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471 to 480 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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471) Commentary Note for line 2550:
2550 To punish me with this, and this with me, {I4v}

    ... &#8216;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 ...
472) Commentary Note for line 2551:
2551 That I must be their scourge and minister, 2551

    ... 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): &lt;p.162&gt; &#x201C;A most thoughtless but outrageous license with Shakespeare seems to have become invariable with the actors of Hamlet in the app ...
474) Commentary Note for line 2558:
2558 Let the {blowt} <blunt> King temp't you againe to bed,

    ... 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, &#8216;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 ...
476) Commentary Note for line 2560:
2560 And let him for a paire of reechie kisses, 2560

    ... ter Weise schildern.&#x201D; [<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.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> ...
478) Commentary Note for line 2564:
2564 But {mad} <made> in craft, t'were good you let him knowe,

    ... 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: &#8216;<i>Paddock</i> call ...
480) Commentary Note for line 2573:
2573 {Ger.}<Qu.> Be thou assur'd, if words be made of breath

    ... udson</sc> (ed. 1851-6): &#x201C;&#8216;I confess,' says Coleridge, &#8216;that Shakespeare has left the character of the Queen in an unpleasant perplexity. Was ...

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