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431 to 440 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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431) Commentary Note for line 2364:
2364 When he is {drunke, a sleepe,} <drunke asleepe:> or in his rage,

    ... approves them. On the contrary, a sensational convention is brilliantly used by Shakespeare for his own dramatic ends. First, theatrically, the convention facil ...
432) Commentary Note for line 2369:
2369 And that his soule may be as damnd and black

    ... mes applies to the subject; but there are hardly any of those commentators upon Shakespeare who exclaim against it, that have not produced instances of it from ...

    ... e stage by subsequent tragedians as late as the middle of the next century; and Shakespeare has here in some sort laid a ground for the introduction of it, by m ...
433) Commentary Note for line 2372:
2372 King. My words fly vp, my thoughts remaine belowe

    ... ns regarding the equivocations and dissimulations present in public speech. Yet Shakespeare manifests the limitations of Hamlet's faith in the relationship betw ...
434) Commentary Note for line 2374:
2374 Enter {Gertrard} <Queene> and Polonius.

    ... lement of this structure, I have suggested, is the 'deceptive cadence' in which Shakespeare summons up our excitement then dashes it down in the false resolutio ...

    ... lement of this structure, I have suggested, is the "deceptive cadence" in which Shakespeare summons up our excitement then dashes it down in the false resolutio ...
435) Commentary Note for line 2379:
2379 Much heate and him, Ile silence me {euen} <e'ene> heere,

    ... #x201D; &lt;/p.265&gt;</para> <para><fnc> Singer is &#x201C;vindicating&#x201D; Shakespeare from &#x201C;the interpolations and corruptions&#x201D; advocated by ...

    ... ceivable that this is the one place where an authoritative change, occurring to Shakespeare when the play was in production, is preserved only in the corrupt fi ...

    ... ceivable that this is the one place where an authoritative change, occurring to Shakespeare when the play was in production, is preserved only in the corrupt fi ...
436) Commentary Note for line 2404:
2404 Ham. How now, a Rat, dead for a Duckat, dead.

    ... p. 35): &#x201C;<i>Hamlet's</i> killing Polonius was in Conformity to the Plan Shakespeare built his Play upon; and the Prince behaves himself on that Occasion ...

    ... ter report the queen makes of the deed, <small>as well as with the novella that Shakespeare follows here more closely that in other parts of his drama. {See In ...

    ... ally a question. Proverbially rats betrayed themselves (see D.V. Falk in the <i>Shakespeare Quarterly </i>18 [1976], p.30). Here the anonymous translation of Be ...
437) Commentary Note for line 2409:
2409 Ham. A bloody deede, almost as bad, good mother

    ... rness, vol. ii. p. 100) the Queen is equally distinct in her disavowal. May not Shakespeare have left the point in doubt for the sake of adding a vague impressi ...
438) Commentary Note for line 2410:
2410 As kill a King, and marry with his brother.

    ... e exhibits: &#8216;But, look! amazement . . . Hamlet' [3.4.112-5 (2492-5)]. Had Shakespeare intended to attach greater culpability to the Queen than her incestu ...

    ... . Therefore she does not deny the murder. She feels both guilty and not guilty. Shakespeare seems to have made the strongest dramatic use possible of these word ...
439) Commentary Note for line 2411:
2411 {Ger.}<Qu.> As kill a King{.}<?>

    ... bservable, that in the drama neither the king or queen make so good a defence. Shakespeare wished to render them as odious as he could, and therefore has not i ...

    ... ready so long that I will content myself with asking if it can be supposed that Shakespeare intended so important a point to be left in doubt; or that Hamlet, i ...
440) Commentary Note for line 2413:
2413 Thou wretched, rash, intruding foole farwell,

    ... umstance which seems likely to mislead. But Hamlet was still to appear mad. And Shakespeare seems to us to have sometimes forgot himself, and to have written as ...

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