small>In the openi ...
240) Commentary Note for line 845:
845 {Ghost cries vnder the Stage.}
845 Ghost. Sweare. <Ghost cries vnder the Stage.>

    ... e dramatic purpose might be of having the ghost cry under the stage: &#x201C;If Shakespeare did not expect (rightly or wrongly) that a weird effect could be thu ...

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