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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... ‘To punish me with this, and this with me;' which is more in the style of Shakespeare than the amendment, nor is any thing wanting to the sense, but the p ...
... cessarily opposites. That is not proved; here they are, as R.W. Dent argues (<i>Shakespeare Quarterly </i>29 [1978), pp. 82-84), synonymous or at least point in ...
473) Commentary Note for line 2554:2554 I must be cruell only to be kinde,... p. 162-5): <p.162> “A most thoughtless but outrageous license with Shakespeare seems to have become invariable with the actors of Hamlet in the app ...
... accuracy of the derivation, it may be interesting, in considering the fact that Shakespeare stands alone in the use of <i>bloat</i> as an adjective, to ask whet ...
475) Commentary Note for line 2559:2559 Pinch wanton on your cheeke, call you his Mouse,... Cf. Edw. Alleyn to his wife, ‘My good sweet mouse', etc. (<i>Memoirs</i>, Shakespeare Soc., pp. 25-6); <i>TN</i> [1.5.62-3 (354-5)]; and Capulet's having ...
... ter Weise schildern.” [<i>reechy</i> means smokey and sooty. In any case Shakespeare wanted to portray the <i>kisses</i> in the most repulsive way.]</par ...
477) Commentary Note for line 2563:2563 That I essentially am not in madnesse,... in a mental condition under examination, to pronounce, after reading this, that Shakespeare intended to represent Hamlet as really mad.”</para></cn> <cn> ...
... e theory of Hamlet's pretended madness finds no support in the ultimate text of Shakespeare beyond 3 or 4 passages. One of these [quotes 2563-4 That I am . . . ...
479) Commentary Note for line 2566:2566 Would from a paddack, from a bat, a gib,... s or breeds on land, and is very large, and boney, and big.' Part I.ch.viii. By Shakespeare it is made the name of a familiar spirit: ‘<i>Paddock</i> call ...
... udson</sc> (ed. 1851-6): “‘I confess,' says Coleridge, ‘that Shakespeare has left the character of the Queen in an unpleasant perplexity. Was ...
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