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451 to 460 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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451) Commentary Note for line 2469:
2469 In the ranck sweat of an inseemed bed

    ... Editors gloss 'saturated with grease or animal fat' (Dover Wilson suggests that Shakespeare drew unwittingly on early memories of hog's lard used in his father' ...
452) Commentary Note for line 2502:
2502 Your bedded haire like life in excrements

    ... e in excrements</b>] T<sc>heobald</sc> (ed. 1733): &#x201C;I took Notice, in my SHAKESPEARE <i>restor'd</i>, that this Expression as much wanted an Explanation, ...
453) Commentary Note for line 2514:
2514 {Ger.}<Qu.> Nothing at all, yet all that is I see.

    ... owever, that it accords with classical and Elizabethan precedent (see Stoll, <i>Shakespeare Studies</i>, pp. 211-13) as well as with the popular belief that gho ...
454) Commentary Note for line 2517:
2517 Ham. Why looke you there, looke how it steales away, {I4}

    ... to be dressed in &#8216;his own familiar habit;' and they conclude, either that Shakespeare had &#8216;forgotten himself,' or had meant &#8216;to vary the dress ...

    ... the apartment, as the natural mode of exit. It is not difficult to believe that Shakespeare wrote the line as it stands in this corrected folio: &#8216;Why look ...

    ... sc> (ed. 1882): &#x201C;According to Furness ad loc. it has been suggested that Shakespeare &#8216;surely' wrote <i>stalks</i>. Surely not! The apparition of th ...
455) Commentary Note for line 2518:
2518 My father in his habit as he liued,

    ... ghost of king Dionysius in the habit of a scrivener. </i>It is well known that Shakespeare excelled in the part of the Ghost--according to Rowe it was &#8216;t ...
456) Commentary Note for line 2522:
2522 <Ham. Extasie?>

    ... ><b>Extasie</b>] <sc>Collier</sc> (ed. 1858): &#x201C;This word, always used by Shakespeare to denote some strong mental impression or aberration, is not in any ...
457) Commentary Note for line 2527:
2527 Would gambole from, mother for loue of grace,

    ... estness, its solemn adjuration, its sober remonstrance, and ask himself whether Shakespeare could by possibility have intended his hero to be otherwise than mos ...

    ... eap wildly, shy away. A verb denoting the action of a curvetting horse supplies Shakespeare with a metaphor for the wild irrational movements of the mind. Cf. < ...
458) Commentary Note for line 2529:
2529 That not your trespasse but my madnesse speakes,

    ... (Sir Philip Sidney&#8212;Apology for Poetry&#8212;written only ten years before Shakespeare began to work in the London theatre&#8212;Tragedy&#8212;&#8216;opene ...
459) Commentary Note for line 2532:
2532 Infects vnseene, confesse your selfe to heauen,

    ... >confesse </b>. . .<b> auoyd</b>] <sc>Rushton</sc> (1909, p. 113): &#x201C;When Shakespeare was writing [this] passage he may have remembered Puttenham's descri ...
460) Commentary Note for line 2535:
2535 To make them {rancker,} <ranke.> forgiue me this my vertue, 2535

    ... rancker</b>] <sc>Walker</sc> (1860, 2:55): &#x201C;<i>Qu&#230;re</i>, would not Shakespeare naturally write ranker?&#x201D;</para> <para><fnc> This note is from ...

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