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461 to 470 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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461) Commentary Note for line 2536:
2536 For in the fatnesse of {these} <this> pursie times

    ... of it as a variant of <i>pursive</i>, short-winded, is not helpful here, though Shakespeare exploits both meanings in the &#8216;pursy insolence' of <i>Tim</i>. ...
462) Commentary Note for line 2538:
2538 Yea {curbe}<courb> and wooe for leaue to doe him good.

    ... </i> line cited] The word is found in the older writers. The moderns editors of Shakespeare have absurdly printed <i>curb</i>.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1 ...
463) Commentary Note for lines 2539-40:
2539-40 {Ger.}<Qu.> O Hamlet | thou hast cleft my hart in twaine.

    ... (ed. 1987): &#x201C;Some earlier examples of this figurative expression, which Shakespeare uses again in <i>MM</i> [3.1.62 (1272)], are recorded by Dent (H329. ...
464) Commentary Note for line 2544:
2544 Assune a vertue if you haue it not, <refraine to night,>

    ... ondemn the F1 cuts; we cannot say they were made without careful consideration. Shakespeare himself could hardly have pruned his own verse more tenderly.&#x201D ...
465) Commentary Note for line 2544+1:
2544+1 {That monster custome, who all sence doth eate}

    ... > into the text instead of <i>evil</i>. But I do not perceive any tampering; if Shakespeare wrote the passage at all he was himself sufficiently conceited to wr ...

    ... > is a &#8216;<i>monster'</i> because he is both a good and an evil angel . . . Shakespeare employs &#8216;<i>use'</i> and &#8216;<i>custom'</i> indifferently; ...

    ... implantation of both vice and virtue within an individual.&#x201D; Like Bacon, Shakespeare &#x201C;has Hamlet explain the same double role of habit to his moth ...

    ... x201C;This passage and the one at 165-8 are not in F. Again Edwards argues that Shakespeare marked them for deletion, and Hibbard comments dismissively on 159-6 ...
466) Commentary Note for line 2544+2:
2544+2 {Of habits deuill, is angell yet in this}

    ... x): &#x201C;The assumption behind this emendation of Q2's <i>deuill</i> is that Shakespeare wrote <i>vilde</i> which Compositor X then muddled in much the same ...
467) Commentary Note for line 2546+1:
2546+1 {For vse almost can change the stamp of nature,}

    ... rd</sc> (ed. 1987, Appendix): &#x201C;i.e. innate qualities of the personality. Shakespeare often employs this metaphor, derived from coining, when referring to ...
468) Commentary Note for line 2546+2:
2546+2 {And either the deuill, or throwe him out} 2546+2

    ... ell as the lection adopted by myself, weak and tautological. I now suppose that Shakespeare wrote: &#8216;And either <i>usher</i> the devil, or throw him out.' ...

    ... t. Andrews, certainly one of the most valuable illustrations of the writings of Shakespeare which have lately been produced. Having accidentally omitted to call ...

    ... d the phrase, &#8216;<i>shame</i> the Devil,' was part of an old proverb, which Shakespeare quotes elsewhere. So in <i>1H4 </i>[3.01.57-60 (1582-5)]: &#8216;And ...

    ... ' would not be without precedent. If, however, we can light upon a verb used by Shakespeare himself, albeit elsewhere, in the same connexion, it would come to u ...

    ... ed that the word in itself implies confinement or restriction (e.g. Ingleby, <i>Shakespeare Hermeneutics</i>, pp. 123ff.). Clark and Wright, who suggested it, t ...

    ... 1 quarto. It may well be that this omission is not the compositor's fault; that Shakespeare had not found the word he wanted before he gave up the passage.&#x20 ...

    ... &#x201C;Either the compositor has omitted the verb at this point, or, possibly, Shakespeare failed to supply one. Various conjectures as to what it should have ...

    ... he proverb 'tell truth and shame the devil' (Dent, T566) is used three times by Shakespeare in <i>1H4</i> (3.1.54, 55 and 58); see t.n. for other editorial emen ...
469) Commentary Note for line 2547:
2547 And when you are desirous to be blest,

    ... k me blessing I'll kneel down / And ask of thee forgiveness.' In both instances Shakespeare draws on the assumption that it would be normal or proper for a chil ...
470) Commentary Note for line 2549:
2549 I doe repent; but heauen hath pleasd it so

    ... the singular with the plural; for <i>Heaven</i> is . . . used in this manner by Shakespeare himself and by his contemporaries.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1 ...

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