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401 to 410 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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401) Commentary Note for lines 2185-89:
2185-6 Guyl. Nay good my Lord, this curtesie is not of | the right breede, if 2185
2186-7 it shall please you to make me a {wholsome} <whol-| some> aunswere, I will doe your
2187-8 mothers commaundement, | if not, your pardon and my returne, shall
2188-9 be the end of | <my> busines.

    ... tesie</b>] <sc>Andrews</sc> (ed. 1993): &#x201C;Courtesy. But here as elsewhere Shakespeare plays on <i>cur</i> (see <i>Breed</i> in line 341 [2185]).&#x201D;</ ...
402) Commentary Note for line 2212+1:
2212+1 {Enter the Players with Recorders.}

    ... ainted with this peculiarity) has appeared irreconcileable with other accounts. Shakespeare (in <i>Hamlet</i>) speaks of the Recorder as a little pipe, and says ...

    ... .' Such changes are innocent enough, if a little cheese-paring; but manhandling Shakespeare is a dangerous business&#8212;as every editor is aware&#8212;and the ...

    ... ty of the recorder &#8211; whose seductive tone charmed the ears of Henry VIII, Shakespeare and Pepys &#8211; is a development unparalleled in the history of an ...
403) Commentary Note for lines 2213-18:
2213-4 Ham. I {sir}, but while the grasse growes, the prouerbe is | something
2214-16 musty, | <Enter one with a Recorder.> | ô the {Recorders,} <Recorder.> let mee see {one}, to withdraw with you, why
2217-8 doe you goe about to recouer the wind of mee, as if you | would driue
2218 me into a toyle?

    ... uainted with this peculiarity) has appeared irreconcilable with other accounts. Shakespeare (in <i>Hamlet</i>) speaks of the Recorder as a little pipe, and says ...

    ... The meaning would be made perfectly clear in the acting. We must remember that Shakespeare wrote for the stage, not the study. The fact explains many superfici ...

    ... .' Such changes are innocent enough, if a little cheese-paring; but manhandling Shakespeare is a dangerous business&#8212;as every editor is aware&#8212;and the ...

    ... ty of the recorder &#8211; whose seductive tone charmed the ears of Henry VIII, Shakespeare and Pepys &#8211; is a development unparalleled in the history of an ...
404) Commentary Note for lines 2219-20:
2219-20 Guyl. O my lord, if my duty be too bold, my loue | is too vnmanerly.

    ... 872): &#x201C;Tyrwhitt proposed to read &#8216;<i>not</i> unmannerly.' Probably Shakespeare intended Guildenstern's words to express an unmeaning compliment. As ...

    ... read &#8216;not unmannerly;' and the Cambridge editors remark, &#8216;Probably Shakespeare intended Guidenstern's words to express an unmeaning compliment. As ...
405) Commentary Note for lines 2247-48:
2247-8 Ham. Do you see {yonder} <that> clowd that's almost in shape | {of} <like> a Camel?

    ... d Mr. Quick, and as he has ever been represented since we remember the Theatro. Shakespeare seems to have intended the Character of Polonius for that of a Court ...

    ... the Managers of both Houses, would set before them the Character of Polonius as Shakespeare intended it, and prevail on them to revive it.&#x201D;</para> <para> ...
406) Commentary Note for line 2259:
2259 Tis now the very witching time of night,

    ... is the best reason &#8211; the testimony of the folio&#8212; for believing that Shakespeare wrote, &lt;p.416&gt;&lt;/p.417&gt; &#8216;In maiden meditation, fanc ...

    ... i> (1589) by Robert Greene (1558-92)] By giving him this familiar stage speech, Shakespeare distinguishes Hamlet's exercise of authority from the rituals and pr ...
407) Commentary Note for line 2260:
2260 When Churchyards yawne, and hell it selfe {breakes} <breaths> out 2260

    ... tab> </tab><b>breakes</b>] <sc>Wilson</sc> (1934, rpt. 1963, 1:138): &#x201C;If Shakespeare wrote &#8216;breathes,' as he is likely to have done, and the Q2 com ...
408) Commentary Note for line 2262:
2262 And doe such <bitter> busines as the {bitter} day

    ... re is the best reason&#8212;the testimony of the folio&#8212;for believing that Shakespeare wrote, &lt;/p.416&gt;&lt;p.417&gt; &#8216;In maiden meditation, fanc ...

    ... (<i>Par. Lost</i>, iv. 32).</para> <para>&#x201C;Though in my recent edition of Shakespeare I have preferred printing, with the folio,&#8212;&#8216;And do such ...

    ... perfectly the sense here required, when it is borne in mind what special force Shakespeare elsewhere uses the word in such passages as&#8212; &#8216;Those bles ...
409) Commentary Note for line 2265:
2265 The soule of Nero enter this firme bosome, 2265

    ... c> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;The Roman emperor who had his mother Agrippina murdered. Shakespeare refers to the story that he subsequently ripped open her womb in <i> ...
410) Commentary Note for line 2272:
2272 King. I like him not, nor stands it safe with vs

    ... es him at his prayers strikes us with deeper horror. The dramatic dilemma which Shakespeare has achieved is acute. For a single moment he makes us feel that Cla ...

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