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361 to 370 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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361) Commentary Note for line 1911:
1911 No, let the candied {tongue licke} <tongue, like> absurd pompe,

    ... rd</b>] <sc>Clark</sc> &amp; <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): "In all other passages Shakespeare accents this word on the second syllable, as we do."</para></cn> <cn ...
362) Commentary Note for line 1912:
1912 And crooke the pregnant hindges of the knee

    ... ln1</sc></hanging> <para>1912 <sc>Clark</sc> &amp; <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): "Shakespeare has here unconsciously made a bold use of the figure synecdoche, whe ...
363) Commentary Note for line 1920:
1920 Whose blood and iudgement are so well {comedled} <co-mingled>,

    ... end, fuse together'. It surely is of OE. origin and we can possibly assume that Shakespeare wrote &#8216;co-melded', which fits his meaning precisely.&#x201D;</ ...
364) Commentary Note for line 1924:
1924 In my harts core, I in my hart of hart

    ... assion's slave, which runs as a steady theme through the plays and sonnets that Shakespeare wrote toward the end of Elizabeth's reign, his sympathies repeatedly ...
365) Commentary Note for line 1949:
1949 Ham. Excellent yfaith,

    ... 8216;the bird Taurus hath <i>a great voice</i>, but a small body;' and Lyly and Shakespeare both say, the empty vessel gives or makes the greatest sound.&#x201D ...
366) Commentary Note for line 1953:
1953 Ham. No, nor mine now my Lord.

    ... > m<sc>mal1</sc></sigla><para>1953 <sc>Malone</sc> (m<sc>mal1</sc>): &#x201C;As Shakespeare gives the customs &amp; mannors of his own country to all <tab> </ta ...
367) Commentary Note for line 1962:
1962 Ros. I my Lord, they stay vpon your patience.

    ... i>or <i>will.' </i> Johnson would have changed the word to <i>pleasure</i>; but Shakespeare has again used it in a similar sense in the Two Gentlemen of Verona, ...

    ... i> or <i>will</i>. Johnson would have changed the word to <i>pleasure</i>; but Shakespeare ahs it in a similar sense in The Two Gentlemen of Vernoa, Act iii. s ...
368) Commentary Note for line 1966:
1966 Ham. Lady shall I lie in your lap?

    ... &#8216;To <i>lie along in ladies lappes,</i> &amp;c.&#x201D; This fashion which Shakespeare probably designed to ridicule by appropriating it to Hamlet during h ...

    ... ttuck 108): &#x201C;The custom of sitting &amp; lying on the stage accounts for Shakespeare placing Hamlet at Ophelia's feet&#8212;during the representation of ...
369) Commentary Note for lines 1983-85:
1983-4 Ham. So long, nay then let the deule weare blacke, | for Ile haue a
1984-5 sute of sables; ô heauens, die two mo|nths agoe, and not forgotten yet,

    ... ed that it signalizes the end of mourning by its richness and display. Yet is Shakespeare had meant that, he could have thought of something gayer; and it is ...
370) Commentary Note for lines 2004-05:
2004-5 Ham. Marry this <is> {munching} <Miching> Mallico, {it} <that> meanes | mischiefe.

    ... anging> <para><sc>Grey</sc> (<i>C ritical, Historical, and Explanatory Notes on Shakespeare (p. 296-297): &#x201C;&#8216;Miching Malicho</i>.' Folios 1623, and ...

    ... <i>mich </i>signified originally to keep hid, or out of sight, why might not <i>Shakespeare </i>have wrote <i>miching Malbecco, </i>from<i> Spenser's </i>descri ...

    ... ith G. H. Lewes.</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1879<tab> </tab><tab> </tab><i><sc>new shakespeare society</sc></i></sigla><hanging><sc>anon</sc></hanging> <para>2004 ...

    ... ging><sc>anon</sc></hanging> <para>2004 <b>miching</b>] <sc>Anon</sc>. (<i>New Shakespeare Society'sTransactions</i> <i>1877-9</i>, pp.472): &#x201C;&#8216;<i> ...

    ... ole'. It seems to be in the common sense of truant, mischievous skulker, that Shakespeare uses the noun micher in 1H4 II. iv. 396. In Massinger, A Very Woma ...

    ... epithet for a person rather than an action, personification either in or out of Shakespeare is no unusual figure.</para> <para><tab> </tab>&#x201C;As for what i ...

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